6 Ins. 
INSECTA. 
Tirol. A second instalment of insect bibliography referring to this 
district ; Gredler, Z. Ferd. (3) xix. pp. 299-304. 
Rothenstein. 0. Schmiedeknecht, S. E. Z. xxxvii. pp. 184-188. 
Florence. Address by A. Targioni-Tozzetti on the foundation of a 
station for agrarian entomology ; Bull. Ent. Ital. viii. pp. 3-18. 
Calabria, Results of entomological excursions ; S. Bertolini, tom. cit. 
pp. 48-63. 
Italy. Comparison of different periods of appearance, &c., of insects 
in 1876 & 1876 ; A. Villa, tom. cit. pp. 226-228. 
North Persia, Krasnovodsk, & Daghestan. Some general notes in the 
introduction to H. Christoph’s account of the Lepidoptera observed ; 
Hor. Ent. Ross. xii. p. 187 et scq. 
Libyan desert: Max Korb, S. E. Z. xxxvii. pp. 27-32, Very few 
specially African forms observed. 
Annual Report of the Entomological Society of the province of 
Ontario for 1875. Toronto : 1876, 8vo, pp. 54. 
Entomology at the Centennial Exhibition. Philadelphia : G. Dim- 
mock, Psyche, i. pp. 201-205. 
North Western Wyoming. General observations on the insects met 
with during Capt. Jones’s Expedition in 1873, with lists of the Hymenq- 
ptertty Lepidoptertty Coleopteray and Neuroptera observed. J. D. Putnam, 
P. Davenport Ac. i. pp. 187-191. Some Indian names for insects ob- 
tained during this Expedition are given, p. 192. 
Utah. A “Report on the Insects collected in the vicinity of Spring 
Lake Villa, Utah Co., Utah, during the summer of 1875,” 75 miles south 
of Salt Lake City, with lists of Ilymenopteray Lepidopteray Coleopteray 
and Neuroptera (observations by H. A. Hagen). J. D. Putnam, 1. c. 
pp. 193-206. 
Fiji. Observations on economy, &c., of Phy Ilium geryouy Gray, 
Phyhalosoma pyihoniuSy 'We^\iw.yEupholus lagopyguSyM.. C. V., Macrotoma 
lieroSy Heer, and Acroea andromachay F. ; Kleinschmidt, J. Mus. Godeffr. 
xii. p. 174. 
Insects observed in the Seychelles, Fiji, and New Zealand, by Filhol & 
de risle ; Pet. Nouv. ii. p. 50. 
Collecting and preserving. Instructions in a Greek periodical (not 
seen by the Recorder) are noticed in P. E. Soc. 1876, p. lix. See also 
Ent. Nachr. ii. pp. 22, 38-45 (figs.) ; 61, 93, 95, 107-110, 125, 126, 
143, 157. 
On the relative advantages of boxes and cabinets for arranging collec- 
tions ; G. Kraatz, Ent. MB. i. pp. 58-60. 
On the great Insect collections of the German capitals and Europe 
generally. Vienna, id. 1. c. pp. 121-123 ; Hamburg, W. Koltze, tom. cit. 
pp. 152 & 153. 
Description of frame and figure of a net named “ Porte-nappe,” for 
beating purposes ; J. Gallois, Feuil. Nat. iv. p. 72. See also Ent. Nachr. 
ii. p. 39. 
The gum oxudod from cherry trees recommended for mounting speci- 
mens, as it does not scale in drying ; E. Honnorat, Feuil. Nat. vi. p. 92. 
