ADDITIONAL LOCALITIES, NOTES, ETC. 



CICINDELIDiE. 



Cicindelidoe. Herr Bouwman and Herr Adlerz have shown that Methoca 

 ichneumonoides, Latr., is parasitic on the larva of Cicindela campestris, and 

 sylvatica (Tijd. vor. Entom., 1909, p. 284). It is most probably also para- 

 sitic on C. germanica, as I have taken it at Blackgang Chine, on the ground 

 where the beetle is abundant. 



(In the Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1907, pp. 7-75, and First Supplement 

 I.e. 1911, pp. 452-496, will be found two very useful papers, by Mr. Claude 

 Morley, on the Hymenopterous Parasites of Coleoptera.) 



The var. funebris of C. campestris was taktn by Dr. Chapman at Glen 

 Finnart {see Ent. Mo. Mag., 1867, p. 251). 



Cicindela sylvatica, L, Oxshott (Donisthorpe) ; Manton Common, Lincoln- 

 shire (Dawson). 



Cicindela maritima, Dej. Carnarvon Bay and Harlech (W. E. Sharp). 



Cicindela germanica, L. Swanage (E. A. Waterhouse) ; Eyde, I. of W. 

 (Rudd, 1837) ; Lyme Regis (Walker, 1834, and still found there) ; Seaton 

 (de la Garde). 



CARABIDiE. 

 Cychrus rostratus, L. Scotland, not uncommon in the Highlands (Beare) ; 

 Isle of Eigg (Donisthorpe). I have found both the larva and the perfect 

 insect feeding on snails. 



According to Mr. Bagnall it seems as if it is only the female sex of this 

 beetle that stridulates (see Ent. Rec, 1906, p. 73). (Mr. C. J. Gahan has 

 written a very interesting paper on the Stridulating Organs in Coleoptera, 

 in the Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. for 1900, pp. 433-452.) 



Carabus intricatus, Li. Recaptured by Mr. Keys near Plymouth, May 28, 1898. 



Dr. Leach discovered the first specimen that was taken in Britain in a 



little wood on the banks of the Tavey, opposite the Virtuous Lady Copper 



Mine. 

 Carabus nemoralis, Miill. A black specimen taken by ]VIr. Keys, Dartmoor, 



1903. 



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