er 
THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 29 
fig. 8, male). The first two joints are short and _ thick, 
annular; on the under side of the third is a small hairy knob, 
and on the upper side, at the apex, a branching process 
covered with hairs, like that of a stag’s horn, and half as long 
again as the joint itself; similar processes are found on the 
fourth, fifth, and sixth joints, decreasing successively in size, 
so that that on the sixth joint only just projects from the 
apex; the seventh joint is, at the end, somewhat more 
pointed above than below; the eighth is simply cylindrical; 
and the ninth awl-shaped. Both the knob and the branches 
are wanting in the female (fig. 8, female); but the third, 
fourth, fifth, and sometimes the sixth, joints are somewhat 
expanded above: they terminate obliquely at the apex, and 
have a fine pointed spine on the projecting upper side. 
The saw and ovipositor of the female are very similar to 
those of Cladius albipes, but are a little broader, and the 
points with which the former is armed are finer and sharper. 
Cladius difformis has been taken with us in various localities, 
and will probably be found to be common wherever roses are 
cultivated. 
Additions to the List of Macro-Lepidoptera inhabiting 
Guernsey and Sark. By W. A. Lurr, Esq. 
(Continued from vol. vii. p. 42.) 
I BEG to offer the enclosed additions to my former lists of 
Guernsey insects for publication in the ‘Entomologist.’ The 
following were, when not stated to the contrary, captured 
during 1874. 
Lampides Betica.—A single specimen was captured by 
Miss L. Renouf in her garden, St. Peter Port, Guernsey, at 
the end of August, 1872. This lady also captured eight 
specimens at the same place in the autumn of 1859. 
Sphinx Convolvuli.mSeveral have occurred in Sark. 
Deilephila Euphorbie.—I am sorry I cannot now record 
this as a Guernsey insect. Many years ago the larve were 
to be found in abundance on the sea-spurge growing near 
the coast of L’Ancresse Bay, but greedy collectors have long 
since exterminated the species. 
Zygena Trifolii.—tt is this insect and not Z. Lonicere, 
as mentioned in my previous list (Entom. vi. 352) which is so 
