47 
The distribution there accorded is ‘* Nova Scotia to Texas, east of the 
Rocky Mountains.” In the national collection is a series showing a 
distribution from Maine to Texas. The localities here represented and 
recorded include the following: 
Maine; Williamstown, Mass. (Grote); Syracuse and New York, N. Y.; Boonton, 
N. J., ‘‘“common everywhere’? (Smith); Marshall Hall, Cabin John, Md.; Wash- 
ington, D. C.; Virginia; St. Louis, Kirkwood, Mo.; Dayton, Ohio (Pilate); Hearne, 
Dallas, and elsewhere in Texas; Canton, Kirkwood, Miss.; Macon, Ga.; Alabama; 
Woodstock, Ill.; Volga, 8. Dak., and St. Anthony Park, Minn. (Lugger). Also 
recorded from Winnipeg, Manitoba (Hanham). 
About the city of Washington this moth is one of our latest as well 
as earliest species, individuals occurring commonly in the writer’s 
experience about the Department buildings throughout the month of 
November, as late as the first week of December, and as early as March 
10. An individual was observed flying on the last-mentioned date in 
a temperature of 51° F., which is about the lowest temperature in 
which any save exceptional species of insects are active. 
This insect is a near relative of the hop-vine snout moth, //ypena 
humuli Harr., with which species it was, in fact, confused at an 
earlier date. 
The green clover worm has not attracted much attention on account 
of its injuries, but good accounts of it have been given by Prof. J. H. 
Comstock in the Annual Report of this Department for 1879 (p. 252), 
and in the Canadian Entomologist for July, 1881 (Vol. XIII, pp. 
137-188), the latter paper by Mr. Coquillett, of this Division. 
THE EARLIER STAGES OF THE INSECT, 
The egg.—Owing to an oversight, the eggs obtained hatched before 
a detailed description could be made. Dorsal and side views of the 
egg, however, were drawn, and are illustrated herewith (fig. 26, c, d), 
and from these a general idea of the egg as it looks under the micro- 
scope may be had. From memory the writer believes that the eggs 
were light gray in color and at least tinged with iridescence. Follow- 
ing are Mr. Coquillett’s descriptions of the egg and of the first stage 
of the larva: 
Globular, slightly flattened above, more decidedly so below; lower half smooth; 
upper half deeply grooved, the interspaces rounded and marked with fine transverse 
impressed lines; whitish, the upper half sometimes dotted with dark brown; trans- 
verse diameter, nearly 0.5™™. 
Measurements showed an average diameter of 0.5™™" and a height of 
O235\"™. 
THE LARVA. 
First stage.—** Body green; a dark-colored dorsal line, edged each 
side with a whitish line; a white subdorsal and stigmatal line; pilifer- 
ous spots green, each bearing a short black hair; venter green; head 
polished green; body provided with only 14 legs.” 
