238 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
reniform stigma partly outlined in white; antemedial line silvery 
white, oblique, interrupted, most distinct towards costa, less in 
evidence towards dorsum; postmedial line black, wavy, nearing the 
antemedial toward dorsum, followed by a shade of brown below 
middle; subterminal line undulate, indistinct, inwardly edged with 
white towards apex and faintly towards dorsum; black lunules edged 
with white on termen; fringes grey, paler at ends of the veins. 
Underside fuscous, paler on costa and termen of fore wings and on 
termen of hind wings. 
Expanse 50 mm. 
A male specimen from Haight’s Place, Pauai, subprov. 
Benguet, Luzon (7000 ft.). 
Comes near H. dieckmanni, Staudinger. 
Ozola pica, sp. Nn. 
&. Head and thorax yellow with black dots; abdomen paler 
yellow, barred with black. Fore wing white on basal two-thirds, apical 
third and costal margin to base black, base of wing yellow, a curved 
series of black dots at one-third from the base; four white spots in 
the black apical third—three parallel with termen, and one at two- 
thirds from base. Hind wings white, a black band on terminal area, 
the outer edge of which is irregular. Fringes of all wings grey, 
termen black. Underside as above. 
Expanse 40 mm, 
One specimen from Palali, sub-prov. Benguet, Luzon (2000 
ft.), December 26th, 1912. 
Comes near falcipennis, Moore. 
NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS. 
ARCTIA CAIA UTAHENSIS, Hy. Epw.—I have just received a specimen 
of this form from Steamboat Springs, Colorado (Orman M. Strange), 
and on looking up the literature find that Hampson’s diagnosis (‘ Cat. 
Lep. Phal.,’ vol. iii) is not quite exact. The hind wings and abdomen 
are orange, or rather orange-fulvous, the abdomen becoming scarlet 
basally. As Henry Edwards stated, the bands on the primaries are 
wider than in the americana form. Holland (‘ Moth Book,’ pl. xv.) 
figured this as wiskotti, Staudinger, but the true weskott2 is not 
American, though it appears to represent an independent development 
along similar lines.—T. D. A. CocKERELL. 
PYRAMEIS GONERILLA IN New ZEALAND.—Having read various more 
or less interesting notes on P. atalanta, from time to time, in the 
‘Entomologist,’ I thought perhaps something about its representative 
in the Antipodes might be of some interest too. This species is said 
to be dying out, and as far as the northern portions on the North 
Island are concerned, there seemed to be a good deal of truth in the 
