66 LEPIDOPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 



Under side has the ground color and fulvous spots of the summit 

 more pale ; the interior points of the terminal edge are replaced 

 by a double series of white lunules ; there are two white spots ou 

 the costal edge towards the base, and sometimes a point near the 

 base of the cell. 



Antennce black as well as the body ; the latter is pointed with 

 white on the head and breast. 



The female is somewhat larger than the male, and the second 

 row of crescents on the under side of the wings is a little bluish. 



Larva green, varied with white ; the first rings are russety. 

 The second ring bears two spiny horns, a little arcuate in front ; 

 the third, fifth, sixth, seventh and tenth has each a small spiny 

 process, and the eleventh two short spines. Feeds on Salix and 

 Prunus. 



Chrysalis russety, with the sides of the abdomen varied with 

 white, and a prominent projection on the back. 



United States. — Expands from two inches and a half to four 

 inches. 



BOISD. 



4. L. lorquini Boisd. Ann. Soc. Ent. 2me ser. X, 301. L. eulalia 

 Doubled. 



Upper side brown-black, traversed toward the middle by a white 

 macular band, preceded on the primaries in the discoidal cellule 

 by a spot of the same color ; primaries, with the summit very 

 widely ferruginous red, separated from the brown part by three or 

 four white spots. Secondaries with two large fulvous points 

 towards the anal angle. 



Under side brown, with the same band and the same white spots 



as above ; the common band followed by a ferruginous space, 



divided by a series of whitish sagittate crescents, bordered with 



black at the summit; that of the primaries with two ferruginous 



streaks in the cellule ; that of the secondaries with the edge 



whitish, and the base intersected by whitish-gray spots. 



California. 



Boisd. 



paphia doubledat. 

 Wings with a metallic gloss, under side indistinctly reticulated; 

 female with the upper side more variegated with brown or pale- 

 colored spots than the male. Head not tufted in front; eyes large, 



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