1890.] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 83 



Trama hinna Gey. , Phurys vinculum Guen. , Euhalisidota longa 

 Gr. and many other species. The true collector is always san- 

 guine, and I have great hopes concerning my unnamed speci- 

 mens. One large, oddly-marked sphinx fills me with visions of 

 a new genus as well a species, and I have already selected its 

 name. There is also a strange and beautiful moth, apparently 

 one of the Zygaenidae, unlike anything I have seen or of which 

 I have read. I found feeding upon the tomato vines in the hotel 

 garden many larvae of Phlegethontius celeus, and upon the sweet 

 potato and Ipom&a pes-capr(E, larvae of P. cingidata. These 

 were all full grown; I placed several of them with their food- 

 plant in a box of earth where they soon buried themselves and 

 transformed, but though they have been in the pupa state nearly 

 five weeks no moth has yet emerged. I also found feeding upon 

 mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) and upon Conocarpus erecta 

 young larvae of Hyperchiria io Fab. I have reared them and 

 they are just spinning themselves up among some leaves. They 

 do not differ in any respect, as far as I can see, from the typical 

 form, and I am anxious to see if they will develop into var. lilith 



Strecker. 



(To be continued.) 



-o- 



Aculeate Hymenoptera new to Pennsylvania 

 and New Jersey. 



BY WILLIAM J. FOX. 



The following list of Aculeate Hymenoptera may prove of in- 

 terest to some readers of the NEWS, as it adds a few more species 

 to the fauna of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The majority of 

 them were collected at Westville, N. J., several miles belou 

 Philadelphia, during 1889. The localities in parentheses signify 

 where the species was recorded from before publication of this 

 article. 



Mntilla ornativentris Cress. Several specimens, Westville, N. J. , 

 1889 (Southern and Western States). 



.Mutilla dubitata Sm. Several specimens taken with the pre- 

 ceding species (Florida, Georgia, Colorado). 



Mntilla thoracica Blake. One specimen of this small species 

 was captured Oct. 29, 1889 (New York). 



