536 FIFTH REPORT OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL COMMISSION. 



12. Thecla liparops. 



13. Thecla calanus Hiibn. 



14. Papilio turnus Linn. Larva, September 5, at Brunswick, Me. 



15. Thecla falacer Godart. Harris Ins. Mass., 276. 



16. Thyreus abbotii Swains. Said in Abbot's MS. paintings to feed on 



Cratwgus tomentosa in Georgia. (Library Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist.) 



17. Smerinthtis myops A. and S. See p. 525. 



18. Schizura unicornis (A. and S.). On thorn-bush at Brunswick, Me., 



September 5. 



19. Schizura sp. On thorn-bush at Brunswick, Me., September 5. 



20. (Edemasia concinna A. and S. (Sanders, Can. Ent., xiii, 139.) 



21. Clisiocampa disstria (Hiibn.). See p. 119. 



22. Datana integerrima G. & R. 



23. Spilosoma virginica Fabr. On buckthorn, middle of September, 



Maine. 



24. Orgyia antiqua Linn. Injurious to thorn hedges in Khode Island, 



Miss Dix, Amer. Journ. Sc, xix, p. 62 ; also observed at Bruns- 

 wick, Me. 



25. Platysamia cecropia (Linn.). W. Brodie. 



26. Telea polyphemus (CrRm.). (Riley's unpublished notes.) W. Brodie. 



27. Amphipyra pyramidoides Gueu. See p. 17L 



28. Eubyja quernaria (A. and S.) On Crataegus australis. See p. 188. 



29. Nematocampa filamentaria Guen. On G. australis. 



30. Grapholitha prunivora Walsh. Living in the fruit, J. Hamilton 



(Can. Ent., xxi, 34). 



31. Aspidisca splendoriferella Clem. Larva and mine as in P. serotina. 



(Chambers.) 



32. Tischeria malifoliella Clem. Larva in a flat, trumpet-shaped, yel- 



lowish mine in upper surface of leaves. (Chambers.) 



33. Ornix inusitatumella Chamb. Larva in white, flat mine, speckled 



with " frass" in upper surface ; pupates in the mine. (Chambers.) 



Order Coleoptera. 



34. Saperda bivittata Say. On hawthorn. 



35. Anthonomus cratcegi Walsh. (Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., vi, 1866, p. 266.) 



36. Saperda fayi Bland. J. Hamilton, (Can. Ent., xx, p. 6, 1888). 



37. Xylotre'chus convergens Le Oonte. Bred from branch of an unde- 



termined Crataegus, locally known as Red Haw, Iowa. (Le Conte, 

 Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, viii, p. xxiv.) 



38. Qaurotes cyanipennis Say. In spring on thorn blossoms and later 



in the season pairing and ovipositing on the butternut. (Caul- 

 field, Can. Ent., 1881, p. 60.) 



39. Conotrachelus naso Lee. This and the next species bred from the 



fruit of the haw. J. Hamilton. (Can. Ent., xxi, p. 34, 1889.) 



40. Conotrachelus posticatus Say. 



