8 Notes on the Lepidoptera of America. 
Haepanse (é and 2), 1.65 to 1.70 inch. Length of body, 0.80 to 
0.90 inch. ‘ ‘ 
flabitat.—Atlantie District. (Buffalo, N. Y.!) 
This species is closely allied to H. thysbe, G. & #., from 
which it may at once be separated by its smaller size and the 
non-dentate inner margin of the terminal band of the prima- 
ries in the male. We have elsewhere drawn attention to the 
character afforded by the inner margin of the terminal band 
in H. thysbe; it is, however, in the males alone that it is 
prominently dentate on the interspaces. There are several 
other less striking characteristics which will at once separate 
H. buffaloensis from H. thysbe, on a comparison between speci- 
mens of either sex. From H. gracilis, G. & 2., the new spe- 
cies may be at once distinguished by the longer and narrower 
primaries, with the discal cell crossed longitudinally by a bar 
ot scales; by the different color of the legs and under thoracic 
surface, and by the diaphanous space on the secondaries being 
crossed, as in H. thysbe, by six nervules. 
Haemorrhagia buffaloensis has been frequently reared from 
the larva by collectors in Buffalo, N. Y. We figure a variety 
of the female, in which the usually wholly vitreous fields of 
the wings are sparsely and evenly clothed with scales. We 
have observed a similar variation in specimens of H. thysbe. 
Hacmorrhagia floridensis, n. s. 
(Plate 16, fig. 20, 2 5} 
2. Size, large; form, stout. Head, above, dark olive green. 
Labial palpi, projected beyond the front, approximate at their tips ; 
above, blackish ; beneath, with under thoracic surface, clear yel- 
lowish white. Legs, generally finely scaled; anterior pair out- 
wardly clothed with whitish scales; inwardly, the tegument is 
almost naked, blackish and dusted with ferruginous atoms. Middle 
pair with the femora clothed with yellowish white hair outwardly ; 
inwardly, blackish, naked ; tarsi shading to blackish towards the 
