102 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



EUDICELLA IMMACULATA, Sp. n. (fig. 1). 



Basal half of head, pronotum, scutellum, epimera of mesothorax, 

 and pygidium dark olive-green, thickly and finely punctured ; lateral 

 margins of pronotum raised, smooth, and shining. The head is pro- 

 longed into three shining mahogany-coloured horns, the central horn 

 being bifurcate, pointed, 6 lines in length, curving upward ; the lateral 

 horns about 1^ lines. The elytra are siiining, pale yellowish brown, 

 and spotless. The sutural margins and body beneath are of the same 

 dark green colour, the last finely punctured. The mesosternum spar- 

 ingly covered with light yellow hair ; the upper part of sternal process 

 thickly covered with yellow hair. The legs are bright shining 

 mahogany coloured ; the tarsi bright shining black ; the front femora 

 has a thick fringe of light brown hair on the under side ; there is also 

 a sUght fringe of the same coloured hair on the pygidium. The front 

 tibiffi in the male are smooth on the outer side, but have seven or eight 

 teeth on the inner side. The female is the same in every respect, 

 except the horns and the front tibia, which are smooth on the mner 

 side, but have three teeth on the outer side. Long. 17 lines ; max. lat. 

 10 lines. 



Hah. Uganda, British East Africa. 



Closely allied to E. smWii, but differing in having a more 

 finely punctured thorax and elytra, the pygidium green, and the 

 elytra spotless ; the pygidium in smithi is red. 



114, Ebury Street, Eaton Square, S.W. 



TWELVE MONTHS' WORK AMONG THE DEAGON- 

 FLIES OF SURREY AND HAMPSHIRE. 



By H. T. Dobson, F.E.S. 



Finding Lepidoptera very scarce during the summer of 1902, 

 I decided to try my fortune among the Odonata, with the result 

 that I captured, between September, 1902, and September, 1903, 

 no less than twenty-six species out of the thirty-nine given for 

 Great Britain by Mr. J. W. Lucas in his excellent work on 

 'British Dragonfiies,' published in 1900. 



Thinking there must be many readers of the ' Entomologist ' 

 who, like myself, are deeply interested in this important and 

 splendid group of the Neuroptera, I venture to offer the following 

 notes. 



I shall consider the species according to the classified order 

 used by Mr. Lucas, quite disregarding the rotation of my cap- 

 tures. Of the five species belonging to the genus Sympetriim, I 

 took but two, viz. striolatum and scoticum. My first capture of 

 the former was on August 8th, at the Black Pond, Esher, and I 

 continued during 1903 to take it until the middle of October. I 



