ot Notes on the Lepidoptera of America. 
oblique, brown line, is quite distinct froin costa to the dark shade 
in which it becomes lost. A lunulate sub-terminal line arises near 
the costa and becomes likewise lost inferiorly in the terminal dark 
shade. A narrow linear dark shade along external margin; 
fringes, silky, clouded. Posterior wings, yellowish testaceous, 
largely and evenly washed with a dark shade which is limited by 
the whitish color of the costal region, fading outwardly, where the 
wing becomes yellowish. A discal annulate mark, below which a 
second, whitish and unencireled. A single geminate dentate brown 
median line crosses the wing, running suddenly inwardly before 
internal margin, A narrow dark line rests on the external edge ; 
fringes as on primaries. 
Under surface, whitish, with a faint hyaline reflection and obso- 
lete dark broken markings, reproducing certain of the lines and 
spots of the upper surface. 
Hepanse, 6 and ?,1.60. Length of body, 4, 0.70, 9°, 0.60 
inch. 
Habitat.—Atlantic District. (Mass.! to Va. !) 
Represents the Brazilian Pantographa seripturalis, Lederer, 
in our fauna. P. limata, is much larger, and may be at once 
distinguished by the different markings of the secondaries, 
which want the internal lines and are more evenly colored. 
The external margin of both wings appears to be more evenly 
rounded and less sinuate in either sex of our species. We are 
indebted to W. TH. Edwards, Esq., for a number of specimens 
of this species taken in Kanawha Co., West Virginia, in which 
locality the species is of common occurrence. 
Explanations of Plates 15A and 16. 
1, ¢ Drepanodes puber. 
t 
+ 
£0 
Drepanodes varus. 
3, ¢ Drepanodes aquosus. 
* Endropia vinosaria. 
5, 4 Endropia vinulentaria. 
