ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
56 i 
of Nematus from rose-galls of the willow. lie regards these insects as pro- 
bably inquilinous. 
Neiu species : — • 
Plerygophora analisj Oosta^ Ann. Mus. Zool. Nap. ii. p. 66, fi-oin Australia. 
Polerus rufotorquatusj Costa, 1 . c, p. 97, from Parma. 
Lycla fasciatipennis, Costa, 1 . c. p. 97, from North Italy. — L. cavifrons, 
Cresson, Proc. Eut. Soc. Phil. iv. p. 246, from the Colorado Territory. 
JLophyrus insular is, Cresson, 1 . c. p. 1, from Cuba. 
Schizocerus ahdominuUs^ Cresson, /. c. p. 243, from the Colorado Territory. 
Selandria duhia, Cresson, I, c. p. 244, and S. moniana, Cress, ibid., from 
the Colorado Territory. 
Tenihredo pleuralis, Cresson, L c. p. 245, from the Colorado Territory. — '1\ 
aureola and T. dorsilinea, Costa, 1 . c. p. 67, from the Amazons. 
Trichiocampus yarhiyliettii, Costa, I, c. p. 103, from North Italy. 
Blennocampa croceipes, Costa, 1. c. p. 104, from Turin. 
Aneugmenus coronatus, Costa, /. c. p. 104, from Turin. 
Cerohactrus facialis, Costa, 1. c. p. 104, from Turin. 
LEPIDOPTERA. 
A. Works in progress. 
Felder, C. & R. Reise der Oesterreichischen Fregatte Novara 
um die Erde, &c. Zoologischer Theil, Zweiter Band, 
Zweite Abtlieilung, Lepidoptera. Heft I. Vienna, 1865, 
4to, pp. 136, with 21 plates. 
The first Lepidopterological part of this fine work is devoted 
exclusively to the Papilionides. In it MM. Felder publish full 
descriptions and figures of a great number of species of this 
group, of which they have already given diagnoses in the Wiener 
ent. Monatsschrift and Verhandl. zool.-bot. Gesellschaft in 
Wien. Many new species are also described ; but several of 
these have no connexion whatever with the ^ No varans ^ voyage. 
The illustrations are beautifully executed. 
Heinemann, H. von. Die Schmetterlinge Deutschlands und 
der Schweiz, systematise!! bearbeitet. Zweite Abtheilung. 
Kleinschmetterlinge, Band i. Heft 2. Die Zunsler. Bruns- 
wick, 1865, pp. vi, 214, & 27. 8vo. 
The first part of Heinemann^s work on the German and Swiss 
Microlepidoptera, published in 1863, contained the descriptions 
of the Tortrichia ; this second part includes the Pyralidina, to 
which the author gives a wide sense, taking in both Pyralidce 
and Cramhidee. The work is too well known to lepidopterists to 
need any further remarks upon its general execution. Besides 
