10 Ins. 
INSECTA. 
Captures. — Insects of various orders in the Scilly Islands ; F. Norgate, 
Ent. M. M. xvi. pp. 182 & 183. Coleoptera and Hemiptera at Hunstan- 
ton, Norfolk; W. W. Fowler, op. cit. p. 275. Also at Hastings ; E. A. 
Butler, op. cit. xvii. pp. 67 & 68. Hymenoptera and Hemiptera at Col- 
chester ; E. Saunders, tom. cit. pp. 68 & 69. 
Europe. — Notes on new or rare Swedish insects ; Spangberg, Ent. 
Tidskr. i. pp. 198-200, 215, & 216. 
Notes on various Silesian Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, and Hemiptera \ JB. 
schles. Ges. Ivii. pp. 350-358. 
General notes on the entomology of Portugal ;• A. E. Eaton, Ent. M. M. 
xvii. pp. 73-79. 
Captures. — Various Orders : in the island of Wermlo, near Stockholm ; 
0. T. Sandahl, Ent. Tidskr. i. pp. 42-50. f In Norway ; J. Sparre 
Schneider, Forh. Selsk. Chr. 1879, No. 3, pp. 12. In Holland; Tijdschr. 
Ent. xxiii. pp. xix. & xxi. In the Alps, where insects were unusually 
scarce in 1880; Fairmaire, Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr. (5) x. pp. cxxxii. & cxxiii. 
In Spain ; Cuni y Martorell, An. Soc. Esp. ix. pp. 207-209, 215-224, 
231-233, & 238-242. 
Asia. — Notes on collecting in Japan ; G. Lewis, Ent. M. M. xvii. pp. 
20 & 21 . 
Notes on insects (chiefly Coleoptera) from Candahar, the Andaman 
Islands, and Gran Bassam (Guinea) ; Dohrn, S. E. Z. xli. pp. 368-371. 
On collecting in Southern India ; E. L. Arnold, Ent. xiii. pp. 135-137. 
North and Central America and West Indies. — A. J. Cook estimates the 
probable number of North American species of insects at 200,000 [nearly 
as many as the total number of insects described from all parts of the 
world] ; Am. Ent. iii. p. 103. 
Scarcity of insects in Canada in 1879; C. E. Heustis, Canad. Ent. xii. 
pp. 19 & 20. 
Notes on the appearance of 13 destructive insects; and insect register 
for 1878 ; Kep. E. Soc. Ont. 1878, pp. 55-59. 
Early appearance of insects in Ohio in the spring of 1880 ; E. W. Clay- 
pole, Canad. Ent. xii. p. 120. 
Cave-insects in Jamaica ; no true cave-forms met with, but twilight- 
loving species, frequenting dark places above ground. Hubbard, Am. 
Ent. iii. p. 30. 
Notes on Coleoptera and Hemiptera in Guatemala; G. C. Champion, 
Ent. M. M. xvi. pp. 234 & 235. 
Economic Entomology. 
Notes on various injurious insects; P. Cavanna, Bull. Ent. Ital. xii. 
pp. 148-152, 246-252, 28C-292. 
On insects injurious to the sugar-cane; — Pyralis saccharalis, Tomarus 
hituberculatus, Sphenophorus sacchari, and Rhyncophorus (?) palmarum. 
The transformations of a moth (probably identical with P. saccharalis, are 
described in detail under the name of Procerus sacchariphagus. E. A. 
Ormerod, P. E. Soc. 1880, pp. xiv.-xx. 
On the relations between parasitic fungi and insects : as far as is 
known at present, different species of the former confine their attacks to 
