INSECTS 



STAPHYLINIDAE {continued) 



Homalota currax, Kr. Bickleigh Vale 



— insecta. Thorns. Valley of the Tavy 



— pavens, Er. Bickleigh Vale 



— cambrica, Woll. Bickleigh Vale 



X — planifrons, Wat. Watermouth, North Devon 

 (Power) 



— gregaria, Er. 



— longula, Heer. Slapton Ley (Wollaston) 



— luteipes, Er. Plymouth 



— fallax, Kr. 



— volans, Scriba. 



— vestita, Grav. 



— silvicola, Fuss. Ivyhridge 



— vicina, Steph. Mr. Keys has also taken at 



Plymouth the bituberculate form of the 

 male 



— graminicola, Gyll. 



— halobrectha, Sharp. 



— algae, Hardy, (puncticeps, Thorns.) 



— fungivora, Thorns. 



— angustula, Gyll. Buckfast 



— debilis, Er. 



— circellaris, Grav. 



— elegantula, Bris. Plymouth, South Brent 



— aegra, Heer. Slapton Ley ; somewhat doubtful 



— cuspidata, Er. 



— eremita. Rye. Dartmoor, valley of the Plym, nr. 



Ditsworthy Warren (J. H. Keys) 



— analis, Grav. 



— decipiens, Sharp 



— depressa, Gyll. 



— aquatica, Thorns, (subaenea, Sharp) 



— xanthoptera, Steph. 



— incognita, Sharp. Lee Valley, N. Devon (Power) 



— euryptera, Kirby 



— trinotata, Kr. 



— triangulum, Kr. 



— fungicola, Thorns. 



— coriaria, Kr. 



— sodalis, Er. 



— divisa, Mark. 



— nigricornis. Thorns. 



— palustris, Kies. 



X — puberula. Sharp. Watermouth, North Devon 

 (Power) 



— oblita, Er. 



— sericea, Muls. 



f — indubia. Sharp. Seaton (Power) 



— nigra, Kr. 



— germana. Sharp 



— cauta, Er. (parvula, Mann. ; parva, Brit. Coll. nee. 



Sahl.) 



— villosula, Kr. 



— macrocern. Thorns. Dartmoor; one specimen 



(J. H. Keys) 



— atramentaria, Gyll. 



— marcida, Er. 



— longicornis, Grav. 



— sordida. Marsh. 



— testudinea, Er. 



— aterrima, Grav. 



— laticollis, Steph. (fusca, Sharp) 



t — orbata, Er. Barrucane Bay, N. Devon 



— fungi, Grav. 



var. dubia, Sharp 

 var. clientula, Er. 



— orphana, Er. Seaton Beach (Power) 



STAPHYLINIDAE {continued) 



Gnypeta labilis, Er. 



— coerulea. Sahib. Ivybridge (J. H. Keys) ' 

 Tachyusa atra, Grav. Slapton Ley 

 Myrmecopra uvida, Er. 



— sulcata, Kies. 

 Falagria sulcata, Payk. 



t — sulcatula, Grav. Exeter ; in the nest of Formica 

 rufa (Parfitt) 



— thoracica. Curt. 



— obscura, Grav. 

 Autalia impressa, Ol. 



— rivularis, Grav. 



Encephalus complicans, West. Lundy Island 

 Gyrophaena affiinis, Mann. 



— fasciata. Marsh. 

 Agaricochara laevicoUis, Kr. 

 Epipeda plana, Gyll. Barnstaple 

 Actocharis Readingii, Sharp. Under seaweed, etc., 



usually below high-water mark. Plymouth 

 (Reading and Wollaston). Mr. Keys has only 

 taken it on the Cornish side, and also Phytosus 

 spinifer and balticus, both of which probably 

 occur in Devon 

 Leptusa analis, Gyll. Stozvfird Woods, Ivybridge, Bick- 

 leigh Vale, Mary Tavy 



— fumida, Er. 

 Sipalia ruficollis, Er. 



— testacea, Bris. Batten, Plymouth (J. H. Keys) 

 Bolitochara bella, Mark. 

 Diglossa mersa, Hal. Batten, Plymouth 

 Oligota inflata, Mann. 



— pusillima, Heer. (ruficornis. Sharp) 



— granaria, Er. 



— apicata, Er. 

 Myllaena kraatzii. Sharp 



— brevicornis, Matth. 

 Gymnusa brevicollis, Payk. Dartmoor 

 Hypocyptus longicornis, Payk. 



— laevinsculus. Marsh. 



— ovuluim, Heer. Exmoor 



— seminulum, Er. 



— punctum. Mots (seminulum, Er. var.), Seaton 

 Conosoma littoreum, L. 



— pubescens, Grav. 



— immaculatum, Steph. 



— lividum, Er. 

 Tachyporus obtusus, L. 



— formosus, Mat. Lundy Island 



— solutus, Er. 



— pallidus, Sharp 



— chrysomelinus, L. 



— humerosus, Er. 



— tersus, Er. 



— hypnorum, F. 



— pusillus, Grav. 



— brunneus, F. 

 Cilea silphoides, L. 



JTachinus flavipes, F. Haldon (Parfitt) 

 X — rufipennis, Gyll. Barnstaple (E. Saunders), Dart- 

 moor (J. H. Keys) 



— humeralis, Grav. 



— scapularis, Steph. Stoke Wood; in the tubes of 

 Boleti (Parfitt) 



* Mr. Keys' specimens of G. coerulea have been examined by 

 M. Fauvel, and he has pronounced them to belong to the species 

 which occurs chiefly in Finland and Scandinavia. He regards 

 G. coerulea as distinct from G. ripicola, with which it has been 

 regarded as synonymous. 



'95 



