192 



Journal New York Entomological Society. t VoL xxvn. 



is a minute sinuation just opposite the ovipositor. The straight outer 

 margin of the fore wings and the broad head with slightly protruding 

 front, are conspicuous features of this large species. 



A male and female collected at Bellevue, Washington Co., Utah, 

 June 21, 1919 (Tom Spalding) are like the specimens examined from 

 California. 



Okanagana vandykei Van Duzee. 



1915. Journal N. Y. Ento. Soc, xxiii, p. 38. 



Reported in the original description from Carrville, Trinity Co., 

 Calif., June 29, 1913; Nash Mine, Trinity Co., Calif., June 29, 1913, 

 8,000 ft., and Plumers Co. Calif., June. To these records may be 

 added a female from Keddie, Plumas Co., Calif., June 7, 1918, 3,500 

 ft. (F. M. Jones), Davis collection. We have examined a male from 



Okanagana. vandykei 



Riddle, Oregon, June 18, which is like the paratype from Plumas Co., 

 with the same long, orange colored valve, orange marks on pronotum, 

 etc., except that the front is more prominent and black. A female 

 from Forest Grove, Oregon, July 30, 1917 (Catherine Jones col- 

 lector), has the body colored as usual, but the costal margin of the 

 fore wings to the end of the radial cell is bright green instead of the 

 more usual orange. The first anal vein is also bright green, and the 

 basal cell is darkened along the hind margin. 



Okanagana lurida new species. PI. xix, fig. 3. 



Type male from Pulman, Washington (C. V. Piper). Collection 

 U. S. National Museum. 



