Page:The Zoologist, 1st series, vol 1 (1843).djvu/300

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272
Insects.

ing up an old wall at Paddington; and another was taken last year at Kensington: the former I had the pleasure of examining whilst alive. It is possible they may have emerged from some old fir-stump, hut I should think it more probable they were introduced in timber from Scotland or Norway.—Samuel Stevens; King St., Covent Garden, July 25, 1843.

Note on the capture of Rhinomacer attelaboides near Edinburgh. I captured a pair of this rare insect in Dalmeny Park on the 20th of June, while sweeping the grass under fir-trees. A few specimens of Sphariestes immaculatus have also occurred in the same locality.—R. Northmore Greville; Queensferry, near Edinburgh, June 28, 1843.

Note on the blighted appearance of the Oak and Ash Trees in Yorkshire. In this part of the country, the North Riding of Yorkshire, the oak and ash trees have a singular blighted appearance, to an extent which I never before observed. The younger trees, particularly the ashes, have escaped, generally speaking, and look well, but the majority of the larger grown ones have the blasted appearance I have alluded to above. A great many dead branches appear in most, which seem as though they had been struck by lightning, and comparatively few of these trees have the appearance of being in full leaf. For a long time I thought them only backward, and attributed it to the continued heavy rains and want of sun; but whether this was the cause of their present state, I am at a loss to know.—F.O. Morris; Crambe Vicarage, near York, July 7, 1843.



Notes on Ephemeræ. By The Rev. J.C. Atkinson, B.A.

"Whileenjoying the hospitalities of Culhorn, they visited the Loch of Soul-seat (Sedes animarum), remarkable for the myriads of an ephemeral fly, the Eph. albipennis, which forms clouds and pillars, rising to the height of above fifty feet, and darkening the air like a mass of vapor or smoke. Previous to their transformation into their strictly ephemeral state of winged insects, they are said to live in their subaqueous abodes for two or three years in the condition of larvae; but the most singular peculiarity of the species is, that they 'throw off a slender envelope or skin, including even that of the limbs, eyes, setæ and antennæ;' and the angler, after remaining only a short time in this entomological mob, is completely covered with the filmy skins of these gay Ephemerae."—Article on Wilson's 'Voyage round Scotland and the Isles,' in 'Edinburgh Review,' for Feb. 1843, p. 174.

On reading this paragraph I was immediately reminded of a scene I witnessed a few weeks since, on the banks of the river Whitadder. I was so much interested by what I had seen, that I noted down the chief particulars while the remembrance was still quite fresh; and I now give the substance of my notes, in the belief that they will not be devoid of interest to the readers of 'The Zoologist.' I will only add that I have had no opportunity of identifying the insect whose changes I noticed, nor yet of examining Mr. Wilson's book for a description of Eph. albipennis.

June 15th, 1843. By the Whitadder. Immense clouds of small,