68 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
Crabro leucostoma, Stigmus pendulus,* Oxybelus uniglumis, 
Crabro brevis, Nysson dimidiatus,* Chrysis ignita, Hedy- 
chrum ardens, Prosopis hyalinatus, P. annularis, Colletes 
fodiens, C. Daviesana, Halictus prasinus, H. albipes, H. 
cylindricus, H. Tumulorum, H. longulus, H. minutissimus, 
H. rubicundus, H. leucozonius, H. villosulus, H. morio, 
H. minutus, Andrena labialis, A. Coitana, A. nana, A. fulvi- 
crus, Megachile argentata,* M. centuncularis, Nomada flavo- 
guttata, Cilissa leporina.* 
Captures in the Island of Anglesea.—The following list 
of species of aculeate Hymenoptera will prove to possess 
some degree of interest, from the fact of its being probably 
the first of such as inhabit the island of Anglesea. It is 
certainly a very incomplete record of the Hymenopterous 
Fauna of the island. During the month of August last I was 
resident at Garth (Bangor), North Wales, but had few oppor- 
tunities of collecting, as, with the exception of about four 
days, rain fell heavily during portions of all the rest. All 
the species enumerated were captured along the road-side, 
between Garth Ferry and Beaumaris:—Formica rufa, F. 
fusca, F. flava, Myrmica ruginodis, M. scabrinodis, Pompilus 
gibbus, Ammophila sabulosa, Crabro dimidiata, Mimesa 
bicolor, Harpactus tumidus, Mellinus sabulosus, Vespa ger- 
manica, V. rufa, Prosopis hyalinatus, Sphecodes ephippia, 
Halictus minutus, H. morio, H. rubicundus, Andrena 
Gwynana, Apathus rupestris, A. campestris, Bombus Musco- 
rum, B. senilis, B. Pratorum, B. Lucorum, B. terrestris, 
B. Hortorum, B. lapidarius. 
FREDERICK SMITH. 
British Museum, 
Entomological Notes, Captures, &c. 
Note on Eupithecia innotaria.—This distinct species, 
formerly in our list, has been ignored as British by recent 
writers, but is, nevertheless, a species well known to me, 
occurring at Wallasey in the larva state on mugwort, in 
September, along with the larva of EK. succenturiata, and 
being occasionally taken around the sand-hills in June: this 
is, in my opinion, the EKupithecia egenaria of Mr. Doubleday’s 
Catalogue; it is a variable species, like EK. expallidata in 
form, but, unlike that species, it also varies in markings, 
