CATALOGUE OF NOCTUID.E SMITH. 151 



O. fuscimacula Grt.* 

 1881. Grt., Bull. Geol. Surv.,vi, 2G2, 265, Oligia. 



HABITAT. Florida; Texas. 



A "type" is in the British Museum; another in the Tepper collection. 



O. grata Him.* 



1819. Hbn., Zutraege, 16, f. 71, 72, Elapltria. 

 1816. Hbn., Verzeichniss, 230, Ehipln-ia. 

 1856. Wlk., C. B.Mus., Het., x, 293, Caradrina. 

 1874. Grt., Bull. Buff. Soc. Nat. Sei., II, 22, Cartidrlna. 

 rax-ili* Morr. 



1874. Morr., Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H., xvn, 158, Hadcna. 



1875. Grt., Can. Ent., vn, 58, pr. syu. 



1875. Grt., Bull. Buff..Soc. Nat. Sci., n, 211, pr. syu. 



1880. Grt., Can. Ent., xn, 86, pr. syn. 



1881. Grt., Bull. Geol. Surv., vi, 265, pr. syn. 



HABITAT. Maryland to Kansas to Florida to Texas, March to Sep- 

 tember in every month. 



Types of Mr. Morrison's species are in the Tepper collection, and in 

 the museum at Cambridge. The species is a common one locally in 

 the Southern States. 



O. nucicolora Gn.* 



1852. Gn., Spec, Gen., Noct., i, 24, pi. 4, f. 9, Monodcs. 

 1856. Wlk., C. B. Mus., Het., x, 284, Monodes. 



unisignata Wlk. 



1856. Wlk., C. B. Mus., Het., ix, 189, Lapkygma. 

 1891. Butler, Entomologist, xxiv, 241, Lapkygma. 



jmginata Morr. 



1875. Morr., Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phil., xxvii, 64, Hadena. 

 1881. Grt., Bull. Geol. Surv., vr, 265, Oligia. 



clara Harv. 

 1878. Harv., Can. Eiit, x, 57, Caradrina. 



HABITAT. Florida; Texas. 



Mr. Morrison's type is in the Tepper collection; the others are in the 

 British Museum. Mr. Grote suggested very doubtfully that Guenee 

 might have intended to describe paginata; but figure and description 

 pointed to Platysenta atriciliata so decidedly that I felt justified in mak- 

 ing the reference in my recent list. Mr. Butler suggested that paginata 

 might be unisignata Wlk., if the former was correctly named in the Mu- 

 seum. Harvey's type of clara is a dull, dark specimen, but unques- 

 tionably the same species. 



Genus PERIGEA Gn. 

 1852. Gn., Spec. Gen., Noct., I, 225. 



The species of this genus must be studied in connection with material 

 from the West Indian 'fauna before a stable nomenclature can be at- 

 tained. There are either several species resembling each other very 

 closely or there are some that are widely distributed and somewhat 

 variable. 



