324 NEUROPTERA. 
Hab. Canapa, Ontario (Brodie, Ont. Gov't Coll. teste E. M. Walker in litt. April 28, 
1905); Brivish Conumpia, Glacier (Mrs. C. Schaeffer, A. N. S.: 1 3), Kaslo™, 
Ainsworth 27, Loon Lake 29; Unitep States !~®>, New York 1#!® and New Jersey 7° 
west to Illinois! and Tennessee 2°, South Dakota [Zruman] to Washington [0. B. 
Johnson], south to Louisiana® and Southern California [Grinnell, Truman] (coll. P. 
P.C.); Lower Cairornia, Sierra Laguna", San José del Cabo !!.—Mexico, Mata- 
moros and Victoria (Rhoads, A. N. S.: 1 2) in Tamaulipas, Las Bocas (Batty, A. M. 
N. H.: 2 3,2 9) in Durango, La Joya (Hoag, coll. P. P. C.: 1 ¢,1 @) in San Luis 
Potosi, Guadalajara (Schumann: 1 specim.), Uruapan (coll. Deam: 1¢ ), Tlalnepantla 
(Barrett, coll. Adams: 5 , 92) [1 6], Guadalupe [1 ¢, 1 2], Tlalpam [1 ¢ | 
(Tower, coll. P. P. C.), Mexico City (Schumann, H. H. Smith: 2 3,2 92 ; Barrett, 
coll. Adams: 3 3, 2 2; coll. Deam: 4 6, 4 2), Tizapan (Barrett, coll. P. P. C.: 
1¢,12), San Luis (Palmer, M. C. Z.: 16,392), Cuernavaca (Barrett, coll. Adams: 
1 3), Orizaba (1. H. 8S. & F. D. G.: 1 2), Amula in Guerrero (H. H. Smith: 3 2, 
1 2), Oaxaca [1 3,1 2], Mitla [1 ¢ ] (coll. Deam); British Honpuras, Rio Hondo 
(coll. McLachlan: 1 3 labelled “‘collocata” in MclL.’s hand).—Asta, Ajan, Sea of 
Ochotsk 1. 
Taken in January at Victoria, in December at Orizaba; the remaining Mexican 
specimens are dated as having been captured between June and September. 
This species has been found at altitudes of 4800 feet at Glacier, 8000-10,000 feet 
in the Beaver Range of Utah, according to specimens in the Brooklyn Institute by 
Messrs. Engelhardt and Doll, and 11,000 feet at Silver Lake, Colorado, according to 
Dr. Henry Skinner. | 
CANNACRIA. 
Cannacria, Kirby, Trans. Zool. Soc. Lond. xii. pp. 262, 800 (1889); Cat. Odon. p. 35 (1890); 
Calvert, Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. (2) iv. pp. 472, 547 (1895). 
Three species of this genus are known, two of which certainly occur within our 
faunal limits. C. furcata has the least, C. gravida the most, dense venation; C. batesii 
is intermediate in this, as in other respects. 
Synopsis of Specific Differences. 
Front wings with three rows of post-triangular cells out to the level of the nodus, 
one row between the short sector and the supplementary sector next below. 
Black on abdominal dorsum confined to a mid-dorsal spot or stripe on segments 8-9, or 
still more reduced, ground-colour of abdomen red ( 3) or luteous ( 2 ), face and 
labrum reddish or luteous ; wings, with one row of cells between subnodal sector 
and supplementary sector next below, uncoloured except for brownish-yellow at 
the base of the hind pair out to the first antecubital and level thereof, or less, 
front wings with 8-10 (9 in 623 °/.), hind wings with 6-7 (6 in 863 °/,) ante- 
