from a Paper hy Zeller on Tinece. 125 



nized by the black spot at the apex of the anterior wings. Sala- 

 ciella has not a yellowish tr'ansverse streak ; and the yellowish 

 tint, though certainly in the same place as in reliquella, is very 

 indistinct, and only visible in certain lights." 



" I took my very bcautifid $ near Glogau, on the 20th of 

 June, on a grassy slope under aspen trees : my equally fine S near 

 Reinerz, on an open grass-plat, on the ICth of July, thus much 

 later than the female." 



" Sp. 3. Auntella, Hiibn." Linn. Ent. vol. 3, p. 2S3. 



Not the auritella of Stephens (which is the next species), and 

 I believe not hitherto detected in this country. 



" Size of the largest salaciella, easily distinguished from this 

 and the second and fourth species, by the rather large brown 

 inner marginal spot on the anterior wings." 



" I obtained a pair from Mecklenburg." " A single $ was 

 taken near Frankfort-on-the-Oder on the 25th of June, in a field, 

 on a thistle." 



" Sp. 4. Crepusculel/a, F. v. R." Linn. Ent. vol. 3, p. 284. 

 Vol. 2, pi. 2, f. 40, 41. 



This is the auritella of Stephens, and Wood's figure 1416 re- 

 presents the species very distinctly. 



" This species occurs near Reichstadt, in Bohemia, where, 

 according to F. v. R.'s notice, it flies in July, on the margins of 

 ponds, from half-past seven to eight, neither earlier nor later. 

 Near Glogau I found it in moist shady places in alder or other 

 leafy woods, in the second half of June and in July, always scarce 

 and singly, yet not always at twilight, but in cloudy weather also 

 in the afternoon. It keeps quite low in grass and weeds." 



In Zeller's genus Bucculalrix he has nine species, five of which 

 are decidedly British. 



" Sp. 1. Cidarella, Tischer." Linn. Ent. vol. 3, p. 287. 



" Easily distinguished in this genus by the brown anterior 

 wings, with two pair of whitish opposite spots." 



I must confess to some uneasy doubts, whether this be not 

 identical with my Demaryella (Zoologist, p. 2157); but on a very 

 close examination of my single specimen, I have been unable to 

 discover any eye-caps, but the hairs of the head are so long, it is 

 quite possible they may be there, but concealed : the hinder tibiae 



