1871,] 183 
On heaths and in mossy places in bogs, &c.:—Dromius nigriventris, shaken out 
of heather; Bradycellus collaris and similis ; Trechus minutus and obtusus (both also 
on Cheviot), Hydroporus monticola and parallelus, Sharp, and obscurus ; Myllena 
elongata (also by sides of hill streams) ; Lathrobiwm quadratum, Lesteva punctata 
(also in marshes), Hypocyptus leviwsculus and anisotomoides, Tachyporus transver- 
salis, Mycetoporus lepidus; Stenus brevicollis and buphthalmus, Helodes marginatus, 
Telephorus paludosus, Prasocuris beccabunge, Graptodera longicollis (g and ?, but 
mostly ¢). 
In fungi, agarics, &c., and also from woods, mostly of old alder :—Bemb1- 
dium Mannerheimii, Wooler-water ; Autalia inypressa, Bolitochara lucida (beneath 
Polyporus versicolor) ; Leptusa fumida and ruficollis in tree fungi; Ozxypoda 
spectabilis, marsh under alder; O. alternans, plentiful in agarics; Gyrophena 
gentilis, between gills of agarics: Myllwna brevicornis, marshes ; Phleopora reptans, 
under bark of Scotch pine: Homalota pavens, volans, wneicollis, Sharp, vanthoptera, 
vicina, picipes, fungicola, occulta, ignobilis, Sharp (plentiful), sodalis; Tachinus 
provimus, dark glen in the hills; Quedius wmbrinus, marshes; Philonthus succicola, 
agarics; Syntomiwm wnewm, moss; Olophrwm piceum, Lathrimeum atrocephalum 
and wnicolor, marshes; Deliphrum tectum, Homalium vile, H. Allardi, H. exiguum 
(base of alder fungi), H. abietinwm (under bark of stumps of Scotch pine), H. 
brevicorne (eight specimens, about the base, and between it and the bark, of fresh 
growing specimens of Polyporus radiatus, on alder, near Langlee, in Wooler-water, 
and on the Lill Burn) ; Spherites glabratus, from the centre of a decayed Boletus 
luteus, in dark glen on the hills; Choleva longula and tristis; Omosita depressa ; 
Cryptophagus dentatus, curious high-coloured varieties ; C. pilosus, fungus of alder; 
C. scanicus, in dry agarics; Rhizophagus depressus, dispar and bipustulatus, in agarics 
on trees,as wellas underbark. Mycetophagus multipunctatus, in the corky fungus of 
the alder (Polyporus radiatus) ; new to Northumberland, and, I suppose, to the north 
of England: it occurred to me in several localities. Triplax wnea, with the pre- 
ceding, but less numerous; occasionally on tree agarics also, and on the oak as 
well as the alder: about its northern boundary on the east side of the island. 
Cis boleti and festivus, on Polyporus versicolor and P. vulgaris ; Salpingus foveolatus, 
base of Polypori; Orchesia micans, on Polyporus radiatus of the alder, in various 
localities. Carida flenuosa (which formerly I had both taken and bred from this 
fungus, gathered in this vicinity), did not occur on this occasion. Lathridius 
nodifer and minutus, from dried-up agarics growing upon and beneath alders; the 
first locally numerous. 
From the hills:—Carabus nitens, high moors at Broadstruther; Patrobus 
excavatus, plentiful on Cheviot and Hedgehope up to the summits (no trace of the 
Scottish mountain species P. assimilis); Calathus melanocephalus, Cheviot and 
Hedgehope up to the summit, nearly all were of the dark mountain variety ; 
C. micropterus, Cheviot and Hedgehope ; Anchomenus fuliginosus, Cheviot: Ptero- 
stichus orinomus, top of Cheviot; P. wthiops, in the Bizzle, Cheviot ; Amara luni- 
collis, in Henshole, Cheviot ; Bradycellus cognatus and collaris, Cheviot and Hedge- 
hope; Autalia puncticollis, Sharp, in Dunsdale, Cheviot (1869) ; Ocalea badia, one 
in a birch fungus (Polyporus betulinus), in Goldscleugh wood, Cheviot ; Oxypoda 
vupicola, Rye, Cheviot ; Homalota clavipes, Sharp, Henshole, Cheviot, also Hedge- 
