( cxxiv ) 



GENEEAL INDEX. 



The Ara/nc pt/ure.': reftr to the paffe.i of the ' Transact ion. ^\- the Roman 

 numerals to the pages of the ' Proceedinys.' 



The President's Address is not separately indexed. 



GENERAL SUBJECTS. 



Aberrant, wasp, exliibited, xlix ; Geometrid moths from East Lothian, 



exhibited, Ixxvi ; Himera pennaria, exhibited, Lxxvi. 

 Acraea f/tiirina, emission of fluid from the antennae of, Ixix. 

 Africa, observations on Fossors in East, xli ; on a collection of Lepidoptera 

 made in East, xlvi, 322 ; syuaposeniatic series of Lycid beetles of 

 9 species taken on one plant in one day in late German East, exhibited, 

 Ivii ; in burying its spider prey, method adopted by the Pompilid Baio- 

 zonits fulnjinosus, exhibited, lix ; dragonfly-like Asilid fly of genus 

 • Lasiocnemus from East, exhibited, Ix ; observations on the mimetic 

 females of Tapi/io darclanus in late German East, Ixv ; of the genus 

 &aranc/esa resting in holes in the ground, fiu'ther observations on 

 Hesperidae from, Ixvii. 

 Ayriades thttis and other Lycaenids, condition of scales in leaden males of, 



xvi, 165. 

 Ayrias claudia, local forms of, exhibited, iv. 



America, on new and little-known Layriidae from South, xvi, 169: descrip- 

 tions of Micro-Lepidoptera from South, 1. 

 Ammophila yabulosa, variation in, exhibited, xiii. 

 Ant, spider mimic of, exhibited, Ixxvi. 



Antennae of closely related species, noticeiihle diflereuce in, exhibited, xciii. 

 Apanteles ylomeratns, hyper-parasites on, exliilnted, xlviii. 

 Aphidae, parasites and hyper-parasites of, exhibited, Iv. 

 Batozonus fuliyiiiosus iu burying its spider prey, method adopteil by the 



African Pompilid, exhibited, lix. 

 Beetle, Death-watch, xvii, xviii, xxiii ; very rare BrilLsh, exhibited, 1 ; living 

 Dermestid larvae, exliibited, 1 ; synaposenuitic series of Lycid beetles of 

 9 species taken on one plant in one day iu late Geimau East Africa, 

 exhibited, Ivii ; very ancient, exhibited, Ixxxix. 

 Birds, capturing butterflies on the wing at Oxford, Nxix ; are rarely witnessed, 



observation explaining why attacks on butterflies by, Ixii. 

 Brazil, predaceous Reduviid bugs and Fossors, with their prey, from the 

 S. Paulo district of South-East, exhibited, xxxiv. 



