636 
MR. W. H. TUCK’S ENTOMOLOGICAL NOTES. 
H. fluviatilis and H. ruficollis, but it takes time to be confirmed by the 
European coleopterists. In the Bury streams Dytiscus punctulatus 
occurs sparingly, as also does Hydroporus halensis : Deronectes 
depressus is frequent when the rivers are in flood. 
At Bungay, in August, I took a fine series of Coelambus versi- 
color which also occurs in the canal here. In the Waveney 
I also took Agathidium marginatum in flood refuse, and also 
Hydrsena testacea. Early in April, I found in a cellar in company 
with a large quantity of Blaps similis and B. mucronata, a fine speci- 
men of Blaps gigas (gages). Mr. E. A. Butler, to whom I sent it, 
thinks it must have been bred in Britain, to which it is practically 
a new addition. The following are new to Mr. Morley’s Suffolk 
list — Homalota mortuorum, Corticaria similata,Cyphon coarctatus — 
while among other notable captures were Philonthus ebeninus in 
a dead bird, Melee violaceus upon a garden flower, and the rare 
timber borer, Hylastes cunicularius — upon Wild Parsley at 
Hardwick. 
In Hemiptera, the best things I had were Verlusia rhombea, new 
to the county list, as is Atractotomus magnicornis which I beat 
from Fir in a Bungay garden. Altogether, I consider it was 
a good season for insects, although the weather at times was 
disappointing. 
