247 



Desiderata. 



Lozogramma extremaria Walk., List Lep. Het. Br. Mus., xxiii, 984, 

 1861 (see plate 10, fig. 20). — "Male. Reddish cinereous. Wings minutely 

 blackish-speckled, with a brown discal point, and with an exterior line of 

 brown points on the veins; these points are apparent only on the under side. 

 Fore wings with a slight indication of an interior line, and with a distinct, 

 almost straight, ferruginous, exterior line. Length of the body, 6£ lines; 

 of the wings, 17 lines. East Florida.'' The figure is copied from Walker's 

 type in the British Museum. 



Lozogramma subcequaria Walk., List Lep. Het. Br. Mus., xxiv, 1660, 

 1862. — " Female. Whitish cinereous, minutely blackish-speckled, slightly 

 ochraceous-tinged. Hind tibia? slightly incrassated. Wings with a slender, 

 brown, marginal line; fringe interlined with brown. Fore wings acute, with 

 two oblique whitish lines, which are diffusedly brown-bordered on the inner 

 side; interior line straight; exterior line very slightly undulating. Length of 

 the body, 5£ lines; of the wings, 16 lines. Canada." In Mr. D'Urban's 

 collection. 



EUFITCHIA, gen. nov. Plate 3, fig. 1. 



Abraxas t Fitch, Trans. N. Y. Ag. Soc, vii, 1848. 



Closely allied to the second section of Thamnonoma. Male antenna? 

 well pectinated to near the tip, the branches ciliated; in the female simple, 

 unciliated. Palpi rather large, porrect, much as in Thamnonoma, passing 

 about one-third their length beyond the front of the head; third joint small, 

 acute. Fore wings subfalcate; the costa rather full, the outer edge slightly 

 angled on the first median. Hind wings somewhat square, a slight sinus 

 below the apex. The shape of the wings closely resembles Thamnonoma; 

 the venation is also very similar, the costal vein joining the subcostal on the 

 inner third of the subcostal arcole; and beyond, the vein is equal in length to 

 the two subcostal venules, the three venules being unusually equal in length. 

 The subcostal areole is long, narrow, and curved, as in Thamnonama. The 

 origin of the discal venules is much as in Thamnonoma brunneata. The 

 direction of the discal venules is different from Thamnonoma, the anterior 

 vein being straight and directed inward a little obliquely, while the posterior 

 one is oblique and not curved. In the first section of Thamnonoma, both veins 

 follow a regular curved line, while the course they unitedly take in T. brun- 



