CATALOGUE OF NOCTUID.E SMITH. 31') 



T. quadrifera Zc-ll.* 



1874. ZcU., Veih. k.-k. zoiil. bdt. (ios., xxiv, i>I. xii, f. 2, EruHtiia. 

 1877. Grt., Can. Eat., ix, 79, TripndUi. 



IfABiTAT. — Mexico; Texas; Missouri. 



I have not seen the tyi)e, uoi- do I know where it is at i)reseiit. I 



have Zeller's paper only iii the separate form, iu which the descriijtion 



is on p. 3. 



T. opipara lly. Edw.* 



1881. Ily. Edw., Papilio, i, 117, (lyros. 



1882. Grt., Ni'W List, 'M, TripmUa. 



llAiUTAT. — Texas in May. 



The type is iii Mr. Graef's collection. 



T. limbata lly. Kdw.* 



1881. Hy. Edvv., Papilio, i, 22, Oribatcs. 



1882. Grt., New List, 37, rripudiu. 



Habitat. — Mazatlaii, Mexico; Texas. 

 The type is in tlie Edwards colle(itiou. 



T. basicinerea (!rt. 

 1882. Grt., BnlL Geol. Siuv., vi, 5G3, Tripndia. 



Habitat. — Arizona. 



The type is in the Neuuiflegen collection. 



T. lixiva Grt. 

 1882. Grt., Can. Ent., xiv, 173, Tripudia. 



Habitat. — Arizona. 



The type is iu tlie NeiinKPgen collection. 



Gcuns GYROS lly. Edw. 

 1881. Hy. Edw.. Papilio, i, 117. 



G. niuirii Hy. Edw. 



1881. Hy. Edw., Papilio, i, 22, Oribates; id., 117, Gyros. 



Habitat. — California. 



The type is in the Edwards collection. 



Lep'ulomys irrenosa Gn., ii, LM)2, pi. x, f. 1, is usually ])laood here, but 

 is certainly not North American. The type is in the British Museum. 

 M. Guenee gave New York as the locality; but nothing on the si)eci- 

 men itself nor in the record indicates Avhere it really came fro!a; it has 

 the Doubleday label and that is all. The insect itself is very i)eculiar; 

 it has a thick truncated tuft of hair at the base of primaries; the pali)i 

 like Pleonectyptera and altogether it has the look of a tro])ical species. 1 

 do not l>elieve for an instant that it came from New York, and i)ref('r to 

 drop it from our lists as not of our fauna, until the contrary is proved 

 by uew specimens. 



