170 
THE ENTOMOLOGIST'S WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER. 
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COMMUNICATIONS, 
Lepidoptera. 
Tceniocampa Populeli. — Twelve speci- 
mens of this insect have made their ap- 
pearance in my breeding-cage within the 
past week; the pupae were obtained at 
the roots of poplars. — W. Thompson, 
4, Duttons Buildings, Mill Street , Crewe ; 
Feb. 20. 
Tephrosia Laricaria. — I have now by 
me the pupae of Laricaria, which I hope 
shortly to see in their last stage. The 
larva), which I beat from the larch while 
in Lancashire last August, are so varied 
in colour that it would not be possible to 
give an accurate description of them un- 
less they were before me. Having also 
taken and bred the larva of Crepuscularia 
(which feeds upon the oak), I state as my 
firm belief that L.aricaria is not a variety 
of it. I have taken Crepuscularia in the 
greatest abundance, both in this neigh- 
bourhood and elsewhere in the Midland 
Counties, but never took a single Lari- 
caria nor one intermediate variety. — Rev. 
Henry Burney, Wavendon Re c ton/ ; 
Feb. 20. 
Gnophos obscuraria. — With regard to 
Obscuraria, as far as my experience goes, 
I should decidedly incline to the opinion 
that it is a distinct species, and not a 
variety of Pullaria. About eighteen 
years ago, when mothiug on Parley 
Heath, in Hampshire, in company with 
Mr. Dale, we found the former insect in 
the most wonderful profusion that cau 
be conceived. They were at rest in the 
dry mounds of cut turf or peat, on brush- 
ing the sides of which with the net, they 
