160 JOHN B. SMITH. 



The early stages of this species have been recently described by 

 Mr. Edwards in " Ent. Amer." vol. iii. 



D. niclaiu'liolica Grt., Pr. E. S. Phil. v. 77, pi. 2, fig. 4, Erhmyis ; G. k R., 

 1. c. 168, Efinnyis; Bd., Sp. Gen. Het. i, 1.30, Anceryx ; Butl., Tr. Zool. Soc. 

 Lond. ix, 603 = % cenotrus ; Giiudlach, Cont. Eut. Cuba, 220 = ohscnra ; 

 Grt., New List, Dilophonota. 



"Anterior wings dark cinereous in the female, much shaded with blockish 

 brown in the male, traversed by many confused, inconspicuous lines. No i)aler 

 patches at apex, and on internal margin, are perceptible, while the transverse 

 lines are more distinct terminally, and especially before internal angle, where 

 they are margined with pale cinereous, showing the ordinary ornamentation of 

 the genus in this respect; external margin denticulate. Posterior wings red- 

 dish ferruginous, with rather narrow blackish borders, the neivules within 

 touched with blackish dots much as in the preceding species [merianx] ; external 

 margin more excavate before anal angle than in E. merianx, much as in E. 

 oenotrus, which E. melancholica more nearly approaches. Under surface brown- 

 ish, with ferruginous scales ou the disc of the anterior pair; posterior wings 

 whitish at base, below central region, along internal margin, reddish over the 

 discal region. The under surface very generally resembles that of the preceding 

 species (supra), while the transverse, median and subterminal dark shade bauds, 

 crossing both pair of wings, are most distinct in E. oenotrus, in which the median, 

 on anterior pair, is more appreciably sinuate. In E. melancholica the inner (me- 

 dian) bands are less distinct, becoming macular, especially in the female. In 



E. merianx the inner bands are obsolete and generally imperceptible. Thorax 

 bi-crested; head and thoracic region above brownish black in the male, in the 

 female cinereous black, paler laterally in both sexes. The segments are fringed 

 with mixed paler and darker hairs, and two dorsal longitudinal shade lines are 

 very distinct. Underneath the abdomen is paler than in either E. merianx or 

 E. oenotrus. Expands '£, 3, 9 3.10 inches; 75— 78 mm." 



Hub.— Texas, Florida (?), Cuba, Central and South America. 



" This species is very confusedly marked and difficult to describe, 

 except by comparison with its allies, E. meriance and E. oenotnis. 

 With the latter it has a similarity of abdominal coloration and orna- 

 mentation, while the generally paler primaries, the absence of the 

 characteristic jialer patches and differing ornamentation of the teg- 

 ulie will separate it from either of its above mentioned allies." 



Mr. Grote had both sexes before him, or what he supposed were 

 such. Later he describes what he here calls the 9 as Erinmjis 

 cinerosa. Mr. Butler refers them in that way, l. e. % and 9 to D. 

 cenotrus. Dr. Gundlach, on the contrary, does not seem to agree in 

 this synonymy, and makes melancholica a .synonym of D. obscura, 

 which is manifestly an error, unless Dr. Gundlach has in mind an 

 entirely different insect as obscura from that so named by American 

 entomologists. 



