Arctiidae 
(2) Hemihyalea labecula Grote, Plate XIV, Fig. 7, $. 
(The Freckled Glassy-wing.) 
This insect is not uncommon in Colorado. It occurs in 
early summer about Manitou, and among the mountains 
generally. 
Genus OPHARUS Walker 
An extensive neotropical genus, represented within the limits 
of the United States by but one species. 
(1) Opharus astur Cramer, Plate XIV, Fig. 5, S. (The 
Astur Moth.) 
Syn. albicans , Walker; maculicollis Walker; pustulata Packard. 
The insect is common in Mexico and South America, and 
occasionally occurs in Arizona. 
Genus CALIDOTA Dyar 
A neotropical genus containing a dozen species or more, two 
of which are found within our limits. We figure one of these; 
the other, C. muricolor Dyar, has the wings mouse-gray, 
semihyaline, the secondaries paler than the primaries. The head 
is gray in front, yellowish above; the thorax is gray, the 
collar edged inwardly with ochreous; the abdomen is reddish 
buff, with a series of black dorsal spots and broad lateral bands 
of the same color. The pectus and coxae are ochreous, the 
legs gray. The type of the species carne from Arizona. 
(1) Calidota strigosa Walker, Plate XVI, Fig. 24, $. 
(The Streaked Calidota.) 
Syn. cubensis Grote; laqueata Henry Edwards. 
This insect occurs in Florida, and is abundant in the 
Antilles. Its life-history has been described by Dyar in the 
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, for 1900. 
p. 268. The food-plant is Guettarda elliptica . 
Genus EUPSEUDOSOMA Grote 
Three species are attributed by Hampson to this genus, 
one of which, the type of the genus, we figure. It is the 
only species of the genus occurring within our territory. 
(1) Eupseudosoma involutum Sepp, Plate XIV, Fig. 1, $ . 
(The Snowy Eupseudosoma.) 
Syn. nivea Herrich-Schaefler; floridum Grote; immaculata Graef. 
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