51 



its destriietivone.s.s that season, it received considerahle attention at this 

 office as well as elsewhere, and will be given more extended notice in 

 a future bulletin. 



DESCRIPTIVE. 



The tjioth which produces this cutworm is a rather large species of 

 the family Noctuidfe. The fore-wings are pale, grayish brown, tinged 

 with reddish and shaded about the middle and towai'd the outer margin 

 with darker brown, the pattern being variable, but more or less like 

 the form illustrated in figure 17, a. The ground color of the hind- 

 wings is iridescent or pearly white, strongly shaded about the mar- 

 gins with shining, light l)rown, the veins being of the same color and 



Fig. 17. — Pcridroina saucia: a, moth; b, normal form of larva, lateral 

 view; c, same in curved pcsition; d, dark form, dorsal view; c, egg 

 from side; /, egg mass on twig (after Howard). 



strongly marked. The wing-expanse is about an inch and three- 

 quarters, and the length of the body three-fourths of an inch. 



The eggs are deposited in regular masses and often in rows of seven 

 or eight or to the number of sixty or more, preferably it appears, 

 along the twigs of certain fruit trees since egg-masses are often found 

 in such locations. An o.^'g is shown in profile, very much enlarged, at 

 figure 17, e, and an egg-mass deposited on a twig at/". 



The larva. — The larva is very variable, but can usually be distin- 

 guished b}^ a row of from four to six 3'ellow rounded spots which 

 occur along the back at the middle of the anterior portion of the body, 

 extending usually from the second to the fifth or seventh segment, as 

 shown in the illustration at h and d; d shows a dark form, while a 



