SOME MOTHS, GENUS ACLERIS — OBRAZTSOV 



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Figure 1. — Acleris macdunnoughi, new species: a, male genitalia with aedoeagus removed 

 (slide 411-Obr.); b, aedoeagus; c, cornuti (more enlarged); d, female genitalia (slide 

 412-Obr.). 



seminalis joining close to antrum. Cervix bursae short; corpus bur- 

 sae elongate without signum. 



Types. — Holotype, female (genitalia on slide, prepared by A. Busck, 

 Mar. 12, 1935), Winchendon, Mass., Sept. 29, 1902; allotype, male, 

 same locaHty, Sept. 23, 1902 ; both in USNM (No. 65585). Paratypes: 

 four males (genitalia on slides, prepared by A. Busck, Feb. 2, 1922; 

 Nov. 2, 1924; Mar. 12 and 13, 1935), same locality, Sept. 23, 26, 

 and 29, 1902, USNM; eight males and three females (genitalia on 

 slides 411-Obr., 412-Obr., 460-Obr., and 461-Obr.), same locality, 

 Sept. 6-Oct. 12, 1902, AMNH. All types originate from Kearfott 

 Collection. 



Other specimens examined. — One male (genitalia on slide 430- 

 Obr.), Winnipeg, Manitoba (A. W. Hanham), AMNH; one slide with 

 male genitalia (prepared by A. Busck, Mar. 11, 1924), Meach Lake, 

 Quebec (C. H. Young), moth not located, USNM; one male. Cats- 

 kill Mountains, N.Y. Aug. 29, 1905, AMNH. 



Remarks. — This is the Neartic species confused in the collections 

 and literature for the Palearctic Acleris latifasciana (Haworth) (schal- 

 leriana auctorum, not Linne), which it really resembles. McDun- 



