NOTES ON THE DRAGONFLY SEASON oF 1918. 63 
Boarmunm.—Boarmia solieraria, Trephonia sepiaria, Hubolia 
murinaria. 
Cympipm.—Hylophila bicolorana. 
Hererocynipz.—Heterogynis penella. 
Lirnosun®.—Lithosia lurideola, L. complana, L. caniola. 
YyvamNIDE.—Zygena scabiose var. orion, Z. sarpedon and 
var. vernetensis, Z. achillee, Z. lonicere and var. ochsenheimert, 
Z. transalpina, Z. angelice, Z. lavandule and var. consobrina, 
Z. hilaris var. ononidis (one). 
Ino (apscrta), I. globularie, Dyspessa ulula. 
Pyrauips, &ce.—Crambus craterellus, C. cumellus, Hromene 
bella, Pyraustra sanguinalis, P. purpuralis, P. funebris (octo- 
maculata), P. cingulata, Titanio polinalis, Evergestis sophialis, 
Salebria palumbella. 
At Bonpou. 
Zygena erythus, Z. filipendule; and at light, Semiothisa 
(Macaria) estimaria, Gnophos mucidaria, Hublemma_ suava, 
E. jucunda, Pseudophia illunaris. 
NOTES ON THE DRAGONFLY SEASON OF 1913. 
By F. W. & H. Campion. 
THE most interesting dragonfly seen by us during the present 
year was a female of Somatochlora metallica taken in Surrey on 
June 8th (H. J. Watts). The capture was made in the same 
locality as that which furnished the male obtained by the same 
entomologist on June 26th, 1910 (Entom. xliv. p. 238). When 
first taken, Mr. Watts tells us, this female was in somewhat 
teneral condition, but it was kept alive for a few days and deve- 
loped into a very fine specimen. When we saw the insect, after 
it had left the setting-board, the wings, including the ptero- 
stigmata, were of a beautiful amber, the colour being richest in 
the region of the costa. In a fully adult female from Guisachan, 
taken in August, 1899, by Mr. J. J. F. X. King, with which we 
compared the Surrey specimen, the pterostigmata are pinkish- 
red, and the wings are only slightly tinged with brown. Well 
authenticated records for this species from any part of Great 
Britain south of the Grampians are still very few, and its 
~ occurrence in Sussex in 1908 came to Odonatists as quite a 
surprise. 
During the last week in May Mr. R. South visited the New 
Forest, and obtained at Brockenhurst (May 380th) Calopteryx 
virgo, Pyrrhosoma nymphula, and Agrion puella. From the same 
locality we also received, through the kindness of Mr. South, 
Platycnemis pennipes, Pyrrhosoma tenellum, Orthetrum cerulescens, 
