DESCRIPTION OF THE SPECIES. 



The moth which produces the greenhouse leaf-tyer is a member of 

 the family Pyraustida?, superfamily Pyralidina, and was first recognized 

 and described from this country' in 1854 (Gucnee, Deltoides ct Pyra- 

 lites, p. 398). It is an inconspicuous little pale reddish-brown species 



with awing expanse of about 

 three-fourths of an inch. 

 The fore-wings are light clay 

 brown in color, suffused 

 with a slightly darker red- 

 dish or ochreous brown, the 

 serrate blackish lines with 

 which they are ornamented 

 forming the pattern shown 

 in the accompan3'ing illus- 

 tration (fig, 1, a). The hind- 

 wings are gray, becoming 

 light brownish toward the 

 termen, and with two discal 

 P)oth wings are bordered with a row 



Fig 1 —Phli/tt J lua utbirialf> o.moth b same in natural 

 position at rest; c, egg mass; rf, larva from above; c, 

 same from side;/, head of same: .or, pupa case: /(.chrys- 

 alis— a, J), d, c, fi, /(, one-half larger than natural size; c, 

 twice natural size; /, more enlarged (original). 



spots, the costal one prominent 

 of small well-defined black dots. 



The description of the moth by Mr. A. R. Grote, which appeared 

 in 1877 under the name of Both harveyana (Can. Ent., vol. IX, p. 

 104), is copied herewith for the further identifi- 

 cation of the species: 



A small species more slender than communis,'^ with pale, 

 brown primaries, the exterior line fine, blackish, obsoletely 

 denticulate, rather suddenly drawn .in at vein 2, thence 

 back again and angulate before the margin. Outer spot 

 large, annulate. Inner spot obsolete. Before the fringes, 

 which are faintly interlined with pale and are discolorons, 

 tliere is a distinct sinus of dark points. Hind-wings i)aler 

 than primaries, washed outwardly with the same brown 

 as primaries, with a distinct discal dot and median line. 

 Beneath more ochreous, with the discal dots double on 



hind-wings; a common exterior line; on the primaries the veins are partially darker 

 marked; terminal points very distinct and continuous. Head, palpi, and thorax 

 above pale-brown, beneath concolorous with under surface of wings glistening. 



Dimensions: Fore-wings, 17-20'"'"; hind-wings, 14.5-17'"'"; length 

 of body, 7. 5-10 '"•".■ 



The venation and the shape of the head and anteinne is about as in 

 P. ferriifjalh shown in figure 2, 



The moth bears a strong supcrficitd resembhuicc to the common 



Fig. 2. — Pionca fnrii galls: 

 wing venation of moth at 

 left; side view of head 

 at right— enlarged (after 

 Hampson). 



^Presumably Both coynmnniH Grt. (Can. Knt., v. VIII, p. 99^Lo.vi)steije sitnildlis Gn. 



