333 



ones with au elongated, costal, black spot; legs whitish. Length to tip of 

 closed wings .21 in. Cambridge, June 21, 1835. 



Body blackish, with yellowish white incisures. Head with a pale yellow 

 line beneath each eye; front yellowish white, with black lines; eyes very 

 prominent, globose ; antenna3 shorter than the wings, black; palpi pale 

 cinereous. Wings hyaline, iridescent; suj^erior ones with an elongated fus- 

 cous spot beyond the middle of the anterior mai'gin. Legs pale cinereous, 

 or dirty white, with the apex of the tibia3 and the tarsi fuscous. The 

 little cellule near the middle of the anterior edge of the upper wings is 

 linear, and much elongated, and entirely fuscous or opaque. The arrange- 

 ment of the nervures near the hinder margin differs also in this insect from 

 that which is found in the other species; the wings are not so wide, and the 

 eyes are much more prominent and globose. 



It may perhaps hereafter be proper to separate this from the other species 

 under a new generic name. I have seen only two specimens, which were 

 discovered on a fence on the 21st of June, 1835; and the description has 

 been drawn up from these instead of from recent specimens, which may 

 perhaps exhibit characters overlooked in those preserved in my cabinet. 



Phryganea sp. [Neuronia pardalis Walk. ?] 



(J? bella, nigro-brunnea ; antennis, capite thoraceqiie supra, nigris; alls 

 h'unneis, aniicis fulvo-guttatis, posticis fascia, poslicd lata gutiisque cosfalibus 

 fulvis. Alarum expansio \\ — If unc. 



Body dark brown, antennae, with the upper part of the liead and thorax, 

 black, the latter having two abbreviated fulvous lines; upper wings brown, 

 with numerous large, rounded, tawny spots in rows between the nervures; 

 hind wings brown, with a broad, tawny, transverse band near the tip, 

 and attaining the margin at the anal angle ; base spotted with tawny yellow 

 upon and behind the anterior edge; head beneath, Avith the jialpi, coxte, an- 

 terior thighg and tibise, and bases of the intermediate and posterior thighs, 

 fulvous. 



The two sexes of this beautiful species were presented to me by the Rev. 

 L. W. Leonard, who took them near the Grand Monadnock Mountain in 

 New Hampshire. 



Phryganea argus Harr. mss. 



? fenestrata fulvo-brunnea ; antennis lineisque tribus mesothoracis nigris ; 

 alis liyalinis; aniicis fusco-venosis, areolisque ovalibns fenestratis fusco-cinctis. 

 Alarum expansio 2 unc. 



Body pale tawny brown. Antennae (except the first joint) and three 

 short dilated lines on the mesothorax, black. Wings transparent; disk of 



