INSECTS OF THE SASSAFRAS. 651 



The moth. — Tawny yellow, thorax with darker patches. Basal two-thirds of costa 

 dark, below deeper tawny, with wrinkled white and blackish hairs in lines. Tibigq 

 provided externally with long white hairs, while the denser tarsal hairs are mostly 



Fig. 2\i.—Lagoa opercularis, after Riley. Larva and cocoon, after Hubbard. 



black. Abdomen with rather long, dense, evenly cut coarse hairs, forming a shorty 

 broad anal tuft. Length of body, .65; expanse of wings, 1.90 inches. North Caro- 

 lina to Texas. 



3. Lagoa pyxidifera (Abbot and Smith). 



The caterpillar of this species, according to Abbot and Smith, feeds on 

 the winter whortleberry, sassafras, red root, oak, etc. " When taken 

 the caterpillar was entirely clothed with long white hairs. On the 

 26th of July it shed its skin, and then appeared as in the figure. It 

 has fourteen holders, and the head is retractile. The web was formed 

 on the 7th of August, and the moth came out May 18, following. Like 

 the former, it does not change to a chrysalis till the spring, but it has 

 not, like that, a door to its web. Many individuals of this species do 

 not spin till late in autumn. The moth is closely similar to the fore- 

 going, but we have never seen it. 



The following species also occur on the sassafras : 



Order Lepidopteea. 



4. Papilio glaucus (Linn.). 



5. Apatelodes torrefacta (Abb.-Sm.) 



6. Callosamia promethea (Drury.) 



7. Samia cynthia Hiibner. S. D. Hulst (Bull. Brooklyn Ent. Soc, i, 



p. 91.) 



8. Hyperchiria io (Fabr.) 



9. Tceniocampa incerta (Hnhn.). See p. 172. 



10. Eutrapela clemetaria (Sm.-Abb.) 



11. Platynota Jiavedana Clem. Miss Murtfeldt in Fernald's Cat. Tor- 



tricidse, p. 22. 



12. Eudemis botrana (Schiff.) Clemens (see Fernald's Cat. Tortricidae, 



p. 28.) 



13. Sericoris niveiguttana (Grote.) Miss Murtfeldt (Fernald's Cat. Tor- 



tricidae, p. 36.) 



14. Oracilaria sassafrasella Chamb. The larva, when very young, mines 



the leaves; when older, rolls them downwards. (Chambers.) 



