The Entomologist's record and journal of variation . , and withwhom our author agrees on almost all occasions. As we must regard this as a translation, rather than an original work,we need not discuss at length any of the real material of the may remark, however, that it covers in various directions some-what different ground to that cultivated by Lord Avebury, andenlarges the outlook we derive from his papers. Besides notes oforiginal observations and experiments, a large part of the volumecontains discussions, criticisms, and comparisons of the experimentsand conclusions of other obs
The Entomologist's record and journal of variation . , and withwhom our author agrees on almost all occasions. As we must regard this as a translation, rather than an original work,we need not discuss at length any of the real material of the may remark, however, that it covers in various directions some-what different ground to that cultivated by Lord Avebury, andenlarges the outlook we derive from his papers. Besides notes oforiginal observations and experiments, a large part of the volumecontains discussions, criticisms, and comparisons of the experimentsand conclusions of other observers, and the errors of observation andreasoning on them which not a few have fallen into are pointed Lord Avebury there is no English author amongst these, andwe suspect that it is because English authors are scarce, becausereferences to more or less isolated English observations are notinfrequent. We hope that with Forels writings thus easily accessible, therewill, in the future, be more English work in this field. Vol. X\. Plate Photo. F. N. Clark .(? H. Main. Odezia atkata var. Eecord, etc., 1908. THE LEPIDOPTERA OF THE BOGS ABOVE THE ZURICHER-SEE. 245 The Lepidoptera of the Bogs above the Ziiricher-See. By J. W. TUTT, 1895, Dr. Buckell wrote an excellent paper {F!nt. Bee, vii.,pp. 100 ct stq.) on Cnennnyiiipha tipJxm and its varieties, which wasfollowed during the next year by another first-class paper by Mr. Elwes[Ent. Rec, viii., pp. 228 etseq.), on the same subject. These dealt, asthe titles suggest, with the variation of the species. About the sametime Mr. J. E. Robson published (Ent. Bee, vii., p. 265) a paper on Cocnoui/viplia ttphnn (davus) at home, giving his observations on thehabits and habitat of the insect on the Northumberland moors. One by one our British species have come under my ken, some-where or other in their native haunts, until at last I could say that Ihad seen all alive under natural condition
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