Sept., 1908] Kearfott: Tortricid.« and Tineina. 169 



— Eucosma engelana, new species. 



Expanse 14-17 mm. 



Head, palpi, antenna, thorax, abdomen, legs and forewings pale terra-cotta 

 brown. The inner sides of palpi are slightly paler, also hindwings are of a lighter 

 shade. 



Fore^uing. — A faintly darker basal shade, its outer edge from inner third of 

 dorsal margin obliquely upward and becoming obsolete near costa. Before tornus is 

 the only conspicuous mark on the wing, a darker brown quadrate spot, resting on 

 dorsal margin and disappearing before middle of wing. The intervening space, be- 

 tween it and basal area, and also the ocellic area is slightly paler than the balance of 

 wing. On the outer half of costa are several faintly darker outwardly oblique dashes, 

 the one before apex is inwardly oblique. The intervening spaces paler. 



Four specimens, three S" from Pittsburg, Pa,, August 20 and Sep- 

 tember 2, Henry Engel ; one 9 Great Notch, N. J., 800 ft. elevation. 

 May 21, 1899. Cotype in Merrick Museum, and my collection. 



This species is very much like dorsisig?iaia?m Clem., and I have 

 long considered my 9 specimen as a very pale or bleached form of 

 this species ; recently, when at New Brighton, Mr. Engel showed me 

 three cJ* specimens and insisted they were distinct from any of the 

 varieties oi dorsisignafaiia, in which opinion I entirely coincide, after 

 additional critical comparison, and take pleasure in naming the spe- 

 cies after this most careful worker. 



Eucosma galenapunctana, new species. 



Expanse 17-24 mm. ' 



Head ochreous cream, darker in front ; palpi with small rounded flattened brush 

 on second joint, apical joint short, exposed, color ochreous cream, outer end of brush 

 and a[.ical jo'nt leaden-gray ; antenna finely ciliated in male, ochreous cream faintly 

 annulated with gray ; thorax same shade as posterior end of head ; abdomen grayish 

 white becoming darker at anal end ; legs creamy white, dusted with brown. 



Forewing. — Male costal fold about one third length of wing, narrow, appressed, 

 costa nearly straight beyond base, apex obtuse, rounded, termen very slightly con- 

 cave ; venation both wings typical, pale ochreous- cream, with horizonal rows of black- 

 ish leaden dots, in certain light these dots are black, in others no trace of black but 

 shining gray, when rubbed the dots are more or less obsolete and of a brownish 

 shade ; the costa is narrowly dotted on the inner half with light to blackish brown, on 

 outer half the dots become outwardly oblique brownish streaks, separated by whitish 

 lines, the latter in outer third connect below with shining streaks that run into the 

 vertical bars on each side of the ocellus. On the inner third of wing, between 

 costal edge and upper vein of cell, is a streak almost free from these dots ; between 

 the clear streak and fold are three rows, below the fold are three or four irregular and 

 broken rows. The ocellus is on a cream ochreous field, with a strong inner bar 

 and a broken outer bar, between which are three fine horizontal black lines, the two 

 upper ones are longest, they all touch the inner bar and in some specimens the inner 

 end of the black lines are enlarged. Costa whitish ochreous, speckled with black at 

 base. 



