385 
At Cawston, C. reclusa and S. fucifonnis have been plentiful 
on dwarf Sallow and Honeysuckle respectively, but I was too 
busy searching Alder to care to take many of these. 
Trklens has been unusually common. I took eleven larva; in 
September and October on Sallow, Whitethorn, and on posts and 
rails. I have never found Tridem so abundant as Psi usually is. 
Bemheciformls larvie wore, as usual, very abundant, and in the 
early spring I brought homo from Foxley Wood alone as many 
Sallow “spoils” (or butt-ends chopped off the hurdle stakes) as 
filled a large wheelbarrow. Each of these “spoils” contained one 
or more Bemheci/ormls. 
Of Coleopfera I will only mention a few of those that interc.<-ted 
mo most. 
Duiing July, the big Longicorn (^Saperda carclutrias) was abun- 
dant in the larva, pupa, and imago stages in Aspen, Tacamahac, and 
other Poplars. I obtained many by splitting the trunks, and a 
few by searching the outside of the trees. 
Iwo beautiful steel-blue Weevils {Wiynchites pnbeseem) appeared 
on my beating-tray at Felthorpo. 
In Sparham I gathered about a dozen splendid blue and red 
beetles {Chrysomela distinyuenda) from a small bunch of Linaria 
vidyans during September and October. 
One well-marked specimen of Rhayium bi/asciatiim I raised 
from a white pupa, which I chipped out of a rotten rail at Dilham. 
On the salt marshes at Wells I swept about half a dozen 
specimens of the purple Aynon limonii from the Sea-lavender. 
