110 



discal dot ; secondaries orange with narrow antemedian black curved line, small 

 discal dot and broad black outer border, interrupted terminally by whitish 

 ochreous shading, broadest and most distinct at apex; fringes dusky, slightly 

 marked with white on secondaries. Expanse 21 mm. 



Habitat: Redington, Ariz.; S. Ariz. (Poling); Ariz. 4 5. Types, Coll. 

 Barnes. 



We figured this species as divinula Grt. in our Contributions, 

 Vol. I, No. 4, PI. XXV, Fig. 10; it differs however from this Cali- 

 fornia species (PI. XIX, Fig. 13) in its larger size and lack of prom- 

 inent black discal streak on secondaries above and on all wings beneath 

 besides other minor details of maculation. 



PSEUDACONTIA MODESTELLA sp. nOV. (PI. XVI, Fig. 13). 



Very similar to groteana Dyar (Fig. 14) but smaller in size and deeper 

 in color, the whole wing being deep black-brown without any gray shading 

 and with all the maculation except the t. p. line obsolete ; the t. p. line as in 

 groteana with the white shade above inner margin slightly more conspicuous; 

 fringes unicolorous blackish without the checkered terminal area of groteana. 

 Beneath blackish, primaries with a white spot beyond the cell and another 

 below it on inner m.irgin ; secondaries with two superimposed white spots at 

 end of cell and a sma'l one above anal angle. Expanse 19 mm. 



Habitat: Camp Baldy, S. Bern. Mts., Calif. (July) 1 ^,5 9. Types, 

 Coll. Barnes. 



ERASTRIINAE 



Oruza albocostaliata Pack. 



As Dr. Dyar has pointed out (1914, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 

 XLVII, 379) this species should be removed from the genus Eleo- 

 nectyptera as listed by us (No. 3457) and placed in the genus Oruza 

 Wlk. to precede Cobubatha Wlk. 



A second species closely related to the above and unfortunately 

 very similar in name is albocostata Druce (1899, Biol. Cent. Am. 

 Het., II, 537, PI. 99, Fig. 8) of which we have several specimens from 

 Arizona ; in Druce's species the white costal streak is rather narrower, 

 especially toward apex of wing, the discal mark is usually faint and 

 when present is a distinct lunule, not a round dot as in albocostaliata; 

 the subterminal line is also not so sharply defined. This species should 

 be added to our list. 



