236 YORKSHIRE AND LINCOLNSHIRE UNIONS. 
other species show that the district should be a good one for the 
coleopterist. The following is as complete a list as could be got 
together, though I should have liked to have known what others 
obtained :— 
Bembidium femoratum. 
Melolontha cc 
orymbites c 
Corymbites Aiea 4 
pe ais quercus and var. 
ochropter 
Athous fiortnderhekdand 
discoidea. 
O colon. Sericosomus brunneus, 
Nitidula bipustulata. Dolopius marginatus. 
Necrophorus mortuorum Agriotes sputator. 
Necrophorus vespillo. Otiorhynchus tenebricosus. 
Necrophorus humator Otiorhynchus picipes. 
Silpha rug: tiorhynchus ovatus 
Silpha thoracica. Omias inus 
Anaitis ocellata. 
Platytarsus echinatus. 
Atactogenus exaratus. 
Phyllobius alneti. 
Phyllobius maculicornis. 
Phyllobius argentatu Ss. 
Telephorus nigricans and var. Cionus scrophulariz. 
Hypera suspiciosa 
Ceuthorhynchus litura. 
Ceeliodes quadrimaculatus. 
papal. 
Telephorus weve 
Telephorus lit Philonthus zeneus. 
Telephorus bicolor. eporaiis betulz. 
Ragonycha limba’ Luperus betulinus. 
Ragonycha pallida flavi 
Aphodius erraticus. Anaspis geoffroyi. 
Mr. Charles Crossland writes:—The mycologists joined and 
kept with the general botanists. Fungi were very scarce, not more 
than 3 Agarics, 2 Polyporid, 1 Uredinid, and 3 Discomycetes were 
collected. It is a splendid district for mycology, and no doubt at 
the proper time of the year the ground gone over will be very 
prolific in fungi and afford a rich harvest to the mycological student. 
The names of those gathered (mostly common ones) are as follow :— 
Collybia butyraceus Bull., Stropharia semiglobatus Batsch, Marasmuus 
“Naturalist, 
