Noctuidae 
Genus COPIBRYOPHILA Smith 
Of the sole species, named angelica, belonging to this 
genus, which was erected by Prof. J. 
B. Smith in the year 1900 (see “Proceed¬ 
ings U. S. Nat. Mus.,” Vol. XXII, p. 416), 
we give a cut made from a drawing of 
Fig. 91 .—Coptbryophila th e type, which is contained in the 
angelica , 3.1. National Museum at Washington. 
Genus ALEPTINA Dyar 
This genus has been erected by Dyar to accommodate the 
species named inca by him in the “Canadian Entomologist,” 
Vol. XXXIV, p. 104. The male is figured on Plate XVII, Fig. 
28. The insect is found in Arizona and Texas. 
Genus BAILEYA Grote 
A small genus, the species in which have been commonly 
referred hitherto to the genus Leptina, but erroneously. 
(1) Baileya ophthalmica Guenee, Plate XVII, Fig. 25, $ . 
Not an uncommon species in the Appalachian Subregion. 
It comes freely to sugar, and is rather abundant in the forests of 
southern Indiana. 
(2) Baileya australis Grote, Plate XVII, Fig. 27, & . 
This is smaller than the preceding species, and generally 
lighter in color, with a very pronounced blackish apical shade 
on the fore wings. It occurs in the Gulf States from Florida to 
Texas. 
(3) Baileya doubledayi Guenee, Plate XVII, Fig. 26, $ . 
Of the same size as ophthalmica, but differently marked. 
From australis it may readily be distinguished by its larger size, 
and by the different marking of the apex of the fore wings. 
Genus HADENELLA Grote 
(1) Hadenella pergentilis Grote, Plate XIX, Fig. 24, 2 . 
This inconspicuous, but neatly marked little insect, belongs 
to the region of the Pacific coast, and ranges eastward as far as 
Colorado. 
(2) Hadenella subjuncta Smith, Plate XIX, Fig. 25, 3 „ 
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