260 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [June, '15 



Catalogo numerico del Museo Zoologico Cubano de Gundlach, Ha- 

 bana, 1895. 



Contribucion al Estudio de los Crustaceos de Cuba. Notas por Dr. 

 Juan Gundlach 1896, Compiladas por Dr. Jose I. Torralbas. Anales 

 Acad. Cien. Med. Fis. Nat. Running as supplements to the Anales, 

 but never completed. 



[The portrait of Gundlach reproduced on Plate VIII is from a pho- 

 tograph which has long been in the collection of the American Ento- 

 mological Society. It may have been received not long after Gund- 

 lach's election as a corresponding member of the Entomological So- 

 ciety of Philadelphia (Jan. 11, 1864). The portrait on Plate IX is from 

 a photograph, dated on the back February, 1885, and forming a part of 

 Prof. P. R. Uhler's collection, presented by Mrs. Uhler to the Ameri- 

 can Entomological Society in 1914. The fac-simile of Gundlach's 

 autograph on Plate VIII is from a letter to Mr. E. T. Cresson in May, 

 1866. It will be noted that the first name is there written "Johannes." 

 On the title pages of the Entomologia Cubana, the author's name is 

 spelled "Juan Gundlach." ED.] 



Additions to Insects of New Jersey, No. 2 (Lep.). 

 By HARRY B. Wfiiss, New Brunswick, N. J. 



With a few exceptions, the records for this list were re- 

 ceived through the kindness of Mr. Otto Buchholz, of Eliza- 

 beth, N. J. Mr. Buchholz also gives the following food plants 

 for species in the 1909 list, where food plants were lacking. 

 Nonagria laeta Morr., larvae in Sparganium, Bird ; Achatodes 

 zeae Harris, larvae in young alder shoots ; Apamea velata 

 Wlk., larvae in Car ex stricta; Catocala similis Edw., larvae on 

 scrub oak ; Papaipema speciosis'sima G. & R. larvae in royal 

 and cinnamon ferns. 



Mr. Frank M. Jones, of Wilmington, Delaware, informs me 

 'that E.vyra semicrocea Gn. in the 1909 list should be replaced 

 by E.vyra rolandiana Grt., the larvae of which occur in Sarra- 

 cenia wherever that plant grows in any quantity in New Jer- 

 sey. He has investigated the New Jersey records for semi- 

 crocea and found that the specimens were XantJioptcra scini- 

 flava Gn. in every case. Semicrocea is not represented from 

 New Jersey in the New Brunswick collection and considering 

 all of the evidence presented, should be omitted from the list. 



