NEW BRITISH SPECIES SINCE 1835. 55 
and a collector rarely identifies his captures without much 
trouble. 
Dicrorampha acuminatana, Zell.; first enumerated 
as British in Doubleday’s Catalogue, at page 26, as Dicro¬ 
rampha caligmosana. It has occurred at Charlton, near 
Bristol, and at Mickleham, in August. From the latter 
locality Mr. Douglas exhibited specimens at the September 
meeting of the Entomological Society in 1851. 
Dicrorampha saturnana, Guenee; first distinguished 
as a British species by Mr. Doubleday, and enumeiated in 
bis Catalogue at page 26. 
Dicrorampha plumbagana, Treit. j first distinguished 
as a British species by Mr. Doubleday, and enumerated in 
his Catalogue at page 26. 
Dicrorampha Ulicana, Guenee; first distinguished 
as a British species by Mr. Doubleday, and enumerated in 
bis Catalogue at page 26. 
Dicrorampha consortana, Stephens ; first recorded 
in the Proceedings of the Entomological Society for Sep¬ 
tember, 1851, when “ Mr. Douglas exhibited an apparently 
new species of Stigmo?iota, taken at Headley Lane, August 
10th.7 In Stephens’s Museum Catalogue it is enumerated 
and described as Z>. consortana 9 at pages 60 and 100. It 
may be said to resemble a small dark Ephippiphoi'a Leplas - 
triana; it is yet in few collections. 
Catoptria Wimmerana, Treit.; thus noticed by Mr. 
Douglas in the Entomologist, at page 384—“ Carpocapsa 
-, a new species allied to C. pupillam , but abundantly 
distinct. Taken on the sea wormwood near St.Osyth, but 
very local.” In Humphrey’s and Westwood’s British Moths, 
v °l. ii. p. 138, it is described as C. maritima. It has been 
frequently taken since by collectors on the coast, and is now 
m most collections. The Orapholita lactea?ui f enumeiated 
