MR. J. EDWARDS ON BAGOUS LUTOSUS, GYLL., IN NORFOLK. I03 
Limnichus pygm.eus. Mr. Morley’s reference to this species 
does not indicate either an additional locality 
or a widening range. The insect was already 
recorded as common in a few spots on the 
cliffs at Cromer ( antea vol. vi. p. 519). 
Bythinus bulbifer I found to be the commonest species of 
its genus in Norfolk, and I had already noted 
it as locally abundant. 
Anomala Frischi is a common sand-hill species ; there is 
consequently nothing remarkable in the find- 
ing of its pupa on the W’interton sand-hills. 
Ceuthorrhynchus picitarsis, Bledius pallipes, Colenis 
dentipes, and Apion pubescens, found by 
Mr. Elliman at Cromer. I did omit from my 
List : the two former because they were 
omitted by Mr. Elliman himself from what 
purported to be a complete list of his captures 
in this County furnished by him to me in 1898 ; 
and the two latter because they are not in- 
cluded in the last named list nor in that given 
in the Entomologist’s Record, vol. vii. p. 306, 
neither were they otherwise notified to me. 
Agrilus viridis. Mr. Morley says that the Agrilus viridis 
of my List is certainly Agrilus angustulus, 111 . 
I had already noted the probability that 
Burrell’s viridis was really angustulus ; but 
unless the material on which Burrell’s record 
was based has been found and identified, it is 
difficult to see where the certainty comes in. 
I believe that Burrell died in 1825, and my 
own efforts to ascertain what had become of 
his collections met with no success whatever. 
Leptura s an guinole nt a . Whether the records for this 
species are “ most unsatisfactory ” or not is 
necessarily a matter of opinion ; but with 
regard to the statement that “ no authentic 
British specimen is known to exist,” it may 
be well to point out that Fowler (Col. Brit. 
