78 THE ENTOMOLOGIST'S RECORD. 



Mr. C. H. Williams, aberrations of A. coridon, including ab. albina, 

 ab. synyrapha, ab. inarginata, etc. 



Mr. B. W. Adkin, long series to illustrate the variation in 

 (1) A. faphia, a gynandromorph $ and pale ? , a dark suffused 

 specimen, a small bred example with hindwings brown beneath, "1 $ q 

 with large white patches, and forms of ab. valezina. (2) Eugonia 

 joolychloros, in depth of colour and extent of markings. 



Mr. Stanley Edwards, sections of the genus Euploea from India 

 and the Malay. 



Mr. H. A. Leeds, a large number of individual aberrations of 

 Pararge aegeria, E. jurtina, E. tithonus, Aphantopus hyjierantus, C. 

 paviphiliis, A. thetis, Polyomniatus teams (8 phases), Agriades coridon 

 (19 phases), Aricia medon, Strymon py-uni, and Bithys quercus. 



Mr. R. Bowman, Numeria pulveraria, 2nd brood, August, 1918, 

 with much deeper markings ; and Rumicia phlaeas ab. eleus, Horsley, 

 August, 1918. 



For Mr. Ing, Mr. Newman showed Arctia caja, bred series including 

 one with chocolate brown covering almost the entire forewings, with 

 orange hindwings, emphasised markings, and body largely melanic. 



Mr. F. W. Frohawk, (1) Brenthis euphrosyne, showing variation in 

 coalescence of spotting ; (2) Euchloe cardamines, variation in colour, 

 and size of apical and discoidal markings, etc. ; (3) Chrysophanus 

 dispar, ^ symmetrically white-marked wings bred by Doubleday ; 

 (4) Two Issoria lathonia, Colchester, 1818 ; (5) Varieties of the 

 Starling (grey, cream, white, and buff), and of the Pied Wagtail (pied 

 and mottled with white). 



Rev. G. Wheeler, Pararge megera 2 ab. mediolugens, near Guildford, 

 1918, and Rumicia phlaeas, ab. suffnsa, ab. caeruleo-punctata, and ab. 

 intermedia. 



Mr. Riches, a series of aberrations of Abraxas grossulariata from 

 N. London. 



Dr. E. J. Salisbury, branched carpels in Clematis vitalba, and 

 discussed this aberrational growth. 



Mr. A. A. Buckstone, (1) Hygrochroa syringaria, bred series of 

 specimens with "abnormal wings, parents ^ normal, ? deformed ; (2) 

 Many bleached and teratological specimens, and suggested that much 

 was due to the ill-development of the first pair of limbs, the main 

 prehensors in the period of wing-expansion. 



Mr. H. Moore, Anosia archippus, racial forms from areas ranging 

 from Canada to the Argentine. 



Rev. J. S. Tarbat, for Mr. Burras, (1) Dryas paphia, much 

 coalesced and suffused examples ; [^) A. cydippe {^gaXe); (3) Phrag)iiatobia 

 fnliginosa (yellow) ; (4) Lithosia deplana (very dark) ; (5) Calymnia 

 trapezina (extremes of aberration). 



Rev. A. T. Stiff (1) Amorpha populi, buff and pink form ; (2) 

 Saturnia pavonia, with pink marginal band on hind-wings ; (3) Arctia 

 villica, 5 with confluent spots and hind- wings almost devoid of 

 markings ; (4) Arctia caja, $ salmon-pink, $ yellow, $ pink-yellow 

 and confluent spots, several with dark forewings ; (6) C. pamphilns, 

 with extra ocelli below, etc. 



Mr. Ashdown, long series of aberrations of Adalia bipunctata (Col.). 



Dr. T. A. Chapman, Orgyia vetusta, California, a long, variable 



