NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS. 289 
from the Spilsbury Collection, 2 labelled ‘‘ Aberdeen, 1916,” pre- 
sented to the Collection by Mr. A. Horne. 
E. venosata.—A long series, including 11 from Shetland with 
‘data. 
ii. trisignaria.—Series of 18, of which 4 from the Sellon 
‘Collection are labelled ‘‘ Bred Burton, June, 1882.” 
E. helveticaria.—Twenty-one in series, including 12 from the 
Meldola Collection from Perth, with full data. 
E. satyrata.—Series of 46. Thirty-six with data, including 
12 var. callunaria and 8 var. curzoni. 
HK. tripunctaria (albipunctata).—F orty-three with full data and 
8 without data, these last being from the Hope and Spilsbury 
Collections. In a series from Shropshire, bred by myself, is one 
specimen of var. angelicata entirely black, and another specimen 
very closely approaching, but with the white spot at the anal 
angle of the fore wing faintly indicated. 
EH. denotatu (campanulata) Series of 25 with full data from 
Worcester, Somerset and Sussex. 
E. jasioneata.—Series of 19 with full data, 9 of them from 
Cornwall. The remaining 10 are interesting, being bred by 
Mr. B. G. Adams and myself from larve taken feeding on the 
flowers of Canterbury Bells in his garden in Mid-Devon far from 
the sea in 1915 and 1917. 
Ii. distinctarta (constrictata)—A series of 21 with full data— 
17 from Cornwall, 2 from Gloucester, | from Portland, 1 from 
Sligo. 
EH. extensaria.—Series of 16 with full data. 
E. fraxinata and EH. innotata.—Series of 19, 10 with full data. 
E. virguureata.—Very poorly represented by a series of 6 
from the Spilsbury Collection, without data. There were no 
specimens in any of the later collections. 
E. debiliata.—A long series with full data from North Staf- 
fordshire, and 1 specimen from the Champion Collection from 
Surrey. 
The genus Hupithecia is well represented on the whole, no 
species being without an example, and there are long series of 
most of the less rare species. 
Cenocalpe (Phibalapteryx) lapidatan—Series of 21 with full 
data. Four from Sutherland from the Pogson Smith Collection, 
and 17 from Lanark from the late Major Robertson's Collection. 
NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS. 
AGLAIS URTICH,, AB. AND CIDARIA IMMANATA, AB.—The following 
two varieties were captured by me at Gathurst near Wigan in July 
of this year, and seem worthy of being recorded. Aglais urtice, an 
aberration, captured on the 11th, differs from anormal specimen as 
ENTOM.—DECEMBER, 1921. BB 
