858 MR. H. J. ELWES ON THE BUTTERFLIES [NoV. 15, 



and Gaschkevltsch, with 2 plates. The remaining novelties in 

 this collection are figured by 

 Men£tries. Enumeratio Corporura Animalium Musei Imp. 

 Petropoli. St. Petersburg, 1863. 



Quoted as Cat. Mus. Petr. 

 Bremer. Lepidopteren Ost-Sibiriens. Mem. Acad. Imp. 

 Sciences de St. Pe'tersbourg, 1864. 



Published as a separate paper, and contains a very full list 

 of the Amur Lepidoptera collected by Kadde, Maack, and 

 Wulffius, with 8 plates, 4to, and descriptions of many species. 

 Menetries. Lepidopteres de la Sibirie orieutale (Schrenk's Amur. 

 Reise, vol. ii.). St. Petersburg, 1859. 



Contains a full list of the collections made by von Schrenk 

 and Maack in Amurland and Eastern Siberia, with notes on 

 their geographical distribution and descriptions of new species, 

 many of which are figured on five 4to plates. Quoted as Men. 

 Schrenk's Reise. 



This paper is so lettered in the French edition, which appears 

 to have been published in Melanges biol. Acad. St. Petersbourg, 

 1859, vol. i. 

 Felder. Wiener entomologische Monatschrift, vol. vi. Vienna, 

 1862. 



Contains a list of species collected at Ningpo by Dr. Muir- 

 head, with several descriptions of new species. 

 Oberthur. Etudes d'Entomologie. Livraisonii. 1876. Eennes. 



Contains descriptions, with beautifully executed figures, of 

 some of the most interesting species collected by the Abbe 

 David in Western and Northern China. 

 Oberthtjr. Etudes d'Ent. Livraison v. 1880. 



Contains an account of the collection made by Jankowsky at 

 Askold, an island on the coast of Amurland near Vladivostock, 

 with descriptions and beautiful plates of new species. 

 MoTSCHULSKY. Etudes Entomologiqucs. Neuvieme annee, 1860. 

 Helsingfors. 



Contains an account of a small collection made by Madame 

 Gaschkevitch in Japan, and description of 5 species. 

 De l'Orza. Les Lepidopteres japonnais a la Grande Exposition 

 Internationale de 1867. Rennes, 1869. 



Contains a list of 75 species, many of which are either wrongly 

 identified, or have not been sent from Japan since, and descrip- 

 tions of some new species. 



Besides these separate publications there are a number of scattered 

 descriptions in various periodicals, the most important of which 

 are : — 



Murray. Notes on Japanese Butterflies, with Descriptions of new 

 Genera and Species. Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, Dee. 

 1874. 

 Contains an account of H. Fryer's Yokohama collection. 



