REVIEWS. 615 
side view of a segment). This must not be confounded with the bluish 
larva of Eudryas grata Fabr. (Fig. 130) which differs from the Alypia cater- 
pillar in being bluish, and in wanting the white patches on the sides of the ` 
body, and the more prom- Fig. 133. 
Larva of Acoloithus. 
va i 
gregarious (Fig. 133) REI in companies of a dozen or more and eating 
the softer nri of the leaves. It is quite common in the Western and 
Southern Sta 
ere are over a hundred cuts in this pamphlct, and the mere dissem- 
ination of these illustrations will do much towards creating a taste for 
entomology in the young. The author sie ibd admits inelegancies of 
expression, which mar an otherwise clear and readable style. He com- 
per. We trust that the next report will be improved in this respect, as 
the excellent cuts need good, hard paper. 
AMERICAN CRABs.*— In this admirable paper, describing many of our 
Peabody Academy of Socii The desc ations seem to be carefully 
and conscien ntiously prepar The specimen of Gelasimus palustris, with 
the large fingers Airis nearly equal in size, and mentioned as a 
remarkable anoma aly in vol. iii, p. 557, of the NATURALIST, is now referred 
by the author to a new species, Gelasimus pugnar. 
Not 1, No.1. Ocypodoidea, with four peque Lp By Sid- 
ney I. hh Tres the Transactions of M Don. Academy, vol. ii). p.63. 1870. 
