THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
Vou. XIIL.] AUGUST, 1880. [No. 207. 
ZOMASPILIS MARGINARIA. 
Norah 
ZOMASPILIS MARGINARIA. 
THINKING you might like to figure some of the varieties of 
this very pretty and variable moth, I have selected three specimens 
of the light varieties. No. 1 was captured some years ago near 
Great Stanmore, Middlesex, by myself; No. 2, also near the same 
place in a swampy hollow, formerly a reservoir of water for 
the supply of the grounds of Cannon’s Park, Little Stanmore ; 
No. 3 was captured near Maidstone, Kent, in 1878. 
FRreprrRick Bonp. 
Staines, Middlesex, July, 1880. 
LOCALITIOS. FOR BEGINNERS: 
By Joun T. Carrinaton, F.L.S. 
No. VIII.—WICKEN. 
For the entomologist who is not afraid of work, and who is 
no mere dilettante, ““ The Fens ” probably afford the richest of all 
localities for Lepidoptera in this country. Amongst fen-lands, 
Wicken still retains its virgin soil and flora, unspoilt by drainage 
Z 
