THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 403 



The wings are a little shorter and wider than in pacificaria^ and are 

 dusted all over quite thickly with cinereous specks, not stria?, as in the 

 iwo species above named. The cross lines on all wings are faint, but 

 appear to be more evenly rounded and less wavy than in erythemaria and 

 pacificaria. 



Beneath, the dense dusting gives a very different appearance to the 

 scattered strigations in the other species. 



This species was found by Mr. T. Bryant, on the international 

 boundary line, near the Stickeen River, in the early part of June, 1905. 

 He reports the species as being rather common. 



The type specimen in my cabinet is dated 13th June, 1905, and is a (^ . 



20. Enypia Packardaia^ new species, — 



= Cleora umbrosaria^ Packard, Monograph, p. 453, and PL xi, 



fig- Zl^ 1876 (part); 

 not Cleo7-a u?/ibrosaria, Packard, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 

 xvi, 23, 1874. 



Packard described Cleora uvibrosaria in 1874, from one male, 

 received from Hy. Edwards, and taken in California. He distinctly states 

 that the antennae were " broadly pectinated^ Had it not possessed this 

 character he would certainly not have placed it in the genus Cleora. 



In his Monograph, two years later, Packard republishes his descrip- 

 tion, but speaks of having at that timeyi7/^r males, two at least being from 

 Vancouver Island, collected by Crotch. 



One of these Vancouver Island specimens he figures, and strangely 

 enough depicts it with pectinated antennce. But whether Packard's 

 original Vancouver Island specimens had pectinated antennae or not, it is 

 quite certain that no such specimens exist in our collections to-day. I am 

 quite prepared to believe that the original Californian type of lunbrosaria 

 had, as Packard states, broadly pectinated antennas, and though for the mo- 

 ment the species has been lost sight of, it will, I am confident, some day 

 be rediscovered, but our B. C. species cannot be the same, and, therefore, 

 needs a new name. 



• It is not a Cleora., nor is it a Nepytia., as Hulst styles nmbrosaria in 

 his latest catalogue, for in both these genera the males have fully 

 pectinated antennte, but it is a near ally of Enypia venata, and like that 

 species has in the male simple, slightly-thickened antennae. 



I propose to call it 



Efiypia Packardata, new species. — P^xpanse, 40 mm. Palpi short, 

 third joint deflected. 



