LIST OF NOUFOLK KAWFLIKS. 
523 
garden is so noted, and tempted the Bees, which stuck to it and 
remained fast : the Sparrows then began to eat them, and having 
acquired a taste for Bees, afterwards proceeded to take them from 
the hives. The same method employed in the case of tlie Tits 
would, no doubt, bo eilicacious in teaching them a lesson, viz., 
a small mouse trap placed at the entrance of the hole of every 
hive. It is said that the Blue Tit takes Bees, but the captured 
ones which I have seen in Surrey have all been the Great Tit. 
Tits are such pretty birds, however, and so readily adapt them- 
selves to boxes put up for them to nest in, that one regrets to see 
them killed, but I confess to no such feelings of compassion for 
the Sparrow — the enemy of all farmers and poultry-keepers. — 
J. H. G., JuN. 
xviir. 
FAUNA AND FLUB A OF NOliFOLK. 
Taut XII. riiYToniACOUS IIv-MENOiTEnA (Sawflies). 
By John B. Bridgman, F.L.S., F.E.S. 
Read 2']th September, 1887. 
In presenting this list of Norfolk Sawflies, I am fully aware 
of its incompleteness, owing to its being mainly the result of 
my own collecting, with a few additions kindly given me by 
Messrs. F. Norgate and E. A. Atmore. Owing to want of time, 
I have been unable to go far from home, the localities are therefore 
chiefly in the neighbourhood of Norwich. I have no doubt that 
if any one had the time, inclination, and leave to hunt the eastern 
part of Norfolk, it would be found to be very prolific in Sawflies. 
I have found a few notices in Paget’s ‘ Natural History of 
Yarmouth,’ Curtis’s ‘ British Entomology,’ Curtis’s ‘ Farm Insects,’ 
and Stephens’ ‘ Illustrations of British Entomology,’ of which 
