168 



Amer. Nat., v. 10. 

 on locusts, and on Carpocapsa saltilans ; Broadhead on locusts; Riley on 

 Paris green and its poisonous effects, and on agave wood for lining insect 

 boxes], p. 125-126 [Riley on oviposition of Leucania unipuncta'], p. 50S- 

 509 [Riley on the periodical cicada, on the cocoons of Sericaria mori reared 

 on osage orange, on Leucania albilinea, and on a specimen of Doryphora 

 decemlineata covered with mites], p. 635-G36; Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. [Scud- 

 der on the geographical distribution of Vanessa cardui and V. atalanta (see 

 Rec, nos. 1013 and 1020)], p. 61 ; Buff. Soc. Nat. Sci. [Grote on Noctuidae 

 from the Pacific Coast, and on Polenta tepperi from Texas], p. 128; Cal. 

 Acad. Sci. [H. Edwards on Darlingtonia californica and the insects taken 

 by it], p. 127 [Dr. Hale on a milk-white spider which is the exact counter- 

 part of the tlower Medrono], p. 5 74; Cambridge Entom. Club [Hagen on 

 Termes flavipes, Scudder on osmateria of butterflies], p. 62 [Schwarz on 

 Rbynchophora], p. 127-128 [Scudder on glands in the thorax of Anisomor- 

 pha buprestoides (see Psyche, v. 1, p. 137-140), Stebbins on a deformed 

 Papilio machaon, Scudder on Megathymus yuccae, Fewkes on glands of 

 Aulolyca paUidicornis, Dimmock on bleaching wings of Lepidoptera], p. 255- 

 256 [Burgess on pupaj of Eudamus tilyrus, Mann on larvae of Anisopteryx 

 pometaiia, Scudder on Gryllus domesticus, Hagen on amber, Scudder on 

 the species of Cyaniris, Hagen on an insect allied to Mantispa and living in 

 wasps' nests, Scudder on Forficularians (see Psyche, v. 1, p. 177-178), 

 Austin on captures of Dytiscidae], p. 507-508. c. Perforation of orange 

 skins by moths [of the genus Opliideres, from Australia] (from the Monthly 

 Microscopical Journal), p. 50. d. A remarkable forage for bees [using the 

 epispores of Uredo luminata in place of pollen grains] (by J. L. Zabriskie, 

 in the Bee Keepers'' Magazine), p. 122. e. The cotton worm, p. 303. /. 

 Insects of the Kerguelen Island, p. 482. g. Carnivorous plants [and some 

 of the insects taken by them] (by W. J. Beal), p. 588-591. h. Notice of 

 death of Edward Newman, of London, p. 700. i. Meeting of the governors 

 of the western states and territories in Omaha, Neb., 25 Oct., 1876, to 

 devise means to rid the country of the grasshopper pests, p. 754-755. 



*i 1001. Rev. Samuel Lockwood. The Florida chameleon, 

 p. 4-16. 



Some insects eaten, and Doryplwra decemlineata refused by Anolis princi- 

 palis. 



* 1002. J. M. Mulligan. Intelligence in the hawk moth, 

 p. 50. 



Hawk moths observed never to go twice to the same flower of Oenothera 

 lamarckiana. 



Correction. In no. 48 of Psyche, v. 2, p. 131, line 3, for 968, read 970; on p. 135, 

 lines 21-26, Jor 973 read 979, for 975 read 990, for 976 read 992, for 974 read 993. 



Nos. 4 7-48 were issued Sept. 24, 1878. 



