394 . THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



Hulst, from Hall Valley, Colo., and a Colorado male compared 

 with a male type in their possession. The male there figured 

 (fig. 12) is the species which was referred by Taylor to loricaria 

 Eversman, and listed by me as such. The female type is, as 

 Messrs. Barnes and McDunnough point out, a distinct species,, 

 and is very close to my No. 532, for which I have not yet received 

 a name. No mention is made of sexes in Hulst's description. 



541. Apocheima rachelcs Hulst. I have a wingless female 

 taken here, which is evidently this species, dated April 11th. 



543. Anagoga pulveraria Linn. — During one or two years, 

 particularly 1909, this species was not uncommon here in June, 

 flying at dusk in the poplar woods. 



547. Xanthotype crocataria Fabr. — I have a single specimen of 

 this species taken at the head of Pine Creek on July 14th, 1906. 



552. Euchloena astylnsaria Walk. — A male is in my collection 

 taken at Edmonton by Mr. F. S. Carr, May 13th, 1910. A male 

 at the head of Pine Creek on May 31st of the same year, by Mr. 

 E. R. Brill. The latter specimen is about like Holland's figure, 

 but lacks the cloud opposite the cell on primaries. The Edmonton 

 specimen is similar though rubbed. The Red Deer River specimen 

 previously recorded almost lacks the brown irroration, and differs 

 from the others in having a diffuse transverse fuscous shade across 

 all wings, above and beneath, least evident on the primaries above, 

 where it is just posterior to the t. a. line. It is possibly a distinct 

 species. 



553. E. pectinaria Schiff. — High River. (Baird). 



556. Metanema inatomaria Gn. — Banff. July 1st, 1907. 



557. M. determinata Walk. — Banff. July 1st, 1907. 



560. Brephos infans Moschl. — Calgary, April 19th, 1913, by 

 Mr. Norman Criddle. 



563. Cossus populi Walk.? vel ore Strk.? — Messrs. Barnes and 

 McDunnough commenced their "Contributions" by a "Revision of 

 the Cossidce" (Vol. I, No. 1, 1911). There on Plate VII, fig 8, is 

 a reproduction from a coloured figure of Walker's type of populi 

 in the British Museum, from St. Martin's Falls, Hudson's Bay 

 Territory, on the borders of Ontario. It is a female, and Sir George 

 Hampson states that the abdomen, though distorted laterally by 

 pressure, is more elongate than in any of its allies. Compared 



