GENERAL INDEX. 



439 



T. 

 Tern, black, particulars respecting, 



193. 



Thread-worms, instance of large 

 numbers being found in a garden 

 after rain, 303. 



Thrush, missel, remarks on the 

 song of, 124. 



song, remarks on its hours of 



singing, 94. 



resorts to favourite stones to 



break snails, 127. 

 Tick, a large one found on a blue 



titmouse, 288. 

 Titmice, remarks on the notes of 



different species, 136. 

 Titmouse, long-tailed, nest and eggs 



of, 137. 



Toads, remarks on the question 

 where they pass the winter, 

 200. 



their abundance in ponds in 



the spring compared with 

 the few seen about at other 

 seasons, 202. 



the case of some shut up in 



a cellar, 203. 



appear to have deserted the 



piece of water in Bottisham 

 Park, 204. 

 Trichocera Uemalis^ its power of 



resisting cold, 272. 

 Turnip-weevil, some particulars re- 

 specting, 241. 



Turtle, collared or African, its 

 mode of feeding its young, 

 with remarks, 169. 



common, remarks on, 168. 



V. 



Valerian, red, much visited by 



brimstone butterflies in autumn, 



264. 

 Vanessa antiopa, notices respecting, 



265. 

 Vespa vulgans and V. rufa, the 



difference in their nests and 



larvae pointed out, 259. 

 Vinegar-eels, will not live long in 



fresh vinegar, 311. 

 Vole, bank, destructive to flower- 

 beds, 77. 



water, its food and mode of 



feeding, 75. 



W. 



Wagtails, more seen in autumn 



than at other seasons, 135. 

 Warbler, willow, its nest and eggs, 

 133. 



willow, sometimes sings in 



its flight, 134. 



wood, rare in Cambridge- 



shire, 133. 



Wasp, common, notes respecting its 

 nest, 257. 



queen, found in great plenty 



in white-thorn hedges in 

 spring, 255. 



queen, period of its waking 



from winter sleep, 256. 



tree, its nest described, 259. 



Weasels, two caught at once in the 



same mole trap, 63. 

 Weever, great, one captured in the 

 river Ouse, 209. 



