245 
Ipswich, Eastham near Birkenhead, Darlington, Kings¬ 
bury, Bristol, Edinburgh, Lewes, Exeter, Manchester. 
The situations where it is found are woods and hedges. 
The perfect insect appears in May, June, and July. 
The caterpillar is dark green with a row of small dull 
red angular-shaped spots, in the centre of each of which 
is a small yellow spot, along the back, sometimes wanting 
on the first segments and their place supplied byagreenish 
line, connected by a line of the same colour; the side line 
red, bordered with yellow; the divisions between the 
segments yellowish. 
The date of the appearance of the caterpillar is in 
September and October. 
It feeds on the whitethorn, the blackthorn, the bar¬ 
berry, the snowberry, the black-currant, the ash, the alder, 
the sallow, and the dogwood. 
The chrysalis is enclosed in a cocoon of earth, and is 
dusky on the body and thorax, the wing cases dark olive 
green, the divisions on the body yellow. 
EUPITHECIA SOBRINARIA. 
JUNIPER PUG. 
Plate XXX. Figure 16. 
This insect measures rather more than three quarters 
of an inch in width. 
Male: fore wings grey with a faint reddish tinge, and 
crossed by numerous darker waved lines ; third line pale 
grey and waved, most distinct at the lower corner; central 
spot black but indistinct. 
Localities for this species are Arran, Glasgow, Newcastle- 
on-Tyne, Brighton, Manchester, Edinburgh, Halton, 
Dover, West Looe, Stowmarket. 
