17 



SPECIES NOT INCLUDED 



Glovcria dcntata Edw. (a/c Dyar — G. arizonciisis), Pap. IV, 107 



(1884). 



t^nknown to us. 

 Eutricha crossaca Druce. Biol. Cent. Am. Het., II, 429, PI. 85, f. 6 



(1897). 



Unknown to us. 

 Eutricha nox Druce. Biol. Cent. Am. Het. II, pi. 85, f. 6 (1897). 



Unknown to us. 

 Lcheda angitstipoinis Schaus. (Am. Mag. Nat. Hist., VII (8) 369 



(1911). 

 Falls outside the scope of this paper ; the strongly excavated costal 

 margin of secondaries would place it nezrerGastropacha. 

 Mctanastria mcxicana Druce. Appears from the figures (Biol. Cent. 



Am. PI. 21, figs. 9, 10) to be a Hemilciica. Also referred to 



Hcmileuca by Dyar (Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., XIII, 10, 191 1). 



NOTE BY HARRISON G. DYAR 



Concerning the other large Lasiocampids, of which unique speci- 

 mens only are in the National Museum, the following notes may be 

 of service. 



Lehcda docri Schaus (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1892, p. 319) does 

 not come in any of the genera here discussed, but may form a new 

 genus. 



Metanastria Icmoulti Schaus, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIX, p. 

 316, 1905) falls in Prorifrons, recognizable by its comparatively nar- 

 row wings and heavy markings. 



Metanastria gustanda Dyar (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXVIII, 

 p. 254, 1910) falls in Prorifrons, near qiiadrilincata B. & McD. and 

 antonia Sch., differing by the rather strongly red hind wings and the 

 absence of subterminal spots near the anal angle of fore wings. 



Borocera cstcban Dognin (Le Nat., XIV, p. 33, 1892) falls in 

 Gloveria by the table, but the fore wings are narrow and elongate with 

 the outer margin concave below, while vein R^ is stalked with R., and 

 Ml, R^ separating from the stalk beyond R^. It probably represents 

 another generic type. The Madagascarine genus Borocera Boisd. is 

 unknown to me. 



