16 
L. 11EEYE AND CO. S PUBLICATIONS. 
CONCIIOLOGIA XNDICA ; being Illustrations of the 
Land and Freshwater Shells of British India. Edited by Sylvanus 
Hanley, E.L.S., and William Theobald, of the Geological Survey of 
India. 4to, Part I. and II., each, with 20 Coloured Plates, 20-s. 
For want of a comprehensive book of reference, the land and freshwater 
shells of British India are less known in Europe and America than those of 
countries less frequented by travellers. To meet this acknowledged want, this 
first attempt at a special conchology of our Indian empire has been essayed. 
THE EDIBLE MOLLUSKS OE GREAT BRITAIN AND 
IRELAND, with the modes of cooking them. By M. S. Lovell. Crown 
8vo, 5 j. ; with 12 Coloured Plates, 8,?. §d. 
INSECTS. 
BRITISH INSECTS. A Eamiliar Description of the Eorm, 
Structure, Habits, and Transformations of Insects. By E. F. Staveley, 
Author of “ British Spiders.” Crown 8vo, with 16 beautifully Coloured 
Steel Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, 14s. 
“ This little work is planned on the supposition that the reader knows 
nothing scientifically of the insect world, but that he has exercised some degree 
of observation on such common species as must have come before him. From 
this it is attempted to lead him on to a general idea of the structure and classifi¬ 
cation of insects.”— Preface. 
BRITISH BEETLES; an Introduction to the Study of our 
Indigenous Coleoptera. By E. C. Rye. Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured 
Steel Plates, comprising Figures of nearly 100 Species, engraved from 
Natural Specimens, expressly for the work, by E. W. Robinson, and 11 
Wood-Engravings of Dissections by the Author, 10<y. 6 d. 
This little work forms one of a New Series designed to assist young per¬ 
sons to a more profitable, and, consequently, more pleasurable observation of 
Nature, by furnishing them in a familiar manner with so much of the science as 
they may acquire without encumbering them with more of the technicalities, so 
confusing and repulsive to beginners, than are necessary for their purpose. In 
the words of the Preface, it is “ somewhat on the scheme of a Delectus ; com¬ 
bining extracts from the biographies of individual objects with principles of 
classification and hints for obtaining further knowledge.” 
BRITISH BEES; an Introduction to the Study of the Na¬ 
tural History and Economy of the Bees indigenous to the British Isles. 
By W. E. Shuckard. Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured Steel Plates, containing 
nearly 100 Figures, engraved from Natural Specimens, expressly for the 
work, by E. W. Robinson, and Woodcuts of Dissections, lOs. 6 d. 
A companion volume to that on British Beetles, treating of the structure, 
geographical distribution and classification of Bees and their parasites, with lists 
of the species found in Britain, and an account of their habits and economy. 
