Proceedings and Transactions of the Natural History Society of Glascow, 3–4. köideThe Society., 1878 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 74
Page 2
... taken in the Clyde , opposite Carmyle ; two species of Nematus , new to the British fauna , viz . , N. apicalis , Hartig . , taken on 5th May in Cadder Wilderness , and N. dorsatus , Cam . , bred from a birch - feeding larva got last ...
... taken in the Clyde , opposite Carmyle ; two species of Nematus , new to the British fauna , viz . , N. apicalis , Hartig . , taken on 5th May in Cadder Wilderness , and N. dorsatus , Cam . , bred from a birch - feeding larva got last ...
Page 3
... taken at Bishopton , where it fed in company with the typical form . It had the upper part of the body deep black , and was considerably smaller than is usual with the larvae of this species . It was not so active and lively as the ...
... taken at Bishopton , where it fed in company with the typical form . It had the upper part of the body deep black , and was considerably smaller than is usual with the larvae of this species . It was not so active and lively as the ...
Page 24
Natural History Society of Glasgow. In Scotland I have taken This species is not very common . it in Rannoch , and I have seen English specimens taken by Mr R. M'Lachlan and the Rev. T. A. Marshall . The larva has not been described . It ...
Natural History Society of Glasgow. In Scotland I have taken This species is not very common . it in Rannoch , and I have seen English specimens taken by Mr R. M'Lachlan and the Rev. T. A. Marshall . The larva has not been described . It ...
Page 26
... taken the species at an elevation of about 2300 feet . Its distribution extends all over the European Continent . 7. CLADIUS BRULLAEI . Cladius Brullei , Dahlb . Consp . , 39 ; Thomson , Hym . Scand . , i . , 75-7 ; Cameron , Ent ...
... taken the species at an elevation of about 2300 feet . Its distribution extends all over the European Continent . 7. CLADIUS BRULLAEI . Cladius Brullei , Dahlb . Consp . , 39 ; Thomson , Hym . Scand . , i . , 75-7 ; Cameron , Ent ...
Page 58
... taken in Kenmore Wood ; and the Sedge Warbler , White - throat , Wood Warbler , and Willow Warbler , are not uncommon . The common Jay is met with here also ; the banks of Loch Lomond being one of the few places where the species can ...
... taken in Kenmore Wood ; and the Sedge Warbler , White - throat , Wood Warbler , and Willow Warbler , are not uncommon . The common Jay is met with here also ; the banks of Loch Lomond being one of the few places where the species can ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abundant According Altnaharra antennae apex appear August autumn Bashk Berwickshire birch woods birds Bishopton Bogdanoff Bonar Bridge Braemar breeds British Cadder Carboniferous cells cellule Clober coast colour common Crinoid Cynipidae Dacha Dalry distribution Duck eastern slope eggs Ekaterinburg Eversmann exhibited Fauna fossils frond fuscous galls genera genus Glasgow Glen Government of Perm Harvie-Brown Hymenoptera Imago in June inches Inchnadamph insect interesting islands James John Young July Kenmuir Kingussie Kintail Klug Larva Larva unknown legs limestone Linnaeus localities Loch Lomond male migration Milngavie Museum Naturalists Nematus nervure nest Nordmann observed occurs pair paper Pavda Perm Perm Government Peter Cameron plants Rannoch rare recorded remarks Russ scarcely season seen segment Shadrinsk Shadrinsk districts shale shell shot side species specimens stem strata Strath-Glass summer Tenthredinidae Thoms Thomson trees uncommon vulgaris wings winter Zirián
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Page 64 - In Rannoch eagles were, a few years ago, so very numerous that the Commissioners of the Forfeited Estates (after 1745) offered a reward of five shillings for every one that was destroyed ; in a little time such numbers were brought in that the honourable Board reduced the premium to three shillings and sixpence ; but an advance in proportion as these birds grew scarcer might in time perhaps have effected their extirpation.
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Page 215 - ... is very great; and their structure is intended to supply nutriment and moisture, when, during the long droughts, they can be obtained nowhere else. Here we have an example of a plant, not generally tuberbearing, becoming so under circumstances where that appendage is necessary to act as a reservoir for preserving its life; and the same thing occurs in Angola to a species of grape-bearing vine, which is so furnished for the same purpose. The plant to which I at present refer is one of the cucurbitaceae,...
Page 215 - ... often as large as the head of a young child ; when the rind is removed, we find it to be a mass of cellular tissue, filled with fluid, much like that in a young turnip. Owing to the depth beneath the soil at which it is found, it is generally deliciously cool and refreshing. Another kind, named mokuri, is seen in other parts of the country, where long-continued heat parches the soil. This plant is a herbaceous creeper, and deposits under ground a number of tubers, gome as large as a man's head,...