6-i Journal New York Entomological Society. [Voi. xvii. 



tex. Collar inferiorly brownish, limited by a black transverse line. Thoracic mark- 

 ings broken and indefined. Primaries powdery and streaked with blackish and black, 

 with a distinct yellowish shade in the discal cell, the ordinar}- spots lost and the 

 median lines fragmentary. On the costa, oblique diftuse brown streaks mark the t. 

 a. line and median shade, and a geminate black oblique streak marks the inception 

 of the t. p. line. The t. a. line is just indicated by venular marks. The t. p. line 

 may be traced as a narrow, rather even broken line from costa to vein 3. S. t. line 

 present as a diffuse oblique whitish shade, outwardly marked by brownish patches in 

 the interspaces, and by a subapical preceding shade. A series of black terminal 

 dots in the interspaces, beyond which the fringes are cut with blackish. Secondaries 

 whitish with a yellowish tinge at base and with a broad blackish outer margin in both 

 sexes. Beneath, all wings whitish with a broad dusky outer margin. 

 Expands, 1,50-1.65 inches =; 38— 41 mm. 



Habitat. — Santa Catalina Mts. , Arizona : southern Arizona. 



Two males and one female from Dr. Barnes ; the southern Ari- 

 zona example marked as taken by Poling. The specimens are very 

 much alike except in size, and are altogether different from any other 

 of our species in the more trigonate primaries ; the lanceolate form 

 being almost lost. There is no subanal streak and the type of macu- 

 lation becomes more like that of some of the normal hadenoid forms. 



Tceniocampa occluna, new species. 



Ground color dull grayish luteous, more or less densely powdered with smoky 

 and blackish. Head and thorax concolorous, the patagia tending toward a blackish 

 submargin. Primaries with all the maculation present but broken, and so powdered 

 with blackish or smoky scales that the ornamentation is somewhat difficult to make 

 out. Basal line geminate, black, outwardly convex and connected with base by a 

 short blackish streak. T. a. line geminate, rather well removed from base, very in- 

 complete, outwardly oblique, with a very slight outcurve. T. p. line geminate, 

 outer portion becoming punctifomi, rather even in general course, outwardh' curved 

 to vein 6, then inwardly oblique and with a slight incurve to the inner margin. S. t. 

 line yellowish, irregularly and strongly sinuate, preceded by a somewhat darker shad- 

 ing. A series of small blackish terminal lunules separated by yellowish dots on the 

 veins, beyond which the fringes are narrowly cut with yellow. Claviform very small, 

 loop-like, outlined in black ; but tending to become lost. Orbicular round or a little 

 oval, small or moderate in size, concolorous, more or less completely outlined by black 

 scales. Reniform large, a little oblique, somewhat constricted at the middle, the 

 lower portion larger and broader than the upper, dark filled, incompletely outlined by 

 black scales. Secondaries whitish at base, darkening gradually to a smoky terminal 

 margin which is broader in the female ; veins smoky and a trace of a smoky discal 

 lunule: fringe whitish. Beneath, powdery; all wings with a more or less obvious 

 outer line and a discal spot : primaries gray, tending to smoky ; secondaries whitish, 

 powdering sparse except along costal margin. 



Expands, .92-1.12 inches =r 23-28 mm. 



Habitat. — Mesi 11a Park, New Mexico, May 9, 190c (Cockerell), 



