RHYNCHOTA. 
393 
RHYNCHOTA. 
Douglas, J. W., and Scott, John. British Hemiptera : Addi- 
tions and Corrections. Ent. Monthly Mag. vol. iv. pp. 238- 
246, and 265-271, pi. 2. 
Contains descriptions of newly discovered British species of 
Heteroptera, with additional synonyms relating to species de- 
scribed in the authors’ work on those insects. 
, . Remarks on the names applied to the British He- 
miptera-Heteroptera. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 4th series, 
vol. i. pp. 278-282. 
This paper is in reply to some remarks of Pascoe’s noticed 
below. 
, . List of captures of Hemiptera in Palestine and 
Syria; together with descriptions of several new species. 
Ent. Monthly Mag. vol. v. pp. 27-33, 65-68, 114-118, and 
135-139: 1868. 
Fibber, F. X. Europaische neue oder wenig bekannte Bytho- 
scopida, Verhandl. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. in Wien, Band 
xviii. pp. 449-464. 
. Die europaischen ^/i«-Arten. Ibid. pp. 465-478, Taf. 
5 &6. 
Gurrin-Meneville, E. Etudes sur les Insectes consideres 
comme la cause de la Maladie des Cannes k sucre, dans les 
lies Maurice et de la Reunion. Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1868, 
pp. 123-127. [Relates chiefly to the Coccidse.] 
Haglund, C. J. E. Hemiptera nova. Stettiner ent. Zeitung, 
1868, pp. 150-163. 
Landios, L. Anatomic der Bettwanze {Cimex lectulariuSj L.) 
mit Beriiksichtigung verwandter Ilernipterengeschlechter. 
Zeitschr. fiir wiss. Zool. xviii. pp. 206-224, pis. 11 & 12. 
Pascoe, F. P. Remarks on the names applied to the British 
Hemiptera- Heteroptera. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 4th ser. 
vol. i. pp. 94-97. 
In this paper Pascoe criticises the names applied to various 
genera of Heteroptera, and especially the diversity of practice in 
this respect to be met with in the works of various authors. He 
is inclined to adopt the plan of taking the species which stands 
first among those described or indicated by the founder of a 
genus as the type form of that genus, but also admits the rule of 
taking the best known, which are generally the commonest ” 
species as the types in breaking up an old geuus. Some of the 
questions raised by Pascoe undoubtedly present considerable 
