APPENDIX. 
137 
Pieris CratcBgi, Black-veined White. Woods near Wor- 
cester. 
Nemerob'ms Lucina, Duke of Burgundy Fritillary. Trench* 
Woods, on the eastern side of Worcester, and Cracombe. 
Melitcea Artemis, Greasy Fritillary. Not common. 
Trench Woods. A specimen was taken on the wing in 
Friar Street, Worcester, April 1834. 
M, Selene, Small Pearl-border Fritillary. Haunts the bog 
on the western side of the Worcestershire Beacon, Great 
Malvern, in May and June. 
M. Euphrosyne, Pearl -bordered Fritillary. Abundant in 
Bewdley Forest. Also met with in Perry and Nunnery 
Woods, &c. 
Argynnls Adippe, High Brown Fritillary. Shrawley 
Woods. 
A. Aglaia, Dark-green Fritillary. Shrawley Woods. 
A, Paphia, Silver-washed Fritillary. A fine local insect, 
abundant in Shrawley Woods. 
Vanessa C. Album, Comma Butterfly. Described as 
" rather uncommon'* in Rennie*s Conspectus, but of frequent 
occurrence with us. The caterpillar feeds on the hop, which 
may account for this circumstance. 
V, Polychloros, Large Tortoiseshell. Nunnery Wood, 
Northwick, &c. Scarce. 
V. Urticce, Small Tortoiseshell. Most abundant on the 
banks of the Severn. 
y. lo, Peacock Butterfly. A beautiful though common 
denizen of the woods and lanes. 
V, Antiopa, Camberwell Beauty. Very uncommon, but 
has been captured at Barbourne, close to Worcester. 
* These woods, situated on an eminence near the junction of tlie red marl and 
the lias, about five miles on the east side of Worcester, are much resorted to by 
entomologists for the rare insects that are met with there. Sale Way, one of the 
ancient British Roads, passes near, and the name of Trench seems to imply the site 
of an old castrametation, traces of which, indeed, appear on the verge of the wood. 
T 
