BIBLIOGRAPHY: LEPIDOPTERA, 1885-6-7. 



61 



Joseph Chafpell. Cheshire, Lancashire, Derbyshire. 



Obnoxious and Injurious Insects [Sesia tipidiformis very common at 

 Bowdon and Manchester ; S. spheoiforinis, sparingly on Chat Moss ; S. beui- 

 beciformis, very destructive near Manchester ; Zeiizera cesciili at Burton-on- 

 Trent ; and Cossiis ligniperda, common in Dunham Park, sparingly all round 

 Manchester, and an oak tree quite riddled near Peover, Cheshire]. Young 

 Nat., Dec. 1887, viii. 228. 



Wm. Eagle Clarke. Yorkshire. 

 Heliothis peltigera in Yorkshire [on the sandhills at Kilnsea, Holderness, 

 just out of pupa, 1 6th Sep. 1885 : new to Yorkshire fauna]. Ent. Mo. Mag., 

 Oct. 1885, xxii. 106. 



Richard Coby. Lancashire. 

 Nyssia zonaria in Lancashire [at Crossens near Southport, many specimens ;, 

 food-plant knapweed]. Ent., June 1886, xix. 158. 



T. D. A. CocKERELL. Yorkshire. 

 On Melanism [with a reference to Eupithecia albipunciala var. angelicata 

 Prest, from Selby]. Ent., March 1887, xx. 58-59. 



[J. A. Cooper]. Derbyshire. 

 [A Series of Tephrosia biundularia Bork., from Derby, exhibited to South 

 London Ent. Soc, Nov. loth, 1887]. Young Nat., Dec. 1887, viii. 234;. 

 Ent. Mo. Mag., Dec. 1887, xxiv. 162; Ent., Dec. 1887, xx. 333. 



[Mr. Cropper]. Lancashire.. 

 [Nonag^ria neurica from Lancashire exhibited to Cambridge Ent. Society], 

 Ent., April 1885, xviii. 128. 



Elizabeth Cross. Lincolnshire. 

 Nemeophila plantaginis Double-brooded [in Lincolnshire, where it occurs 

 in great numbers on the sandy warrens near Applel^y]. Ent., Sep. 1886, 

 xix. 231. 



Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Isle of Man, Lancashire, 

 C. W. Dale. Derbyshire, Durham, Northumberland. 



The History of our British Butterflies. [This is issued in the form of a 

 separately-paged supplement to the 'Young Naturalist,' and enters in great 

 detail into the. whole history and range of the various species, collated from 

 all possible sources of information. The Beverley records iox Faptlio viachaon 

 are given at pp. 5-6, and for P. podalirhis at p. 7 ; Robson's record of a large 

 flight of Fieri s brassicce at Hartlepool is repeated at p. 15 ; Gonepteryx rhanuii 

 stated not to have been observed as Manx at p. 25 ; Colias hyale stated as 

 having occurred as far north as York in 1842, and in Yorkshire and Lan- 

 cashire in 1868, at pp. 35-6 ; absence of Thecla betiihr from Isle of Man, 

 Yorkshire, Durham, and Northumberland, and its presence in Lancashire 

 referred to at p. 39 ; absence of T. w-albtim from Isle of Man, and its 

 occurrence at Melton Wood near Doncaster noted at p. 41 ; the fraudulent 

 Yorkshire record ol T. pruni, and its inclusion as a Derbyshire insect on the 

 strength of one being in a box of captures within a few miles of Chesterfield, 

 referred to at p. 43 ; Geo. Wailes' record of Polyoniviatiis argiohcs for Nor- 

 thumberland and Durham repeated at p. 56 ; P. acis noted for Yorkshire and 

 Lincolnshire at p. 57 ; the presence of P. corydoii in Lancashire and its 

 absence from Yorkshire and Isle of Man noted at p. 65 ; detailed notices of 

 the occurrence in Northumberland, Durham, Yorkshire, and Lancashire of 

 P. agestis, and its varieties artaxgrxes, sal/iiacis, and alloiis, given at pp. 76-8 ; 

 the absence o{ Netneobins lucina from Northumberland, Durham, and the Isle 

 of Man, and its presence in Westmorland and Cumberland, noted at p. 82 ; 

 Yorkshire cited at p. 85 as the furthest northern locality for Afelanargia 

 galathea ; increasing scarcity of Hipparckia juegccra since i860 in the Durham 

 district, and its presence in the Isle of Man, noted at p. 90 ; Manx occurrence 

 of H. semele noted at p. 92 ; absence of //. tithoitus from Isle of Man noted 

 at p. 98 ; presence of var. arete of //. hyperaiitJnis in Yorkshire, and the 

 captu re in Durham of two individuals of that species without any spot whal- 

 March i88S. E 



