146 Ins. 
LEPIDOPTERA. 
List of Diurnal Lepidoptera inhabiting the Nicobar Islands (64 species, 
some new) ; Wood-Mason & De Niceville, J. A. S. B. 1. pp. 224-238. 
List of 231 Butterflies of Sumatra ; Henley Hrose Smith, in Bock’s 
“ Head Hunters of Borneo,” App. v. (pp. 336 & 337). 
Africa and Socotra. 
Aurivillius, 0. Om en Samling Fjiirilar fran Gaboon. Ent. Tidskr. 
ii. pp. 38-47. 
Includes lists of Rhopalocera^ Sphingidce and Zt/gcenidce, with notes on 
variation, &c., and descriptions of a few new genera and species. 
Butler, A. G. On the Lepidoptera collected in Socotra! by J. B. Bal- 
four. P. Z. S. 1881, pp. 175-180, pi. xviii. 
13 species enumerated, 7 new. 
Dewitz, H. Afrikanische Naclitschmetterlinge. Verb. L.-C. Ak. xlii. 
pp. 63-91, pis. ii. & iii. 
Includes descriptions of new African species, chiefly from Chinchoxo 
and the Cape. A list of the known species obtained in the former 
locality is also added. 
Gooch, W. D. Notes on the Lepidoptera of Natal. Ent. xiv. pp. 1-7, 
& 35-40. 
Notes on habits and transformations of Butterflies: Acraiidccio Uea- 
periidoi. (See also on collecting Butterflies in Natal, id. 1. c. pp. 61-66, 
100-105, & 124-129.) 
Walsingham [Lord]. On the Tortricidce^ Tineidce, and Pterophoridce 
of South Africa. Tr. E. Soc. 1881, pp. 219-288, pis. x.-xiii. 
Includes a complete list of described species, with synonymic notes, 
&c., and descriptions of many new genera and species. 
Caterpillars in South Africa ; Oates’s “ Matabele Land,” p. 96. 
North America. 
Butler, A. G. Notes on some North American Lepidoptera. Papilio, 
i. pp. 103-106, 128-132, 168-171, & 220-223, 
Relates to various Sphingidce, Bombyces, Noctuce, and Geometridce. 
■ . An account of the Sphinges and Bombyces collected by Lord 
Walsingham in North America, during the years 1871-72. Ann. 
N. H. (5) viii. pp. 306-318. 
Notes on 36 species, some new, chiefly from California and Oregon. 
Lintner, j. a. Lepidoptera of the Adirondack Region. Albany : 1880, 
8vo, 26 pp. 
Weir, J. J. Notes on the Lepidoptera Rhopalocera of Hudson’s Bay. 
Ent. xiv. pp. 97-100. 
17 species : 10 genera noticed ; all the genera but 1 British ; 3 British 
species, 8 closely allied to British species ; 4 have European allies ; 1 
represents an American type of an European genus, and 1 is of a purely 
American genus. 
