A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE ALEOCHARINA (continued) Calodera umbrosa, Er. Wihtone, very rare, one specimen only under dead reeds at the reservoir. This insect occurs very frequently near Chesham, just over the county boundary Chilopora longitarsis, Steph. Tring, a common marsh species Atemeles emarginatus, Payk. One speci- men found running on chalky path- way. This species is usually as- sociated with the smaller ants. In that portion of the county which I have been able to explore I have not yet noticed the large ants Formica rufa and F. fuliginosa, with which so large a 'number of our myrme- cophilous species occur, and conse- quently the number of such species included in this list is very small Myrmedonia funesta, Grav. Hertford (Stephens) Astilbus canaliculatus, F. Tring ; New Barnet (Newbery) Callicerus obscurus, Grav. Wihtone ; New Barnet (Newbery) rigidicornis, Er. Bovingdon, rare, one specimen only ; Felden (Piffard) Thamiarea cinnamomea, Grav. New Barnet (Newbery) Alianta incana, Er. Tring, not uncom- mon about the reservoirs Homalota languida, Er. Tring, very rare, under refuse at the reservoirs pavens, Er. Tring, rare, one taken by sweeping in a moist wood gregaria, Er. Tring fallax, Kr. Tring, not uncommon under dead reeds, etc., at the reservoirs, but only found in the spring luridipennis, Mann. Tring gyllenhali, Thorns. Tring, fairly com- mon at the reservoirs hygrotopora, Kr. Tring, scarce, with the preceding elongatula, Grav. Tring, very com- mon volans, Scriba. Tring; several well- marked forms of this very variable species are to be found in the Tring district oblongiuscula, Sharp. Tring, scarce, in moss, etc. vicina, Steph. Tring; New Barnet (Newbery) pagana, Er. Tring, scarce, and only found singly graminicola, Gyll. Tring, very abund- ant in marshy places ALEOCHARINA (continued) Homalota occulta, Er. Tring, by no means a rare insect ; found under carrion, in garden refuse, etc. fungivora, Thorns. Tring, not seen so often as the preceding monticola, Thorns. Tring, very rare, one male found under a stone nigella, Er. Tring, scarce, at the reser- voirs aequata, Er. Felden (Piffard) angustula, Gyll. Tring; New Barnet (Newbery) linearis, Grav. Tring, occasionally found in rotten stumps of beech trees debilis, Er. Tring, common at the reservoirs circellaris, Grav. Tring ; New Barnet (Newbery) ; found very commonly almost everywhere splendens, Kr. Tring, very rare, one specimen taken by sweeping early in July, 1898, on the hills aegra, Heer. Tring, very rare ; near Bovingdon, taken in numbers occa- sionally immersa, Heer. Aldbury Common, under bark of oak cuspidata, Er. Tring and Aldbury gemina, Er. Wihtone^ not common, under refuse at the reservoir in the spring analis, Grav. Tring, very abundant everywhere decipiens, Sharp. Little Tring, rare soror, Kr. Little Tring, under stones in muddy spots by the reservoir, the males being much rarer than the females exilis, Er. IFilstone, not common validiuscula, Kr. Tring, very rare, two specimens only in dead leaves in October depressa, Gyll. Tring hepatica, Er. Tring, very rare aquatica, Thorns. Wilitone, scarce, by the reservoir aeneicollis, Sharp. ) - . xanthoptera, Steph. j * * euryptera, Steph. Near Bovingdon, at sap ; New Barnet (Newbery) trinotata, Kr. Tring ; New Barnet (Newbery) xanthopus, Thorns. Tring, rare triangulum, Kr. Tring fungicola, Thorns. Tring, one of the most abundant species of the genus ignobilis, Sharp. Tring, rare, found chiefly in the month of August 90