412 
ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
gives the follovring indications with reference to species of Tortricidce for- 
merly described by him as new; — Sericoris ohesana^^antiquana, H.-S. j cas- 
ianeana=iupupana,liX.y Coccyx giganteana==Jimhr{mia^ Haw.; ephippiphorana 
=ar(7yrawa,HUbn. ; stelliferana=iSCopariana,ll .’‘^. ; squmana^splendidulana, 
Gu4n. ; conficsimicana:=^pygmceana,l\uhii.‘y latifa&ciana — mcciniana^ Zell.; 
immetallana=^nananaf var.P; concrctana=^proximana^ II.-S. ; mamna—ni- 
gricanaj II.-S. ; incognatana=^rubiginosa, II.-S. The genus Orchemia, Toy., 
is to be suppressed ; the two species 0. gallicana and 0. diana are varieties 
of Stigrnonota germarana^ Hb. 
Packard (Guide to the Study of Insects) mentions the following species of 
Tortricidce among others ; — Lozotcenia rosaceana, Harr., p. 335, pi. 8, f. 12, 
12 a; Anchylopera fragarice^ Riley, pp. 340, 341, fig. 261. 
. H. G. Knaggs records tho capture in England by J. B. Hodgkinson of 
Dicrorampha plumhana, Scop. (=zzacchana, Tr., =iuUcana, Gu^n., nec auct. 
angl., H.-S.), Entom. M. Mag. vi. p. 66; Entom. Ann. 1870, 
pp. 142, 143. He also states (Eut. Ann. p. 135) that Peronea potentillana, 
Cooke, comariatia, Zell. 
Snellen publishes notes on the larvae &c. of Tortrix costana and Copto- 
loma janthinana. Tijdschr. voor. Ent. 2nd series, ii. pp. 227, 228. 
T. DE Grey records the capture of the true Hypermecia augustana in 
England, and states on Doubleday’s authority that the insect previously 
called augustana in this country ^cxccecana^ H.-S., and probably also =crw- 
cianaf Linn. 
Tortrix nikyana, Grote. Riley describes and figures the transfonnations 
of this insect. First Report on Insects of Missouri, pp. 153, 164, fig. 86, 
pi. 2. f. 3, 4. 
Tortrix farsterana. Vollenhoven describes and figures the transformations 
of this species. Sepp’s Nederl. Ins. 2nd ser. ii. pp. 162-171, pis. 37, 38. 
f. 1-30. 
ScuDDER (Harris Correspondence, p. 324) publishes Harris’s description of 
the larva of an undetermined American species of Tortrix. 
Coccyx splendidula has been taken in Ireland by II. Marsden. Entom. M. 
Mag. vi. p. 66. 
Steganoptycha neglectana and dealbana. On the characters of these species 
see Zeller, Entom. M. Mag. vi. pp. 49, 50, note. 
Carpocapsa pomonella, Linn. Habits fully described, and the insect figured 
in all its stages, by Riley^ First Rep. on Insects of Missouri, pp. 62-67. 
Some remarks by F. Francis on the damage caused to apples by this insect 
are published in the ^ Entomologist,’ iv. p. 330, extracted from the ^ Field.’ 
Sciaphila ictericana. 41. W. de Graaf has written a long descriptive and 
synonymic paper on this insect (Tijdschr. v. Ent. ser. 2. vol. v. pp. 95-105), 
and gives the synonymy as follows; — ictericana^ Haw., = Haw.,= 
P lutosana, TLuhn. y=^capillana, Gu6n.f=^loeiviana, Zell. ; varieties, stratatia, 
Zell., insolatana, Herr.-Schaff. ; luridalbana, Herr.-Schaff. 
Sciaphila communana, H.-S. On its occurrence in England, see F. Bond, 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1869, p. 10. 
Von Nolcken (Stettin, entom. Zeitung, 1869, pp. 283, 284) refers Pu- 
chromia centrana, H.-S., to Tortrix inopiana. Haw., and later English authors. 
Pupoccilia. C.G. Barrett (Entom. M. Mag. v.pp. 244-246) points out the di- 
stinctive characters of subroseana, Haw., heydeniana, H.-S., ciliella^ Iliibn., 
