334 Y.N.U. IN EDLINGTON AND WADWORTH WOODS. 
For the Conchological Section, in the absence of all its officers, 
Mr. W. Denison Roebuck, F.L.S., Leeds, reported that he and 
Mr. Riley Fortune, F.Z.S., Harrogate, were the only conchological 
collectors present, and that very little had been done. He had 
himself collected only in the vicinity and on the outskirts of 
Edlington and Wadworth Woods, where he had found Helix 
hispida in abundance, H. rotundata, H. aspersa, Jf. nemoralis, H. 
cantiana, Zua lubrica, Clausilia rugosa, Pupa umbilicata, Vitrina 
pellucida, Zonites cellarius, Z. alliarius, Z. nittidulus, Z. fulous, 
Z. purus var. margaritacea,and Z. crystallinus ; and of slugs, Arion 
ater, A. hortensis, A. bourguignati, A. minimus, and Limax agrestis. 
Mr. Fortune, collecting near Edlington village, added a couple of 
freshwater species to the list, Zimnea peregra and Anodonta cygnea. 
The whole list of mollusca for the day thus amounted to 22 species, 
of which only a couple were fluviatile ones, and five were slugs, the 
remainder land-shells. 
For the Entomological Section, the report was given by one of its 
Secretaries, Mr. A. E. Hall, F.E.S., who stated that the Section was 
well represented, the following members being present: Messrs. E. G. 
Bayford (Doncaster), W. E. Brady (Barnsley), H. H. Corbett 
(Doncaster), G. C. Dennis (York), R. Dutton (York), A. E. Hall 
(Sheffield), —. Hawkins (York), W. Hewett (York), George Jackson 
(York), William Mansbridge (Horsforth), G. T. Porritt, F.LS., 
F.E.S. (Huddersfield, President), and W. White (Sheffield). He 
was sorry that the captures to report were so few, for, although the 
members worked hard, the results were not very satisfactory. 
Coleoptera were collected by Mr. E. G. Bayford, who has 
furnished the following list. There were a few species taken he 
has yet to determine, which, should they prove anything worth 
reporting, will be duly recorded in ‘The Naturalist.’ Cychrus 
rostratus, Loricera pilicornis, Pterostichus striola, P. madidus, P. 
nigrita, Coccinella septem-punctata, C. 10-punctata, Halyzia 14- 
guttata, Sinodendron cylindricum, Aphodius fetens, A. fossor, 
Chrysomela hyperici, Crepidodera ferruginea, C. aurata (new to 
the district), and Apteropeda orbiculata. 
Of Lepidoptera, the imagines noted were Vanessa io, Ennomos 
angularia, Cidaria immanata, C. russata, Anchocelts litura, Xanthia 
silago, Euperia fulvago, Polia chi, Plusia gamma (common), Gonop- 
tera libatrix, Peronea comparana, P. variegana, and Ephippiphora 
bimaculana ; and Larve of Epione advenaria, Selenia illustra’ ta, 
Odontopera bidentata, Amphydasis betularia, Abraxas ulmata (eX 
ceedingly abundant), Zomaspilis marginata, Eupithecia trisignaria 
(taken by Mr. Jackson), Z£. Jariciata (common on _ larch in 
‘Naturalist 
