ar 
were presented by C. A. Wiggins, Esq., a part of the splendid 
collection given by him in 1902 and 1903. These specimens 
were from Kilindini, on the island of Mombasa (60 ft.), and 
from Changamwe (500 ft.), on the Uganda Railway, 10 miles 
west of Mombasa. All were collected in Ig01. Forms such 
as these, characteristic of the Eastern tropical coast-belt of 
Africa, afford a most interesting comparison with the allied 
species or varieties from the shores of the Victoria Nyanza 
(see donations in 1903). 
Fifteen butterflies from various European localities were 
presented by Herbert Druce, Esq., F.L.S., F.Z.S. 
ADDITIONS TO THE COLLECTIONS IN 1903. 
The Blattidae of the fine general collection of Orthoptera, 
presented by Malcolm Burr, Esq., B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., New 
College, have now been labelled, catalogued and incorporated. 
They amount to 243 specimens. Large numbers of the species 
are named, some of them by Dr. Brunner von Wattenwy], of 
Vienna, the most distinguished authority on the Orthoptera. 
The remaining specimens of the remarkably fine collection 
of butterflies from British East Africa, presented in 1903 by 
C. A. Wiggins, Esq., have now been catalogued and incor- 
porated. 2,568 specimens, of which 1,421 were catalogued as 
permanent accessions, were acknowledged in last year's Report. 
These catalogued specimens were collected at the following 
localities, near the shores of Lake Victoria Nyanza: 1. Tiriki 
(404 specimens), 2. Nyangori (461), 3. Ugaia (285), 4. En- 
tebbe (271). The specimens now gratefully acknowledged 
come from the localities numbered below 5-9. The types, 
the specimens illustrating mimicry, and nearly the whole of 
the Lycaenidae, Hesperidae and moths are excluded from the 
captures recorded under localities 5-9. The specimens in 
each of these categories are treated as a whole and acknow- 
ledged separately. It must also be remembered that the 
numbers quoted below do not include the specimens still in 
“papers.” All these have been carefully studied, and are 
