11 



Khasia Hills, Assam (c. 1904), presented by Herbert Druce, 

 Esq., F.L.S., &c, have been catalogued and, with many others, 

 incorporated. This is a further instalment of the splendid 

 series from this interesting locality presented by the generous 

 donor. Several instalments of equal or larger extent have 

 been acknowledged in earlier Reports. 



Sixty-eight insects of various groups and one Acarid, from 

 Durban and Camperdovvn, Natal (1908), were presented by 

 the captor, G. F. Leigh, Esq., F.E.S. Three sets of parasitic 

 Hymenoptera, bred by the donor from the pupae of moths, 

 2 Hemiptera from ants' nests, and a Neuropterous insect 

 allied to Bittacus w r ith its Dipterous prey, are included. 



Additions to the Collections in 1909. 



Two hundred and seven insects of various groups from 

 Durban and Pinetown (c. t,ooo ft.), Natal, were presented 

 by the captor, G. F. Leigh, Esq., F.E.S. Included in the 

 series are a Salius with its victim, a Lycosid spider, and two 

 Asilid flies with their prey — a Pentatomid bug and a bee 

 respectively. These will form an interesting addition to the 

 bionomic collection. 



The localities of the great collection made, Jan.-Sept., 

 1908, in N. Rhodesia, by S. A. Neave, Esq., M.A., B.Sc, 

 Magdalen College, were fully described in the Report of the 

 year 1909. The moths have now been worked out, together 

 with those of Mr. Neave's earlier collections, by Sir George 

 Hampson (see p. 10), and 380 have been catalogued and, with 

 many hundred additional uncatalogued specimens, incorpo- 

 rated in the collection. With the exception of a few specimens 

 which are still without their printed labels, the whole of the 

 moths presented by the generous donor in 1906 and 1909 

 have now been incorporated, forming a splendid addition to 

 the Ethiopian material which is so marked a feature of the 

 Hope Department. 



Sixteen males and two females of the little fritillary 

 Argynnis cytheris, from the McClelland R., Tierra del Fuego 

 (1904), were presented by the captor, Captain R. Crawshay. 

 Three males and one female were added to a special faunistic 



