17 



An Ichneumonid {Ophioninae) with a yellowish substance, 

 probably a pollen-mass, adhering to its head, captured at 

 Dodington, Kent (May 27, 1904), and presented by the late 

 A. J. Chitty, Esq., K.C., M.A., F.E.S., Balliol College, which 

 had been inadvertently overlooked, has now been catalogued 

 and added to the collection. 



Additions to the Collections in 1905. 



The following specimens of the great 1905 collections made 

 by Dr. G. B. Longstafif in S. Africa and Algeria, and by 

 Dr. F. A. Dixey In S. Africa, and for various reasons omitted 

 from the catalogue of 1905, have now received their num- 

 bers : — 



(i) Dr. G. B. Longstaff's collections. 



South Africa : 1 1 Coleoptera named by L. Peringuey, Esq., 

 in the South African Museum, Cape Town ; 7 Hymenoptera, 

 3 of them named by the late Col. C. T. Bingham ; 4 male 

 butterflies (of different species) observed to emit an agreeable 

 odour ; 2 butterflies in which both sexes emit an unpleasant 

 odour ; i Lycaenid butterfly with an Injury to the " tail " of 

 the hind wing. 



Algeria: 6 small moths; 19 DIptera named by G. H. 

 Verrall, Esq., M.P., F.E.S. 



(2) Dr. F. A. Dixey's collection. 



South Africa : 2 Coleoptera named by L. Peringuey, Esq. ; 

 I bee named by the late Col. Bingham ; 2 butterflies with 

 pleasant scent in males and i unpleasant In both sexes ; i 

 Salamis anacardii set to show position of rest. 



The white black-marked Hesperid butterfly Abantis levubn 

 taken with 3 Pierinae at Taveta, British East Africa (1905), 

 was presented to the bionomic collections by the captor, 

 Rev. K. St. Aubyn Rogers, M.A., F.E.S., Wadham College 

 (Trans. Ent. Soc, Lond., 1908, pp. 539, 540). 



Sixty-three Lepldoptera from Entebbe and Kampala or 

 between the two (1905), were presented by the captors, Pro- 

 fessor E. A, MInchin, M.A., Keble College, and Mrs. MInchin. 



