52 
From Umtali (3,700 ft.), 2 Lycaenid butterflies, including 
Pentila peucetia (Dec. 1900), and a variety of Crenis boisduvalit, 
captured by H. Dobbie (April 7, 1901). From the Mpudzi 
River, Manica (3000 ft.), an ant-lion (Nov. 1go1). From 
Mount Chirinda, Melsetter, Gazaland (4,500 ft.), 3 Lycaenid 
and 3 Hesperid butterflies. With the kind help of Mr. H. H. 
Druce these butterflies have been mostly named, but there 
remain one or two which are still uncertain, or may be new 
species. 
From Bulawayo, 4 Hymenoptera Aculeata (Dec. 1903). 
From the Matoppo Mountains, near Bulawayo, 2 specimens 
of a large conspicuous Cantharid beetle and a beautifully 
mimetic Buprestid, captured on the same day (Jan. 1g04). 
From Bulawayo, 21 examples of the great Lycoid group, 
including many new to the fine set in the Department. Also 
from the same locality, 2 individuals of a Sesiid moth with 
hairy brightly-coloured legs, which are held so as in great part 
to cover the moth when at rest, and, as Mr. Marshall believes, 
produce the appearance of a conspicuous distasteful caterpillar. 
Mr. G. A. K. Marshall has also presented a valuable series 
of co-types of many species described in his masterly mono- 
graph on the Curculionid genus H7ipporrhinus (Proc. Zool. Soc., 
1904, p. 134, &c.):—H. gunningi ¢ (Transvaal); H. consors 
3 ¢ (Transvaal); H. deceptor 8 3 (Algoa Bay); 4. braunsi 
& (Orange River Colony); “7. vicinus 2 (Natal); H. pro- 
pinquus & % (Salisbury); HY. dcmaculatus § ¢ (Salisbury) ; 
HI. cervinus 8 (Orange River Colony); H. angustus 8 (Algoa 
Bay); H. errans 9 (Natal); A. humeralis g (Little Nama- 
qualand). Mr. Marshall also presented a g and 9 of H. ave- 
narius (Fahr.) from Bulawayo. 
From Crete, Lassethe Plain (about 2,500 ft.), 3 Zhazs cerisyi 
(May 19-26, 1904) ; together with 8 Coenonympha pamphilus, 
var. Zyllus, and 9 Lycaena psylorita, from the Nidtha Plain at 
a height of about 4,200 ft. on Mount Ida (July 2-3, 1904). 
Presented by the captor, Miss Dorothea M. A. Bate. The 
specimens are a welcome addition to the representatives of 
the Mediterranean insect fauna in the University Collection. 
