434 
ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
localities and times of appearance of the insects, the food- 
plant of the larva, and sometimes a general description of the 
appearance of the latter. The work at present extends as far as 
the Tortricidae. With the later numbers are issued half sheets 
of a general ^ Catalogue of British Insects.^ 
VoLLENiiovEN, S. C. Snellen VAN. Essai d^une Eaune Ento- 
mologique de BArchipel Indo-Neerlandais. Seconde Mo- 
nographic : Eamille des Pierides. La Haye, 1865, pp. 70, 
with 7 plates. 
This second part of Vollenhoven^s / Entomological Fauna of 
the Indian Archipelago ^ is devoted to the group of the Pierides ; 
its contents will be indicated under that head. 
B. Separate Works. 
Constant, A. Catalogue des Lepidopteres du Departement de 
Saone-et-Loire. Autun, 1866, pp. 368. Publication de 
la Societe Eduenne. 
In this excellent Catalogue of the Lepidoptera of the depart- 
ment of the Saone-et-Loire the author enumerates no fewer 
than 1418 species inhabiting that district, and to a great many 
of these he appends notes relating to their habits and the 
localities in which they are to be met with. M. Constant has 
followed the classification, and in most cases the nomenclature, 
adopted by Staudinger and Wocke in their catalogue of Euro- 
pean Lepidoptera. 
Koch, Gabriel. Die Indo-Australische Lepidopteren-Fauna 
in ihrem Zusammenhang mit der Europseischen, nebst den 
drei Hauptfaunen der Erde. 8vo. pp. xii & 119, with 1 
plate. Leipzig, Deni eke, 1865. 
In this important work Koch treats of the geographical dis- 
tribution of the Lepidoptera in general, with especial reference 
to the faunas of the East Indies and Australia. ‘ His results will 
be indicated further on. A few new species are described.' 
Trimen, Boland. Bhopalocera Africie australis ; a Catalogue 
of South African Butterflies : comprising descriptions of all 
the known species, with notices of their larvae, pupae, locali- 
ties, habits, seasons of appearance, and geographical distri- 
bution. 8vo. London and Cape Town, 1862-1866, pp. 353 
and 7 plates. 
Of this valuable work, the general scope of which is suffi- 
ciently indicated by its title as given above, the second part 
appeared in 1866, and thus comes into the present ^ Becord.^ 
The first portion, published in 1862, included descriptions of 
the South African Butterflies belonging to the groups Pa^n- 
lionideSj Pierides, DanaideSj Acrceides, and Nymphalides , and 
oecupied pp. 1-183 ; the second and concluding part contains 
