APPENDIX. 



Page 5. FoRFicuLA borealis. Curtis, v. xii. pi. 560. 



Mr. Curtis, in the folio quoted, says, " Mr. Stephens gives the F. media of 

 Marsham as a variety of this species/' after stating that the British Forfi- 

 culidag have been divided into four genera, as I alone have done in p. 4; and 

 if the reader will refer to p. 5, he will find that I give F. media as a distinct 

 species, the forceps of which I have figured from Marsham's original 

 insect. 



Page SO.tLocusTA Christii. Curtis,v.^ni.pl.GO%. — " Pallide viridis, lineis 

 2-bus faciei mandibulisque ccerulescentibus, elytris maculatis, femoribus posie- 

 rioribus subtus, interne caerulescentibus, nigro maculatis, (Long. corp. 2 unc. 

 4lin. ; Exp. Alar. — unc. — lin.) 



*' Pea-green: antennae subferruginous ; an ochreous and purplish longitudinal 

 line behind each eye, face with two lines down the middle, and the man- 

 dibles blue-black ; thorax triangular behind, with a sharp convex carina ; 

 abdomen reddish-brown, marbled with greenish-yellow ; elytra more or 

 less spotted, nervures reddish-brown, variegated with green towards the 

 base ; wings delicate yellow, inclining to green, the apical portion more 

 grey, nervures brown and piceous, reticulations ochreous ; hinder legs pale 

 green; thighs blue internally beneath, with a large black space from the 

 base to the middle, a blackish band beyond it, and a ring near the apex, 

 which is brown above ; spines of tibiae tipped with black ; tarsi grey." — 

 Curtis, I. c. 



" Taken by Wm. Chistry, Esq. upon some French-beans in a garden on the 

 Clapham-road, in July, 1826." — Curtis, I. c. 



Page 46. Ectobius lapponicus — Blatta laponnica, Curtis, v. xii. pi. 556, 

 where it is stated " there are 11 species (of Blatta) registered as inhabitants 

 of England." — I had previously described 12, for although the date of the 

 plate is July 1, it was not published till August 1. 



Page 90. CoRDULiA Curtisii — Loudon, v. vii. p. 60.— Curtis, v. xiii. pi. 616. — 

 The reference to Loudon's Magazine, by some accident, is erroneously 

 stated in this page. 



Page 184. Sericostoma Spencii.— The death of Dr. Leach, here referred to, 

 took place at Genoa on the 24th of August last, from an attack of cholera, 

 after an illness of seven hours only, in, I believe, the 47th year of his age. 



2 G 2 



