334 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



Forest, 1880, Douglas Coll. in coll. Mason, bought in 1904. 

 One (male), Lyndhurst, June 17th, 1885, Douglas Coll. in coll. 

 Mason, bought in 1904 (in F. A. Marshall's writing). Four, 

 ex coll. Stephens. Three " Gulliver," Lyndhurst, New Forest, 

 June, 1892; presented by F. C.Adams in 1893. One, " G. 

 Lewis," New Forest, June 17th, 1895, Douglas Coll., in coll. 

 Mason, bought in 1904. 



Brockenhurst : August 18th, 1911. 



A BUTTERFLY HUNT IN SOME PARTS OF 

 UNEXPLORED FRANCE. 



By H. Rowland-Brown, M.A., F.E.S. 



(Continued from p. 308.) 

 (ii) The Basses-Pyrenees. Eaux-Bonnes. 



I CAN hardly claim any particular originality in the choice 

 of the hunting-grounds described in the first part of this paper. 

 The coast from Biarritz to St. Jean de Luz is by no means 

 " unexplored." On the contrary, many British collectors on 

 the way to Spain, or returning from the Central Pyrenees, have 

 visited this region, and given us the benefit of their experiences. 

 The reason I selected Guethary was the reputed abundance of 

 Coenonympha oedipus in that locality, and if Guethary failed us, 

 then there was Biarritz only a little way off, where I had over- 

 taken the rear-guard of the species in August, 1905 (Entom. 

 vol. xxxviii. p. 273), and three weeks earlier in the field might 

 ensure a bag of this interesting butterfly in good condition. 



Our opening day, July 2nd, was not auspicious — hazy, with 

 mist blowing in from the sea, and the not-very-distant Pyrenees 

 cloaked with heavy cloud. There were, however, gleams of sun- 

 shine at intervals, but neither then, nor at any time, were 

 butterflies on the wing. I attributed their absence, of course, 

 to the weather ; but in the event the only conclusion possible 

 was that Guethary as a hunting-ground was a failure. Both 

 on this day and the 4th, when the sun shone brilliantly, we 

 quartered the country inland for miles over what suggested an 

 ideal ground for our purpose — marshy heath and rough pasture, 

 with occasional scrubby oak-woods. But C. oedipus vfa,s nowhere 

 to be found, only the commonest species ; my own captures 

 being limited on these two occasions to two very fine Lampides 

 hoeticus (females), the largest I ever saw, a few fresh Brenthis dia, 

 and one fine Colias edusa ab. pallida ; though Mr. Warren took 

 several more of the latter in the rough fields near the cliffs. 

 The only really plentiful butterfly in evidence on the heaths was 

 llusticus argus, L. {a-gon) — all males ; while a battered female 



