THE ENTOMOLOGIST’S WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER. 
7 
3. Minusculella. L. fig.; desc. 
4. Tiliae. L. fig.; desc. 
5. Lonicerarum. L. fig. ; desc. 
6. Desperatella. 
7. Aceris. Mine fig. 
8. iEneofasciala. 
9. Cryptella. 
10. Weaveri. L. fig.; desc. 
11. Argyropeza. L. fig.; desc. 
12. Sericopeza. 
13. Assimilella. 
14. Vimineticola. L. fig.; desc. 
15. Turicensis. 
16. Arcuata. L. fig. desc. 
17. Centifoliella. L. fig. ; desc. 
18. Argentipedella. L. fig.; desc. 
1 9. Betulicola. Desc. 
20. Gratiosella. 
21. Continuella. Mine fig. ; desc. 
22. Alnetella. L. fig.; desc. 
23. Mespilicola. 
24. Splendidissima. Mine fig. ; desc. 
25. Luteella. Mine fig.; desc. 
26. Atricollis. L. fig. ; desc. 
27. Myrtillella. L. fig. ; desc. 
28. Poterii. L. fig. ; desc. 
29. Pomella. Desc. 
30. Freyella. 
31. Tormentillella. Mine fig.; desc. 
32. Agrimoniella. 
33. Paradoxa. 
34. Speciosa. 
35. Ariella. 
36. Helianthemella. Mine fig. 
37. Rhamnella. Mite fig. 
38. Pulverosella. L. fig.; desc. 
39. Sorbi. Mine fig. ; desc. 
40. Ulmivora. L. fig. ; desc. 
Hence with fourteen species in the 
above list we have complete information, 
but with respect to the other twenty-six 
much remains to be done. 
1. Atricapitella has not yet been dis- 
tinguished in the larva state ; and 
the larvee of 
15. Turicensis (see Int. iv. p. 15) and 
20. Gratiosella are in the same pre- 
dicament. 
2. Aucupariee. The mine of this spe- 
cies is very different from that of Sorbi, 
which latter, commencing with a slender 
gallery, terminates in a complete blotch ; 
the mine of Aucupariee has much resem- 
blance with that of Viscerella, but often 
runs along the margin of the mountain- 
ash leaf, going in and out of the serra- 
tures. 
6. Desperatella. The larva mines the 
leaves of the wild apple in October, and 
generally occurs on the smallest bushes, 
sometimes in extraordinary abundance. 
The mine is a tortuous gallery, with a 
slender central thread of excrement: 
the larva is bright green (Frey, Linn. 
Ent. xi. p. 385). 
7. Aceris. The larva feeds in the 
leaves of the maple ( Acer campestris) in 
July, and from the middle of September 
to the middle of October. 
8. Mneofasciata. It may be well to 
quote here the following passage from 
the ‘Intelligencer,’ vol. v. p. 140: — 
“ I can now distinguish the larvae of 
the two species on Agrimonia Eupatoria. 
N. Agrimonice is in the larva state in 
September, and before the end of that 
month is already in cocoon inside the 
leaf; its cocoon is blackish. This oc- 
curred last autumn near Paris in the 
greatest plenty; on the other hand, 
N. ceneofasciata appears some weeks 
later, not till the middle of October ; it 
creeps out of the leaf in order to make 
its mine on the ground ; I found it again 
near Zurich, and Herr Schmid appears 
to have met with it at Frankfort-on-the- 
Maine. — Professor Frey, Zurich; 
Jan. 3, 1859.” 
See also Int. vol. iv. p. 27. 
9. Cryptella. I believe I have had the 
larva of this figured, but if so I have lost 
the drawing : the larva and mine are 
