68 Ashmolean Natural History Society of Oxfordshire. 
L. sicula, Er. On river-banks and in wet places; Cothill, Marston, 
Yarnton, &c., not rare. 
Olophrum piceum, Gyll. By sweeping, in sandpits, among dead leaves, 
&c. : common. 
Lathrimzum atrocephalum, Gyll. 
L. unicolor, Steph. 
Both common among dead leaves 
and sticks; Bagley Wood, 
Boar’s Hill, Wytham Park, &c. 
*Deliphrum tectum, Payk. In putrid fungus ; one specimen, Wytham 
Park, October 25th, 1906. 
Philorhinum sordidum, Steph. Jn flowers of broom, Cumnor Hill; 
common, May, 1906. 
*Coryphium angusticolle, Steph. In decaying faggots ; Bagley Wood, 
not rare. 
Homalium rivulare, Payk. Incarrionand decaying fungi ; very common. 
**H. septentrionis, Thoms. In fungi and by sweeping ; Wytham Park, 
rare. 
. oxyacanthe, Gr. Tubney (//”. 7.). 
. excavatum, Steph. In dead leaves, by sweeping, &c.; generally 
common. 
. cesum, Gr. With the preceding, not rare. The well marked var. 
tricolor, Rey, occurs rarely by sweeping at Wytham Park. 
. rufipes, Fourc. Chiefly on hawthorn-blossom in spring; Bagley 
Wood, Tubney, Wytham Park, &c., not rare. 
. vile, Er. Under bark ; Tubney, Wytham Park, &c., not rare. 
. iopterum, Steph. Chiefly under oak bark; Bagley Wood, Boar’s 
Hill, Wytham Park, Xc., not rare. 
H. concinnum, Sale two species have been taken rather 
oo tf ft te 
* sparingly in dry tree fungi near Summer- 
Hi deplanatum, Cyl, town and at Wytham Park. 
H. striatum, Gr. In dung, and by sweeping; widely distributed and 
not rare. 
“Hapalarea pygmeza, Payk. Once found at Summertown, on a window 
in my house. 
Eusphalerum primule, Steph. In primroses in woods ; Bagley Wood, 
Wytham Park, &c. ; common in early spring. 
*Anthobium minutum, F. By sweeping in wet places, early summer ; 
Cothill and Ogley Bog, common; Ferry Hinksey (//. 7.). 
A. ophthalmicum, Payk. Both plentiful in flowers, chiefly of Um- 
A. torquatum, Marsh. bellifere, in early summer. 
A. sorbi, Gyll. Bagley Wood (lV. 7.). 
Proteinus ovalis, Steph. In vegetable refuse and on the wing ; very 
common. 
P. brachypterus, F. Tubney (//. Z.). 
P. atomarius, Er. In fungi at Wytham Park, rare. 
Megarthrus denticollis, Beck. ) All more or less common among veget- 
M. depressus, Payk. able refuse, dead leaves, &c., as 
M. sinuatocollis, Lac. well as on the wing. 
*M. hemipterus, Il]. In fungi at Wytham Park ; rather rare. 
Phleobium clypeatum, Mull. In tufts of grass, vegetable refuse, &c. ; 
common. 
**Pseudopsis sulcata, Newm. Recorded by Mr. F. Holme, Trans. Ent. 
Soc. vol. iii. p. 109, footnote (1840). ‘*A second specimen of the 
Pseudopsis has been taken by Mr. Matthews at Shotover Hill, near 
Oxford.” It should be looked for among vegetable refuse and at the 
bottoms of haystacks. 
Prognatha quadricornis, Kirby. In decaying faggots, Bagley Wood, 
scarce; Boar’s Hill (1. Z.), 
