134 THE ENTOMOLOGIsT. 
Regent’s Park (Godwin); Hampstead (Vaughan); Chiswick, 
fairly common at rest (Sich); Whitton (Rendall) ; Oxhey Lane 
(Rowland-Brown); Harefield, not common (Wall); Highgate 
(Shepherd) ; Ealing (Adye). 
Subf. Larentiine. 
Cheimatobia brumata, L., Mill Hill (South) ; generally common 
(Godwin) ; Hampstead (Vaughan) ; Chiswick, abundant, larva in 
~ young shoots and buds of fruit and other trees (Sich) ; Whitton 
(Rendall); Harrow-Weald, very common (Rowland-Brown) ; 
Harefield, exceedingly abundant (Wall); Highgate (Shepherd) ; 
Hammersmith (Mera); Clapton (Bacot); Dalston (Prout). 
C. boreata, Hb., Bishop’s Wood (Godwin). 
Oporabia dilutata, Bork., Mill Hill (South) ; generally common, 
especially Hampstead (Godwin) ; Isleworth (Fenn); Chiswick, 
occasionally, also larva (Sich); Whitton (Rendall); Harrow- 
Weald (Roland-Brown); Harefield, common (Wall); Highgate 
(Shepherd) ; Clapton (Bacot). O. dilutata var. obscurata, Stgr. 
Mr. Shepherd wrote me that he had taken this at Hampstead ; 
and Mr. Sich refers to a suffused form at Chiswick (Hintom. 
xxi. 112). 
Larentia didymata, L., Mill Hill (South) ; generally common 
(Godwin); Bishop’s Wood (Vaughan); Whitton (Rendall) ; 
Hampstead, common (Watts); Harefield, common (Wall) ; 
Dalston (Prout) ; [Northwood (South)]. L. multistrigaria, Haw., 
Mill Hill, at rest on palings (South); Hampstead Heath (God- 
win); Whitton (Rendall); Hampstead Heath, 1882 (Watts). 
L. viridaria, Fb. (=pectinitaria), Bishop’s Wood (Godwin) ; 
Whitton (Rendall); Harefield, occasional (Wall); [Northwood, 
common (South) |. 
(To be continued.) 
NOTES ON BRITISH LEPIDOPTERA. 
By Ricuarp Souru. 
Tor GENUS MELANIPPE. 
(Continued from p. 114.) 
MELANIPPE GALIATA. 
The ground colour of fore wings is generally chalk-white, with 
a greyish patch at the base, and more or less tinged with ashy 
grey on the outer marginal area. The central band, which has 
a decided projection on its outer edge, is usually divided trans- 
versely into three parts by thin black or blackish lines; the 
median portion is always the widest, and, as a rule, darker than 
the narrow inner and broader outer portions, which are alike in 
