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268 Mr. P. H. Gosse on the Insects of Jamaica. XXVI. — On the Insects of Jamaica. By Philip Henry Gosse. [Continued from p. 202.] 39. Calopteron bicolor. On the trees at the forest-edge, on each side of the Hampstead Road, this Lycus was excessively abundant in June 1845 and 1846, particularly in the latter year. Hundreds, I should judge, were sometimes on a single small tree. They rested principally on horizontal branches from the height of ten feet upwards. 40. Pygolampis xanthophotis* (mihi). 41. Photuris versicolor. 42 to 53. Twelve other species of LampyricUB, all luminous. The fire-flies of the tropics have been often described. Thi Lampyridie are, in Jamaica, far more abundant than Pyrophori noctilucus. At all times, their sparks, of various degrees of in tensity, according to the size of the species, are to be seen, fitfuU; gleaming by scores about the margins of woods, and in open an< cultivated places. Photuris versicolor, a large species with drab coloured elytra, I found abroad soon after my arrival, in Dt cember. One flying around the house, in the evening, I wa struck with its swift and headlong flight and nearly permanen luminosity, which was much more brilliant than that of any spe cies which I had at that time seen. The large Pygolampis, to which, for precision's sake (as I hav a note concerning it), I have given a name, I did not meet with until May, when one flew into the house at Bluefields in the evening ; and two nights afterwards I observed it rather nume-rous on the very sea-beach at Sabito. It was conspicuous for the intensity of its light, much exceeding that of Photuris versicolor. Sometimes it is only the last segment but two that shows lumi-nosity, but when excited the whole hinder part of the abdomen is lighted up with a dazzling glare. It is in the woods of St. Elizabeth's, in the month of June, that I have seen the Lampyridce in their glory ; and particularly along the road leading up the mountain from Shrewsbuiy to Contend where it is cut through the tall forest, which overhangs it on each side, making it sombre even by day, and casting an impe-netrable gloom over the scene by night. The darkness here, however, and especially at one point, a little dell, which is most obscm-e, is studded thick with fire-flies of various species, among * This fine species may be thus described. Length 9 lines ; breaddk of lines. Elytra smoke-black; thorax drab, the central portion dark brown; abdomen pale, the last three or four segments cream-white. Specimens io Brit. Mus.

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XXVI.—On the insects of Jamaica

Philip Henry Gosse
Annals And Magazine of Natural History (2) 1: 268-270 (1848)

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