GLOVERIA ARIZONENSIS. 137 



Pale grey or ashen ; primaries with a small round white discal .sj)ot beyond which is a brown double 

 transverse line extendino- from inner maru'in to tlii' thii'd sul)costa] nervule; between this line and tiie exterior 

 margin is a transverse zigzag Mne, the points of wliicii iietween the veins are very acute; between this line and 

 the exterior margin as well as at liase anil along tiie eosta the colour is darker than in the median space. Secon- 

 daries without marks, a little darker towards the exterior margin. 



Under surface of all wings grey witiiout marks of any kind. 



The male is not yet known. 



One example from S. W. Arizona. 



The genus Gloveria, erected by Dr. Packard for tliis in.sect, is as its author stated closely allied to Lasiocarapa and the species to 

 L. Otus, Dru., to which it bears a considerable resemblance though it is l)y no means iis ponderous or heavily furred as that species. 



Never was hcmour more worthily bestowed than in the instance of the dedication of this genus to the most hard-working, over- 

 worked, indefatigable entomologist in all America, Prof. Townend Olover, the extent of whose labors in economic entomology are yet 

 to be estimated at their true value. 



COLORADIA TANDORA. Bi.ake. 



Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil. II, p. 279, t. VII, ?, (1863). 



(PI-ATE XV, FIG. 7 ^.) 



Male. Expands .3| inches. 



Antemue yellow and jiectinated as in Psevd()hazi>i and Hcmileuca ; head and thorax dark brown with 

 scattered \\hite hairs ; abdomen above heavily clothed with dark brown and white hairs, beneath In-own, the 

 segments widely fringed with white; legs dark brown. Wrings inclined to semi-transparency and with the ex- 

 ception that the ])rimaries are a little more pointed :ij)ically are nearly the same shape as in the female. Pri- 

 maries dark brown with broad irregular transverse suli-basal and median bands; between the latter and the 

 exterior margin is another broader transverse btind or shade edged outwardlv with white scales ; the spaces 

 between all btiiids more or less covered with scattered white scales; a round black discal spot. Secondaries 

 very pale rose colour more strongly tinged at base and abdominal margin ; a round black discal spot; a narrow 

 brown median band ; a broad brownish border to exterior margin. 



Under surfttce pale rose colour, darkest on primaries and at abdominal margin of secondaries. All wings 

 broadly bordered with brown on exterior margins, also with a narrow brown median band :ind lilack discal 

 spots. 



One d' from Oregon in Mus. Strecker. 



^e"' 



The female type, and only example of that sex yet known, is in the museum of the Am. Ent. Soc. The markings are not near 

 as dark or well defined as in the male, and scarcely any indication of pink or rose colour is on the upper side of secondaries. It was 

 taken at Pike's Peak, Colorado. 



I here append Mr. Blake's original description : 



'^Female. — Brownish-grey. Head not prolonged, palpi extending rather beyond the head. Antennte bright luteous, biserrate, a 

 little longer than the thorax. Thorax densely villose. Abdomen above fuliginous, sides mixed with griseous, apex tufted, extending 

 a little beyond the hind wings. Wings semi-transparent. Fore wings with two indistinct, oblique, somewhat undulating, fuliginous 

 bands, the exterior one paler than the other, the space between the liands covered somewhat sparsely with distinct white scales, a small 

 black spot on the discal nervure. Hind wings with an indistinct cloudy band, broader at the interior margin, gradually tapering to the 

 exterior. A pale fuliginous spot on the disc. Base of the wings clothed with pale pinkish hairs, cili;e whitish at the extremity of the 

 veins. Under side brownish-grey, tinged with pink ; the discal spots more distinct than on the upper side. Length of the body 15 

 lines. Expanse of the wings 3S lines." 



PSEUDOHAZIS HERA. Harris. 



Satuenia Hera, Harris, Rep. Ins. M;i.ss., p. 286, (1841); 3Ioms, Svn., p. 221, (1862); {Hemileuea H.) 

 Packard, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., Ill, j). 383, (1864)"; (Fseudohazis H.) G.-R, Ann. Lvc. 

 Nat. Hist. N. Y. VIII, p. 377, (1866). 

 Hemileuea Pica, Walker, Cat. Lep. B. M. VI, p. 1318, (1855); {Saturnia P.) 3Iorris, Syn. p. 

 222, (1862) ; {Hemileuea P.) Packard, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., Ill, p. 383, (1864). 



Var. Eglaxterina, Bd\., {Safumia E.) Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr., 2me Ser. X, p. 323,(1852); (Hem- 

 ileuea E.) 117^., Cat. Lep. B. M. VI, p. 1318, (1855); {Telea E.) H-S., Lep. Exot., 

 p. 445, (1855); {Saiumin E.) Morris, Svn., p. 222, (1862); [Hemileuea E.) Packard, 

 Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., Ill, p. 383, (1864); (Pseudohazis E.) G.-R., Ann. Lye. Nat. 

 Hist. N. Y. VIII, p. 377, (1866). 



Var. NuTTALLi, Streck., Lep., Rhop.-Het., p. 107, (1875). 



Var. Arizonensis, nobis. 



