146 CATALOGUE OF MOTHS. 



104. D. badiella, Hub. 



Depressai'ia badiella. Staint. Man., vol. ii., p, 328. 

 „ „ Meyr. Hdbk. Brit. Lep., p. 627. 



Meyrick gives Yorkshire as its most northerly known station, 

 but it occurs both in Northumberland and Durham, though I 

 have but few records. Mr. Maling includes it in his list in the 

 Transactions for 1875, p. 282. Mr. Sang took it on the railway 

 banks at Darlington in 1878, and it was captured at Hawthorn 

 Tower, near Seaham Harbour, by Mr. Bankes in 1885. 



105. D. pastinacella, Stain. 



Depressaria pastinacella. Staint. Man., vol. ii., p. 328. 

 ,, discipunctella. Meyr. Hdbk. Brit. Lep., p. 630. 



A local species, and only taken in these counties by Mr. 

 Gardner, who captured it at Greatham. 



106. D. heracliana, De Geer. 



Depressaria heracliana. Staint. Man., vol. ii., p. 328. 

 „ ,, Meyr. Hdbk. Brit. Lep., p. 629. 



A very common insect, no doubt occurring wherever the food 

 plant grows. The "Manual" gives it as being abundant both 

 at Newcastle-on-Tyne and at Darlington. Mr. Maling recorded 

 it in the Transactions for 1875, p. 282. Mr. Corder has taken 

 it at Sunderland, and it is very plentiful all around Hartlepool. 

 The larva feeds in the seed heads of Heracleum sphondylium. 



GELEGHIA, Hub. 



107. Gelechia cinerella, CI. 



Gelechia cinerella. Staint. Man., vol. ii., p. 329. 

 Recurvaria ,, Meyr. Hdbk. Brit. Lep., p. 607. 



The only Northumbrian record I hare of this insect is that 

 the late J. B. Hodgkinson marked it in a list he supplied me of 

 insects he had taken in the west of that county. In Durham 

 Mr. Backhouse got it at Shotley, the "Manual" marks it as 

 occurring regularly at Darlington, and Mr. Sang took it there 



