186 GEO. D. HULST. 



vein ; they are very short stemmed, and 10 is separate. In the hind 

 wings 3 and 4 are stemmed one-half length, 7 and 8 are stemmed. 

 The description of the genitalia is from the American species. 



1. S. albipeuuella Hulst, Euto. Am. iii, 133, 1887 iPempelia). — Expands 

 20 mm. Palpi whitish fuscous, darker at end ; head ocher fuscous, as also ab- 

 domen : thorax fuscous. Fore wings dull ocher clay-white, shaded and washed 

 with fuscous reddish basally and beyond first line, at middle sometimes wanting. 

 Lines intermediate, revealed by the fuscous, the basal with blackish spot along 

 inner margin, the outer close to margin, parallel with it. Hind wings light fus- 

 cous, with veins and margin darker. 



Southern California. 



HETEROGRAPHIS Rag. 

 (Type legateUa Hiib.) 

 Ento. Mon. Mag. xxii. 31, 1885. 



Mona Hulst, Ento. Am. iv, 11.5, 1888. 



Labial palpi erect, slightly exceeding head, end member short ; 

 maxillary palpi small, filiform ; tongue rather long, stout; ocelli 

 present; antennae simple, slightly bent, pubescent. Legs: tarsi all 

 spinulated. Venation : fore wings 11 veins, 4 and 5 separate, these 

 on a line with the median vein, 10 separate; hind wings 7 veins, 2 

 at angle ; 3 and 4 long stemmed. 



1. H. morrisonella Rag., Diag. N. A. Phyc. p. 11, 1887 (Heterographis). 

 — Expands 14 — 22 mm. Fore wings clay-white or ochreous, dusted unevenly 

 with blackish, particularly on and about the veins and along the lines. Costa 

 whitish to second line. Lines whitish, oblique, not distinct, the outer near mar- 

 gin and sometimes seeming dentate by the fading of the blackish edging; some- 

 times a band within basal and beyond outer line, sometimes one, sometimes both 

 wanting. Discal dots distinct or wanting. Hind wings fuscou.s, pellucid. 



Texas, Colorado, New Mexico. 

 Var. olbiella Hulst, Ento. Am. iv, 116, 1887 {3Iona). 



Under this name I described several specimens, part the normal 

 form of morrisonella, part what I think to be a variety having the 

 same markings, but washed all over, except on the lines, with deep 

 wine-red ; the name may hold as a varietal name for this very distinct 

 form. 



Yar. coloradensis Rag., Diag. N. A. Phyc. p. 12, 1887 i Heterographis). 



In ray specimens I have is every variation from morrisonella to 

 coloradensis. The latter differs from the type form in having no 

 ochreous submarginal band, or as some specimens are found without 

 the basal band also, it may stand for the form having no orange 

 ochreous, on fore wings. 



