Noctuidae 
collections. A good place to collect them is in maple-sugar 
camps, about the sap-buckets. 
(1) Scopelosoma moffatiana Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 33, 
£ . (Moffat’s Sallow.) 
This as well as all of the other species is found in the northern 
portion of the Atlantic subregion. 
(2) Scopelosoma ceromatica Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 34, 
$ . (The Anointed Sallow.) 
Ranges from New Jersey to Maine. 
(3) Scopelosoma walkeri Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 35, $ . 
(Walker’s Sallow.) 
The moth is known to fly from Texas to Iowa and eastward 
to Maine and Canada. The larva feeds upon oaks. 
(4) Scopelosoma devia Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 42, £. 
(The Lost Sallow.) 
It occurs in northern New York and Canada. 
Genus ORRHODIA Mubner 
Fig. 125 .—Orrliodia 
californica. 
The genus is found both in Europe and 
America. Prof. Smith has attributed to it a 
species to which he gave the name of cali¬ 
fornica. The type is in the United States 
National Museum and the annexed figure gives 
a representation of it. It is the only species of 
the genus in our fauna. 
\ 
Genus GL^EA Hubner 
(1) Glaea viatica Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 38, £. (The 
Roadside Sallow.) 
The species appears very late in the fall of the year. It rartges 
from Texas in the south to Massachusetts in the north. 
(2) Glaea inulta Grote, Plate XXVI, Fig. 37, £ . (The 
Unsated Sallow.) 
The moth ranges from Canada to Virginia and westward to 
Illinois and Iowa. 
(3) Glaea sericea Morrison, Plate XXVI, Fig. 36, £ . (The 
Silky Sallow.) 
The range of this species is much the same as that of the 
preceding. 
218 
