THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 165 



i88i— Graef, Bull. Bkln. Ent. Soc, III., 14, /r. syn. 



1S81 — French, Bull. Bkln. Ent. Soc, III., 2,1, j>r. syn. 

 H. textor Harris 



1828 — Harris*, New Engl. Farmer, VII., 33, Arctia. 



1833 — Harris, Cat. Ins. Mass., 591, Arctia. 



1841 — Harris*, Rept. Ins. Mass., 255, Hyphantria. 



1856 — Fitch*, 3rd Rept. Ins., N. Y., 387, Hyphantria. 



1856— Wlk., C. B. Mus., Lep. Het., IV., 834, Euproctis. 



i860 — Clem., Proc. Ac. N. Sci., Phil., XII., 530, Hyphantria. 



1862 — Morris, Synopsis Supplt., 344, Spilosoma. 



1862 — Harris"*, Inj. Ins., 358, pi. VII., ff. 10-12, Hyphantria. 



1862 — Morris, in Harris 1. c. note, Spilosoma. 



1865— Walk., C. B. Mus., Lep. Het., XXXIL, 351, Hypantria. 



1870 — Riley*, Am. Ent., I., 59, HyphaJitria. 



187 1 — Riley*, 3rd Rept. Ins., Mo., 130, f. 55, Hyphantria. 



1871 — Walsh*, 2nd Rept. Ins., Ills., 18, Hyphantria. 



187 1 — Saund.*, Can. Ent., III., 69, Hyphantria. 



1873— Stretch*, Zyg. & Bomb., 206, pi. VIIL, f. 21 ( <^ ), Hyphantria. 



1875 — Edw.*, Proc. Cal. Ac. Sci., VI., 187, Hyphantria. 



1875 — Butler, Cist. Ent., II., ^t^, Hyphantria. 



1881 — Johnson*, Can. Ent., XII., 18, Hyphantria. 



1881 — Graef, Bull. Bkln. Ent. Soc, III., 14, =amea. 



1881 — French, Bull. Bkln. Ent. Soc, III., 31, = amea. 



1 88 1 — Riley, Gen. Index to Mo. Reports, 55, ^ainea. 



1883 — Saund.*, Fruit Insects, 71, ff. 66-68, Hyphantria. 



1S88— Dimmock*, A. K., Psyche, IV., 280, Hyphantria. 

 H. Candida Wlk. 



1864— Wlk., C. B. Mus., Lep. Het., XXXI., 291, Spilosoma. 



1868 — Grt. & Rob., Trans. Am. Ent. Soc, II., 84, /r. syn. 



1875 — Butler, Cist. Ent, II., t^i, an sp. dist ? 



Habitat — United States and Canada. 

 An elaborate list of food plants is given in Bull. X. of the Division of 

 Entomology, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, to which reference is made 

 above. The synonymy is the generally accepted one, except as to 

 congrua, which is added for the first time. In Mr. Grote's list of 1882, 

 textor and punctata stand without number but in Roman letters, and 

 therefore not as synonyms. There is no doubt at all of the identity of all 



