NEW BRITISH SPECIES SINCE 1835. 
31 
page 2547 — (( they are very local, being only found over a 
space of about 400 yards in extent, on the coast of Deal/’ 
Tryphjena subsequa, W. V. Concerning the true sub- 
sequa , Mr. Doubleday writes in the Zoologist for 1844, page 
399—“ Mr. Bentley possesses two specimens of the species, 
one captured by himself in Hampshire, the other from Mr. 
Stone’s Cabinet, probably taken in the same county. The 
species is very likely to occur in the southern counties, as it 
is not uncommon in the northern parts of France.” Since 
this was written, it has been repeatedly taken by sugaring in 
the New Forest, and is now in most collections. The black 
spot towards the apex of the costa of the anterior wings, as 
in pronuba, at once distinguishes it from orbona. 
Opigena Fennica, Eversmann. “ A single specimen 
of this Noctua, hitherto unknown in Britain, and principally 
found in Finland, has been taken in Derbyshire ;” this notice 
by Mr. Doubleday appears in the Zoologist for 1850, page 
2971. The specimen is in the collection gf Mr. Allis. 
Guenee retains this species in his genus Agrotis , but observes 
that it has “ un facies particular.” It is figured by Du- 
ponchel and Herrich-Schaffer. 
Graphiphora ditrapezium, Bork., ( Noctua ditra¬ 
pezium, Doubl.); first recorded as British under the name 
of tristigma by Mr. Stevens, Zoologist for 1846, page 1347 
—“ I fortunately possess a specimen of this distinct species, 
the true Graphiphora tristigma of the Continent, which I 
have had in my cabinet the last two years, and supposed it 
only an extraordinary variety of triangulum , which it much 
resembles;” and he then proceeds to describe wherein it 
differs from triangulum . At the August meeting of the 
Entomological Society in 1852, “ Mr. S. Stevens exhibited 
Graphiphora ditrapezium , reared from a larva found at 
Leith Hill, in Surrey.” An old specimen has been detected 
in the collection of the Entomological Society. The larva, 
