59 
NEW BRITISH SPECIES SINCE 1835 . 
Since the re-discovery of this species, it has been identified 
as the Tinea sanguinella of Haworth. 
Argyrolefia Schrebersiana, Frolich; first enumerated 
as British in Doubleday’s Catalogue, at page 27; a single 
specimen, taken at Yaxley by Mr. Bouchard, is in the col¬ 
lection of Mr. E. Shepherd. [Another specimen, probably 
from the Norfolk fens, is in the collection of Mr. Buxton.] 
Argyrolepia Mussehliana, Treit.; first enumerated 
as British in Doubleday’s Catalogue, at page 27 ; a speci¬ 
men has been taken by Mr. Weaver, in the west of England. 
Argyrolepia Cnicana, Doubleday; first enumerated 
as British in Doubleday’s Catalogue, page 27. It has much, 
resemblance to badiana , with which it has probably long 
been confounded, but frequents thistles, whereas the larva of 
badiana feeds in the stems of burdock. It may readil} 1 be 
distinguished by the narrower central fascia of the anterioi 
wings not expanding on the inner margin, and being paler 
coloured. 
Eijpcecilia atricapitana, Stephens; first noticed as 
British by myself^ in the Zoologist for 1848, at page 1990, 
as E. dubitana; recorded as being taken at Charlton, in 
July and August, by Mr. Douglas, under the name of 
Eupcecilia --, in the Zoologist for 1851, page 3129. 
It is described in Stephens’s Museum Catalogue, at page 
103, under the name of atricapitana . 
Eupcecilia Carduana, Zeller; first enumerated as a 
distinct British species in Stephens’s Museum Catalogue, at 
page 81; Doubleday having given it as a synonym for So- 
daliana , from which it differs in the central fascia being 
aiore oblique; it w r as formerly taken by Mr. Sircoin near 
Bristol, and is not uncommon in the Hilly Field at Headley 
Bane. The true Sodaliana appears very scarce. 
Eupcecilia affinitana, Douglas; first recorded and 
