NORTH AMERICAN LASPEYRESIINAE AND OLETHREUTINAE 31 



Alar expanse. — 8-10 mm. 



Type. — In National Collection, 



Type locality. — Illinois. 



Food plants. — Fruits of apple, plum, peach, chen-y, Crataegus^ 

 Auielanchier ,- also in " black-lmot " fungus and in aphid galls on 

 oak and elm. 



5. GRAPHOLITHA ANGLESEANA (Kearfott) 



(Figs. 127, 304) 



Enarmonia angleseana Kearfott, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 33, 1907, 



p. 64. 

 Laspeyresia angleseana Barnes aud McDunnough, Check List Lepid. Bor. 



Amer., no. 7214, 1917. — Foebes, Memo. 68, Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta., 



1924, p. 393. 



Hind wing with veins 3 and 4 connate. 



Male and female genitalia figured from paratypes in National Col- 

 lection from type locality. 

 Distribution. — New Jersey, Massachusetts. 

 Alar expanse. — 10-11 mm. 

 Type. — In American Museum. 

 Type locality. — Anglesea, N, J, 

 Food plant. — " Strawberry seeds " (Fernald rearing note). 



6. GRAPHOLITHA CAERULEANA Walsingham 



(Figs. 125, 299) 



Orapholitha caernleana Walsingham, Ulus. Lepid. Heter. Brit. Mus., vol. 4, 



1879, p. 66. 

 Enarmonia caeruleana Fh3Jnald, in Dyar List N. Amer. Lepid., no. 5277, 



1903. 

 Enarmonia zana Kearfott, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc., vol. 33, 1907, p. 61. 

 Enarmonia vana Kearfott, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 33, 1907, p. 62. 

 Enarmonia xanthospora METi'RiCK, Ent. Mo. Mag., vol. 48, 1912, p. 34. 

 Enarmonia eoleuca Meyrick, Ent. Mo. Mag., vol. 48, 1912, p. 34. 

 Laspeyresia vatia Barnes and McDunnough, Check List Lepid. Bor. Amer., 



no. 7227, 1917. 

 Laspeyresia zana Barnes and McDunnough, Check List Lepid. Bor. Amer., 



no. 7228, 1917. 

 Laspeyresia caeruleana Barnes aud McDunnough, Check List Lepid. Bor. 

 Amer., no. 7229, 1917. 



Male paratype from Fernald collection in the National Museum. 



The genitalia (male and female) of Kearfott's two species and 

 caeruleana agree in all details. There is a slight difference in some 

 specimens in the color of the hind wing cilia, but this is not con- 

 stant for anj^ given locality or collecting date, and the gradation 

 is gradual from white to pale smoky fuscous. Kearfott was unable 

 to distinguish the different forms himself, for he had several speci- 

 mens of each set aside under another name {'"''handana''^) as cotypes 

 of a new species. 



