372 MODERN CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 

filipendule, jig. 103. 13. tip of antenna of Ino Statices ¢ ); the 
head (fig. 103. 8. head of Anth. scabiosz) is furnished with a pair of 
ocelli behind the antenne; the labial palpi are small, or but of mo- 
derate size, with the terminal joint distinct (fig. 103. 11. labium and 
Jab. palpi of Anth. scabiose); the maxilla are greatly elongated 
(fig. 103. 8. 10.; fig. 103.9. labrum and mandibles of Anth. scabiosze 
after Savigny); the maxillary palpi are short and 3-jointed; the 
wings are always deflexed in repose, exhibiting in many species a 
number of denuded spots ; the nervures are very numerous; the legs 
are long, with the posterior tibize furnished with four spurs (fig. 103. 5.); 
the abdomen is never terminated by a broad pencil of hairs. 
The caterpillars ( fig. 103. 6. larva of Anth. filipendule; 103. 14.. 
that of Ino Statices) are sluggish creatures, of a cylindrical form, gene- 
rally clothed with short hairs, without any spine at the hind part ot 
the body; and considerably resemble those of several of the Bomby- 
cide. ‘These caterpillars feed on various species of Leguminose ; 
and, when full grown, construct a close cocoon of silk, which they 
attach to the stems of grass and low plants, out of the upper end of 
which the pupa partially works itself, as represented in fig. 103. 7., 
being the cocoon of Anth. filipendule. The pupz are of the ordi- 
nary conical form, without any angular prominences (fig. 103. 15. 
pupa of Ino Statices, after Lyonnet, in whose posthumous memoirs 
are contained memoirs upon Anthrocera and Ino). The larva of 
Procris Vitis is very destructive to the vine in Tuscany. (See Pas- 
serini, WMemorie sopra due Specie d’ Insetti nocivi ; and Bull. Sci. Nat. 
Feb. 1831. See also Pallas, Travels in South Russia, vol. ii. p. 241., 
quoted by Kirby and Spence, Introd. vol. i. p. 206.) The larva of 
Aglaope infausta nearly resembles that of Anthrocera; but that of 
