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GONODONTIS DUARIA Gn. 
Amyrisaria Wlk. is a synonym of this species, not of Caberodes con- 
fusaria as listed at present. 
EUCHLAENA OBTUSARIA Hbn. 
Decisaria Wk. incisaria Wlk. (Cat. Lep. Het. 35, p. 1546) and 
musaria Wk. all refer to this same species; the latter name is at 
present listed as a variety of effectaria Wlk., but only differs from 
decisaria in having the basal portion slightly yellower. The type of 
effectaria is not in the British Museum. 
EUCHLAENA ASTYLUSARIA WIk. 
Madusaria Wik. is correctly placed as a synonym, Packard’s fig. 
(Monog. Pl, XII, fig. 14) is correct; deplanaria Wlk. ¢ type is a 
small pale form without terminal shading, referable, we think, to this 
species, certainly not amoenaria Gn. as figured by Packard. Opone- 
aria Wlk. and tiviaria Wlk. both refer to the same species, the former 
name having priority ; this is a brown suffused form from E. Florida, 
which we could not match and which may be a distinct species. 
EUCHLAENA DEDUCTARIA WIk. 
Packard’s figure (Pl. 12, fig. 11) represents this form fairly well 
although the type is rather more shaded outwardly with brownish; 
this is evidently the pectinaria of Guenée’s description, but we have 
not seen the original description nor any of the figures mentioned by 
Guenée so cannot vouch for the correctness; Packard’s figure (PI. 
XII, fig. 18) is a 6, not 2, and represents another form also com- 
monly going under the name of pectinaria D. & S.; this is sirenaria 
Stkr.; propriaria Wlk. is this species, a rather aberrational form in 
which the yellow has been largely replaced by brown sprinkling. 
If Guenée’s determination be correct and deductaria Wlk. becomes a 
synonym of pectinaria Schiff, then propriaria Wlk. with yellow variety 
sirenaria Stkr. will apply to the larger species. 
EUTRAPELA ALCIPHEARIA Wk. 
Packard’s figure (Pl. XII, fig. 27) represents this species well; 
it is the form with the t. a. line of primaries nearly straight and the 
underside of secondaries rather evenly dark beyond the lunule with 
the exception of a straight whitish postmedian narrow band; peran- 
gulata Hulst, according to a photograph of the type in our possession, 
