568 ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
Birch ALL j Edwin. Notes on the Lepidoptera of Ireland. Ent. 
Monthly Mag. vol. i. pp. 270-272. 
Blake^ C. a. Description of a new species of Cuban Lepido- 
ptera. Proc. Ent. Soc. Philad. vol. iv. pp. 313-314 : (8) 
May 1865. 
ButleRj a. G. Description of six new species of Diurnal Lepi- 
doptera in the British Museum Collection. Proc. Zoolo- 
gical Society^ 1865, pp. 430-434, pi. 25 (read May 9, 1865). 
. Description of six new species of Exotic Butterflies in 
the Collection of the British Museum. Ibid. pp. 455-459, 
pi. 26 (read May 23, 1865). 
. Descriptions of the characters of six new species of Rho- 
palocerous Lepidoptera in the British Museum, with notes 
on the allied species. Ibid. pp. 481-486. 
. Description of a new species of Moi'pho in the Collection 
of the British Museum. Ent. Monthly Mag. vol. ii. p. 81. 
. Description of four new species of Butterflies in the 
Collection of the British Museum. Ann. & Mag. Nat. 
Hist. 3rd ser. vol. xvi. pp. 397-399: December 1, 1865. 
. Monograph of the species of Charaxes, a genus of Diur- 
nal Lepidoptera. Proc. Zool. Soc. 1865, pp. 623-639, 
pis. 36-37. 
. Descriptions of Six Butterflies new to Science, belong- 
ing to the genera Heterochroa and Romaleosoma. Ibid, 
pp. 667-673 cum, figg. 
Bremer, Otto. Lepidopteren Ost-Sibiriens, insbesondere des 
Amur-Landes. Mem. Acad. Imp. Sci.St. Petersb. tome viii. 
pp. 1-103, with 8 plates: June 1864 (read May 8, 1863). 
This memoir contains a critical revision of all the species of 
Lepidoptera discovered in Eastern Siberia and the region of the 
Amur, and is founded chiefly on the specimens collected by 
Badde, Maack, and Wulffius. The total number of species 
here cited is 483, of which 130 are described as new and 
hitherto peculiar to the district. Menetries has described 22 
new species in Sclirenck^s ^Amur-Lande,'' raising the whole num- 
ber of recently detected forms to 152, and leaving 336 as the 
number of previously described species. Of these, 20 belong to 
the fauna of China and Japan, and 33 are peculiar to Russian 
territory ; the remainder, 283 species, are more or less generally 
distributed in Europe. The various groups are represented in 
the following proportions 154 species, Sphingidee 
4 species, Besudae 1 species, Zygamidcc 5 species, Bombyema 46 
