THE GENERAL SUBJECT, APID^. 
Ins. 125 
lijst van Nederlandsche Vliesvleugelige Insecten (Hymenoptera). 
Tijdschr. Eut. xix. pp. 211-257. 
Additions and corrections to tho author’s Catalogue of Netherlands 
Hymenoptera [Zool. Rec. x. p. 346]. 
Local Lists : — 
Scotland : P. Cameron, P. N. H. Soc. Glasg. ii. pp. 290-294, 304. 
S. England : E. Saunders, Ent. M. M. xiii. p. 114. 
Hamburg : A second instalment towards a Catalogue of the Hymen- 
opiera of this district [Zool. Rec. xii. p. 384] ; H. Beuthin, Yerh. Yer. 
Hamb. 1875 (1876), pp. 225-234. 
Mark Brandenburg : P. Rudow, Ent. Nachr. ii. p. 169. 
Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Iowa, Kansas, and New York (with descrip- 
tions by Cresson of two new species) ; J. D. Putnam, P. Davenport Ac. 
i. pp. 206-211. 
New Zealand : F. Smith, Tr. E. Soc. 1876, p. 473 et seq. 30 new 
species, all from the South Island. 
Apid^, 
Mora WITZ, F. Zur Bienenfauna der Caucasuslander. Hor. Ent. Ross, 
xii. pp. 3-69. 
Adds 173 to the known species from the Caucasus. One new genus 
and several new species are characterized. 
. In A. Fedchenko’s Puteshestvie v Turkestan [Travels in Turkes- 
tan] ; Part 13, Section ii., Zoogeographicheskia Izledovania, Divi- 
sion 5. Pcheli {Mellifera), fasc. 2, pp. 161-304, pis. i.-iii. St. 
Petersburg and Moscow ; 1876, 4to (forms part 3 of vol. xxi. of 
Nachr. Ges. Mosc.). 
Completes the discussion of the species, 438 in all, observed by the late 
A. Fedchenko in his explorations of Turkestan. This fasciculus refers 
to the Andrenides, but contains tables and index for the whole Apidai, 
the plates also in part illustrating the preceding portion [Zool. Rec. xii. 
p. 385]. Pt. iii. consists of highly magnified drawings of the copulatory 
organs of the males of 16 species of Anthophora, admirably delineated by 
Mme. Fedchenko. 
Smith, F. Catalogue of British Hymenoptera in the British Museum. 
Second Edition. Part 1. Andrenidm and Apidm. . (Catalogue of the 
British Bees in the collection of the British Museum). London ; 
1876, 8vo, pp. 236, pis. a, & i.-x. (same as in the first edition). 
211 species are described, being only five more than those in the first 
edition of 1855 ; several forms, however, treated as species in that edition 
are now known to be merely sexes of others already recorded, and two 
are dropped entirely, the absolutely new additions being 10. One new 
species is described. 
