HENRY SKINNER. 185 



dull white, the dark shade prevailing at apex, of secondaries white 

 with short brown hairs at ends of the nervules, but which do not 

 entirely cross the white. Underside brown, much dusted with gray 

 scales, especially over secondaries and at apex of primaries ; inner mar- 

 gin of primaries yellomsh ; secondaries crossed by dark bands, one on 

 disk, the other beyond; there is also a demiband near base ; the spots 

 of primaries repeated and a little enlarged, and in addition there is a 

 light brown patch lying between the outer spots and opposite cell. 

 Body brown above, beneath thorax gray-brown ; abdomen whitish, 

 with a brown line in venter ; legs gray-brown, the outside of tibiae 

 white ; palpi white with brown hairs ; antennae black above, annulated 

 with yellow beneath ; club black above, yellow beneath, and above 

 also at base, tip ferruginous." 



From two males taken at Tucson and at Prescott, Arizona. 



Habitat. — Southern Arizona ; Mexico. 



Food plants unknown. 



"This species has in the male a small tuft or pencil of 

 hairs arising from the base of the abdominal fold of the infe- 

 rior wings, and has therefore been placed in the genus Cogia 

 of which C. cajeta Herr.-Schaeff. is the type." (Godman and 

 Salvin in the Biologia Centrali-Americana.) 



Records. — Mt. Graham, Arizona (H. K. Morrison); Organ 

 Mountains, New Mexico, Aug. 30th (C. H. T. Townsend). 



Eudauins (Rliabdokles) epijJioiiJi Herr.-vSchaeff., Prodr. 3, p. 



59, 1868. 

 Eud. epigena Butler, Tr. Ent. Soc, Lond., 4, 493, 1870. 



" Wings above, dark brown ; front wings with a spot at the end of 

 the cell, three placed obliquely between the median branches, one 

 below the first median branch and near outer margin, and three to- 

 gether in oblique line near the apex, fringe gray ; hind wings with 

 white fringe. Front wings below, paler, excepting within the cell and 

 from the cell to the costa, which is dark brown ; apical area hatched 

 with dark brown, hyaline spots as above ; hind wings almost exactly 

 as in E. orion ; body dark brown. Expanse of wings, 2 inches, 1 line." 



Food plants unknown. 



Habitat. — Arizona ; Southern Texas ; Mexico ; Guatemala. 



Eudaums (Cocceius) drusius Edw., Can. Ent., 15, 211, 1883. 

 Cocceius drusius Godman and Salvin, Biol. Cent. -Am., 2, 336, 1894. 



''Mate. — Expands 1.7 inch. Upperside glossy dark brown, with 

 eight minute semi-transparent spots on the primaries, four of them 

 subapical on costal margin, three in discoidal and median interspaces, 



TRANS. AM. ENT. SOC, XXXVII. (24) 



