78 Ins. 
XIII. INSECTA. 
gatt, p. 339, P. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, 1896. — Resemblances between 
insects of different orders, IIaenscii, Berlin, ent. Zeitschr. 1896, SB. 
p. 22. — Resemblances between Coleoptera and Hymenoptera , PIsringuey, 
Tr. S. African Soc. vii, p. 131. — Resemblance between bee and fly preying 
on it, Cotes, p. 10, Ind. Mus. Notes, iii, No. 6. — Bee and fly, Meunier, 
Feuille Natural, xxvi, p. 121. — Mimicry in Hypera punctata , Morley, 
p. 91, Ent. Mag. xxxii. — Mimicry among palaeozoic cockroaches, Scudder, 
pp. 30 & 31, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. No. 124. 
Empusa egcna imitating flower, Krauss, p. 527, Zool. Jahrb. Syst. ix. 
— Resemblance of Gossyparia to lichen-fruit, Stone (1130). — Resem- 
blance of a group of a dimorphic Fulgorid to a spike of buds and flowers, 
Gregory (428, p. 273). — Galls mimicking Lepidopterous larvae, Fuller 
(390). — Resemblance of Lycaenid and Syrphid larvae, Turner, p. 168, 
Ent. Rec. viii. — Resemblance of Papirius to the matter it feeds on, 
Folsom, p. 121, Canad. Ent. xxviii. — Variety of objects mimicked by 
Apatela , Grote (443). — Theda pruni , resemblance of pupa to bird’s- 
dropping, Tutt, p. xxxviii, P. ent. Soc. London, 1896. — Resemblance of 
pupa of Feniseca to human head, Ent. News Philad. vii, p. 193, pi. viii. 
An apparent head at caudal extremity, Green, p. xviii, P. ent. Soc. 
London, 1896. 
Relations of colour, instinct, and position in Vanessa egea } Stefanelli 
(1127). 
Phylogeny and Evolution. 
The speculative method in Entomology, reprint of part of Prof. Mel- 
dola’s address to the Entomological Society, Nature, liii, p. 352. 
Utility, natural selection, Ac., Mej/dola (778). 
Inheritance of acquired characters in Lepuloptera , Packard (850, p. 33). 
Selection and heredity as influencing the cocoons of silkworm, Raulin 
(931). 
Heredity (see also General Subjects, p, 76). 
Mechanical selection, Jordan (584). 
Criticism of theories of selection, Jordan (584). 
Orthogenesis, Eimer (281). — Evolution of allied forms of Papilio , 
Eimer (282). 
Origin of species, lepuloptera , Standfuss (1120). 
Bearing of fossils on the supposed phylogenetic alliance between 
Diptera and Hemiptera , Meunier (786). 
Embryological relations of the orders Orthoptera , Aptera , with Odonata , 
Ephemeridce , and Perlulce , Heymons (500). 
Phylogeny of Hymenoptera , and of the orders of insects, Ashmead 
(27). 
Phylogeny of Lepuloptera , Packard (850, p. 51). — Phylogeny of 
Lepuloptera, Charm an (154). — Phylogeny of Lepidopterous families, 
Chapman (155). 
Classification of Lepuloptera , Dyar, p. 45, Canad. Ent. xxviii. 
Phylogeny of Rhopalocera , E. Reuter (966). — Phylogeny of Satur- 
niidai i Dyar (273). — Phylogeny of Saturniidce } Grote (446). — Phylogeny 
of the families of Bombycules , Dyar (270). — Phylogeny of coloration of 
wings of Vanessa; , Urech (1181). — Evolution of hairs and spines of 
caterpillars, Packard (850). — Pupa of Lepuloptera , its lines of develop- 
ment, Chapman (154). 
Miscellaneous. 
Insects attacking human corpses, M^gnin (773). 
Organic rather than physical conditions determine the vertical distribu- 
tion of Lepuloptera , IIarcourt-Bath (473). 
