54 
LEPIDOPTERA. 
the pinasters on the cliffs. It has been distributed amongst 
Entomologists by the name of duplana” 
Opadia funebrana, Treit.; first recorded as a British 
species by myself, in the Zoologist for 1848, page 1989. 
I have two specimens, and I believe a few others have been 
since met with. The larva feeds in the interior of plums, 
and is very common, as those who are in the habit of pre¬ 
serving plums well know. 
Ephippiphora floricolana, Hiibner; first recorded as 
British, also described and figured, in Humphrey's and 
Westwood's British Moths, vol. ii. page 126, pi. lxxxiii. 
fig. 20, as Pseudotomia notata, having been “taken by 
Mr. Bentley, near Woolwich.” The species has since been 
taken freely at Plumstead, among maples, and is now in 
most collections. 
Ephippiphora Weirana, Douglas; in the Proceedings 
of the Entomological Society for February, 1850, we read- 
“ Mr. Douglas exhibited a new species of Tortrix, allied to 
Stujmonota redimitana , Guenee; which he proposed to call 
Weirana'” The species is described in the Proceedings of 
the Entomological Society for April, 1850, where we are 
informed that it was “ taken at the end of May, flying in 
sunshine round beech-trees at Mickleham.” 
Ephippiphora coniferana, Ratzb.; first recorded and 
described as British by myself in the Zoologist for 1848, 
page 1988. The species in not uncommon in the north of 
England and Scotland, and has occurred occasionally in 
the south. 
Dicrorampha senectana, Guenee; first distinguished 
as a British species by Mr. Doubleday, and enumerated in 
his Catalogue at page 26. Its capture is first recorded by 
Mr. Sircom in the Zoologist for 1851, page 3287; this and 
the four following species form a very puzzling little group, 
