= 
GORTYNA SERRATA forma ocuRIMACULA for. noy. (PI. III, Fig. 11). 
¢. Maculation as in typical serrata Grt. from Colo. but the spots are all 
deep yellow instead of white. 
Hasitat. White Mts., Ariz. (Lusk) 1 ¢. Type, Coll. Barnes. 
This may prove to be a geographical race when more material 
comes to hand; we refer it to serrata Grt. rather than to repleta Bird, 
recently described from Arizona, as the shade of the hind-wings agrees 
exactly with that of the former species. 
OGpOocoNTA SEXTA sp. nov. (Pl. V, Fig. 6). 
Head, thorax and primaries deep olive-brown, sprinkled more or less heavily 
with white scales; t. a. line indistinct, whitish, outwardly oblique from costa 
to median vein, then inwardly oblique and subparallel to t. p. line; orbicular and 
reniform wanting; t. p. line white, bent strongly outward below costa, then 
inwardly oblique and rather rigid to beyond centre of inner margin, usually in- 
distinct at costa, followed by slight pale shading in subterminal space and with 
a more or less distinct white shade proceeding from its costal angle to apex of 
wing; 4 pale dots on costa apically; s. t. line defined by some slight dark shading 
in subterminal space, indistinct, slightly crenulate, but generally rigid and sub- 
parallel to t. p. line; a terminal lunulate dark line; fringes concolorous. Sec- 
ondaries smoky brown with paler fringes. Beneath, primaries smoky, dusted 
with whitish outwardly and with indistinct discal lunule; secondaries paler with 
broad subterminal dark line. Expanse 25 mm. 
Hasitat. Brownsville, Tex., San Benito, Tex. (Mch.-June) (Dorner). 
4 @’s, 7 9’s. Types, Coll. Barnes. 
Closest to altura Barnes, but differs in the course of both t. a. and 
s. t. lines. 
Eustroria cNnossiA Druce (Pl. V, Figs. 10, 11). 
Pseudina cnossia Druce, Biol. Cent. Am. Het. 1, p. 311, Pl. 28, Fig. 28 (1889). 
Eustrotia cnossia Hampson, Cat. Lep. Het. X, p. 602 (1910). 
We have a long series of what is apparently this species from 
Brownsville and San Benito, Texas. 
TARACHE DORNERI sp. nov. (Pl. IV, Figs. 8, 9). 
Head and thorax white; entire basal half of primaries white, this color 
extending broadly along costa to near apex; the white portion of the wing is 
bordered outwardly by an olivaceous broad line, straight and parallel to outer 
margin from costa to just below vein 6, then turning at almost right angles and 
running inward parallel to costa below radius to just before inception of vein 
II, again sharply angled and slightly inwardly oblique to center of inner margin; 
beyond this line the outer half of wing is deep purple with traces of a subterminal 
