264 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XXXI, '20 



Kntomological Literature. 



COMPILED BY E. T. CRESSON, JR.. AND J. A. G. REHN. 



Under the above head it is intended to note papers received at the Academy of Natural 

 Sciences, of Philadelphia, pertaining to the Entomology of the Americas (North and 

 South), including Arachnida and Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American ento- 

 mology will not be noted; but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of 

 insects, however, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. 



The numbers in He.wy-Faced Type refer to the journals, as numbered in the following 

 list, in which the papers are published. 



All continued papers, with few exceptions, are recorded only at their first installments. 



The records of papers containing new genera or species occurring north of Mexico are 

 all grouped at the end of each Order of which they treat. 



For records of Economic Literature, see the Experiment Station Record. Office of Ex- 

 periment Stations. Washington. Also Review of Applied Entomology. Series A, London. 

 For records of papers on Medical Entomology, see Review of Applied Entomology, Series B. 



2 — Transactions of The American Entomological Society, Philadelphia. 

 4 — Canadian Entomologist, London, Canada. 5— Psyche, Cambridge, 

 Mass. 7 — Annals of The Entomological Society of America, Columbus, 

 Ohio. 9 — The Entomologist, London. 11 — Annals and Magazine of 

 Natural History, London. 12 — Journal of Economic Entomology, Con- 

 cord, N. H. 17 — Lepidoptera, Boston, Mass. 20 — Bulletin de la Societe 

 Entomologique de France, Paris. 31 — Proceedings of the Entomological 

 Society of Nova Scotia, Truro. 33 — .A,nnales de la Societe Entomologique 

 de Belgique, Brussels. 39 — The Florida Buggist, Gainesville. 45 — Zeit- 

 schrift fur wissenschaftliche Insektenbiologie, Berlin. 49 — Entomolog- 

 ische Mitteilungen Berlin-Dahlem. 50 — Proceedings of the United States 

 National Museum, Washington. 53 — Nature Study Review, Ithaca, 

 N. Y. 62 — Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, New 

 York. 68 — Science, Lancaster, Pa. 76 — Nature, London. 81 — The 

 Journal of Parasitology', LTrbana, Illinois. 82 — The Ohio Journal of 

 Science, Columbus. 90 — The American Naturalist, Lancaster, Pa. 103 — 

 Biologisches Centralblatt, Leipzig. 110 — Naturwissenschaftliche VVoch- 

 enschrift, Jena. Ill — Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, Berlin. 112 — Ento- 

 mologische Berichten, The Hague, Holland. 



GENERAL. Blackmore, E. H. — Rare and uncommon insects taken 

 in Br. Columbia during 19 19. (Rept. Prov. Mus. Nat. Hist. Br. Colum- 

 bia, 1919, 17-23.) Bouvier, E. L. — Revue d 'entomologie pour les Annees 

 1910-1914. Part I, Biologie; Part 2, Structure et physiologie, developpe- 

 ment et adaptation. (Rev. Gen. d. Sci. Pures et Appl., xxxi, 410-18; 

 155-62.) Bouvier, E. L. — The psychic life of insects. (An. Rept., 

 Smiths. Inst., 1918, 451-9.) Chetverikov, S. S.^ — The fundamental 

 factor of insect evolution. (An. Rept., Smiths. Inst., 1918, 441-9.) 

 Crampton, G. C. — Remarks on the basic plan of the terminal abdominal 

 structures of the males of winged insects. 4, lii, 178-83. Dixey, F. A. — 

 The geographical factor in mimicry. (Rept. Br. Assoc. Adv. Sci., Bourne- 

 mouth, 1919, 201-7.) van Eecke, R. — Varia entomologica. 112, v, 

 i53~5- Folsoni, J. W. et al. — Symposium on "The life cycle in in- 

 sects." 7, xiii, 133-201. Gibson, E. H. — Professional entomology: 

 the call and the answer. 12, xiii, 355-7. Lyon, M. W.^ — Family and 



