AND THEIR TRANSFORMATIONS. 191 



margin ; towards the middle of the costa a short, oblique, thickish, black streak bends outwards, and some blac 

 dots placed transversely, with an apical row of minute black dots. Taken in woods, in the south of England, 

 in June. 



Species 42. — Anacampsis aleella"' — (Fabricius; Stephens; Wood, fig. 1225; and our Plate CVII., Fig. 2) 

 — Expands 5 or 6 lines ; fore wings white, very much clouded with black, forming more or less confluent spots ; 

 an oblique fascia at the base, and an irregular streak from thence to the apex. Taken in gardens about the end 



of June. 



'' Synonyme. — Recurvaria nana, Hawortli. 



Species 43. — Anacampsis interruptella (Hiibner ; Haworth ; Wood, fig. 1226 ; and our Plate CVII., 

 Fig. 3) — Expands 5 lines ; fore vrings somewhat ashy or pale, with a broad brown streak running interruptedly 

 from the base to the apex. Near London, and in Sussex, in June. 



Species 44. — Anacampsis fulvescens — (Haworth ; Wood, fig. 1227 ; and our Plate CVII., Fig. 4) — 

 Expands 5 lines; fore wings pale fulvous, with very slight brown clouds or irrorations ; hind wings leaden-brown, 

 shining. Taken near London, Dover, and Hertford, in June. 



Species 45. — Anacampsis fuscescens — (Haworth ; Wood, fig. 1228 ; and our Plate CVII., Fig. 5) — 

 Expands 4^ lines ; fore wings gray-brown, vrith the base and apical portion darker, with a few (three) small 

 obscure dusky clouds or dots in the middle of the wing. Near London, June. 



Species 46. — Anacampsis alternella — (Hiibner, &c. ; Wood, fig. 1229 ; and our Plate CVII., Fig. 6) — 

 Expands 6^ lines ; fore wings snowy white, with one or two black spots at the base, followed by a rather oblique 

 fascia, and a triangular black costal patch before the middle ; then two dots on the opposite margins, and a largish 

 black dot on the hinder margin, with several minute ones on the extreme edge. Taken in the Kentish woods, 

 in June. 



Species 47. — Anacampsis angcstella — (Hubner; Haworth; Wood, fig. 1230, and our Plate CVII., 

 Fig. 7) — Expands about 6 inches ; fore wings sulphur-yellow, with four black fasciae, the first at the base, 

 the second preceding, and the third beyond the middle ; these being generally broad, nearly confluent, scarcely 

 reaching either the costa or inner margin, but sometimes reduced to small spots, a fourth broad black fascia near 

 the apical margin ; costa sUghtly edged with black. Beginning of June, in various places near London. 



Species 48. — Anacampsis albimaculea — (Haworth; Wood, fig. 1231, and our Plate CVII., Fig. 8) — 

 Expands 5^ lines ; fore wings black, with an anterior white fascia, often not reaching to the costa ; a second in 

 the middle, sometimes slightly interrupted, and two whitish spots on the opposite margins of the wing ; liind 

 wings black. Taken with the last species, and possibly a variety of it. 



Species 49. — Anacampsis 4-puncta p — (Haworth ; Wood, fig. 1232, and our Plate CVII., Fig. 9) — 

 Expands 6 lines ; fore wings narrowed, black or blackish, with a yellovyish but almost obsolete patch near the 

 base, another more conspicuo«is and sinuated across the middle, and two dots, opposite to each other, on the 

 costal and inner margin of the wing ; hind wings whitish. Near London, August. 



* Synonyme. — Tinea Scopoiella, Huhnet. 



Species 50. — Anacampsis bifasciella — (Fabricius? Stephens; Wood, fig. 1233, and our Plate CVII., 

 Fig. 10) — Expands from 6 to 8i^ lines ; fore wings narrow, black, shining, with a patch at the base, two fasciae 



