170 
(Decemb 
.J'F*:''''.'^^'P!'^'^Pi^'^i^t^e New Forest.-The following are our best o^ 
tures taken m various parts of the Forest during the past season -/'• 
comn^on in May and June , P. cratce.i, not rare, in young fir pllntrons cTr 
saw onespecin^enin June,- A. Pa.Ma, ve^ abundant (luTT^el l^' 
VZTT^'^'' ^-^^^^^^'—"^ ^- ^.^«^a. .ales CO. Jn 1^^^^^^^^^^^ 
F. polychloros, common in the spring ; the larva, (from which we br^d a fin s2 
i.^^6,^ a, abundant, alsobredfromlarva; A GaZai/^e., a few ; F. sL?, coJm 1 
P.^r,^o.., males common, females three, P. ^,o. abundant ; 7^17 
wL P ^;'^^^^^^'^' ^- — H ^- ^--^-, larv. abundant oL sloe^ 
Whom. ^. ac^^enaWa, ^. dolol^rari., P. syrin,aria, B. consortaria, T. consZal 
P. cyt^sar^a N. v^r^data, E. porata, punctaria, and triUnearia, A. trigeZZa 
ternerata C ta^inata (abundant). A. strigmaria, S. plumaia, /'^W 
ruUg^nata S unjulata, L. .iretata, T. cn.ropkyllata, A. sulseHeata, Till 
Ejalum,ana, M. euphorliata (common), P. unguicula and Kamula, k ^2 1" 
i^. pras^nana A. cal^g^nosa, common, but worn. We obtained our specimens of thi 
and Mr Owen for furn:shxng me with the exact locality for the species, 
from the r!,!!; '"T "" "^^P''^^^^^^^- ^^ ^^-^ -ptures were T. latis, fresl 
very late C. dihda. H. mcUtans, C. cytherea (abundant), A. puta A saucia 
so.er.lN.umlrosa, laja, triangulum, ana neglecta (2) , C. IffinisTcoluam 
c^Zred • " ""T" ^"^'^°-^^*i — y tree. Besides the above, w 
captured an immense number of common species not worth recording.-J E & H 
Eamsay Cox, W. Dulwich, S.E. ^ o- J^.&n. 
Lepidoptera captured at Darlington.-l annex a list of a few things which I 
have met with this season ; all of them, excepting C. allersana, were taken within 
about them ; the wonder xs, that, though I have lived here and collected assiduously 
for the last twenty years, I never before met with them in this locality. Tkyaiira 
batrs, one at sugar; Macaria lUurata, common, Mi.odia Eatzeiurgiana (common • 
among spruce firs) I never took before; Halonota tetragonana, one, beaten out; 
Coccyx nanana, in the same manner as M. Rat.elurgiana , Retinia pinicolana, 
common among Scotch firs ; Retinia pinivorana, one, among Scotch firs ; Carpocapsa 
grossana one, beaten out ,- Catoptria allersana, one bred, larva in April , Eup.ciUa 
atr^cap^tana, one flying; Lampronia lu.ella, one, beaten out; Cerostoma lucella, 
a few from young oaks, T find that by day they generally drop straight down, but 
not towards evening; QelecMa Mouffetella, one bred; QelecUa dodecella, a few 
from fir; Zellena kepariella, one, beaten out (no yew or privet in the wood); 
Asychna profugella, one, beaten out. The larva of QelecUa rhombella is very 
abundant m the apple bushes in hedges about the town. The moths are all of a 
very dark grey colour, none of them being light like southern specimens.-J. Sano 
High Kow, Darlmgton, September 6th, 1869. ' , 
Thera juniperata near Edinhurgh.~On the 28th of October, I beat one sicklyji 
