Genus Feniseca 
on the under side pale fawn, with a band of pale-red spots on 
both wings about the middle, and a few similar spots on the 
outer and inner margins of the hind wings. Expanse, .75 inch. 
Early Stages .—Only the egg, described and figured by Scud- 
der, is known. 
It ranges from Quebec to southern New Jersey, and westward 
to West Virginia, and has been taken on Mount Graham, in Ari¬ 
zona. It appears in early spring. It is still rare in collections. 
(37) Thecla titus, Fabricius, Plate XXX, Fig. 10, $ ; Fig. 14, 
6 , under side; Plate V, Fig. 37, chrysalis (The Coral Hair-streak). 
Butterfly. — Uniformly gray-brown on the up¬ 
per side. Some specimens of the female have 
a few red spots at the anal angle of the hind 
wing. On the under side the wings are col¬ 
ored as on the upper side; but the hind wings 
have a conspicuous submarginal band of coral- 
red spots on their outer third. Expanse, 1.30 
inch. 
Early Stages .—These have been well described 
by several authors. The fullest account is given 
by Scudder. The caterpillar feeds on the leaves 
of the wild cherry and the wild plum. 
The insect occurs from the Atlantic to the Paci¬ 
fic, from Maine to Georgia. It is not very common. 
There are some ten or more other species of this genus found 
in our fauna, but the species figured in our plates will suffice to 
give a good idea of the genus. 
Fig. 133. — Neu- 
ration of Thecla 
titus , enlarged. 
Typical of sub¬ 
genus Strymon , 
Hiibner. 
Genus FENISECA, Grote 
(The Harvesters) 
“ Upon his painted wings, the butterfly 
Roam’d, a gay blossom of the sunny sky.” 
Willis G. Clark. 
Butterfly.— Small, bright orange-yellow, on the upper side 
spotted with black, on the under side more or less mottled and 
shaded with gray and brown, the markings of the upper side 
reappearing. The cut shows the neuration, which need not be 
minutely described. 
Egg. —Subglobular, much wider than high, its surface smooth* 
250 
