THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



Scologramma perplexa, which occurs also both at Laggan and on 

 Pine Creek, and with which I formerly confused them, before 

 noting the very different generic characters. 



I have seen in the British Museum Morrison's male type of 

 perquiritata from Mt. Washington, but have no further note 

 thereon. 



615. P.gelida Sparre-Schneider, var. mevesi Auriv.? — -I have 

 examined four specimens, all males, taken at Banff by Mr. Sanson, 

 which I refer doubtfully as above. Dates are Aug. 19th, 1909^; 

 Aug. 19th, Sept. 1st and 5th, 1911. One of these is in my collec- 

 tion. The others are in that of Mr. Sanson, and one of these I 

 have compared with the British Museum material. On the 

 strength of that comparison I recorded the species as sincera H.- 

 S. in 43rd Rept. Ent. Soc, Ont. (1912), p. 119, 1913, notwith- 

 standing that, as there stated, I found the form to resemble more 

 closely some specimens standing under gelida. Sincera is 

 European, and stands in our North American lists as from 

 Labrador. Hampson adds: "U.S.A., mountains of northern and 

 middle states." Gelida has not previously been recorded from 

 North America. In January of the present year (1914), I again 

 examined the British Museum series under both names, though I 

 had then no Banff specimen with me. From my notes I conclude 

 that a specimen standing as "ab. mevesi Auriv." from Bergen, 

 Norway, agreed with the Banff form better than did anything else 

 there, and so tentatively I record it. Comparing it with typical 

 gelida, Hampson says of mn'esi: "Browner: fore wing without the 

 pinkish patch on the reniform; hind wing more irrorated with 

 brown." Hampson refers .both gelida and sincera to Anomogyna 

 Staud., with which the present form agrees structurally. 



616. P. imperita Hbn.— Calgary July 23rd, 1908, at light; 

 and Didsbury Aug. 5th and 8th, 1905; all taken by by Mr. C. G. 

 Garrett. Banff, July 30th to Aug. 4th, four specimens, by Mr. 

 Sanson. One Calgary and two Banff specimens are in my 

 collection. One of these I have compared in the British Museum, 

 and have labelled it as being like Labrador specimens there 

 standing, and smaller only than the female type discitincta Morr. 

 from St. Martin's Falls. Hiibner's figures, which I have carefully 



