62 IOWA STUDIES IN NATURAL HISTORY 



Paradopaea garita G. & S. (not Reakirt) Biol. Cent.-Am. Rhop. in, pi. 92, 

 f. 25 $ genitalia, 1900. 



Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico; June and July. 



I have seen the type of this species and the pale upper surface is very 

 different from garita. 



3. OARISMA POWE SHEIK 



Hesperia powesheik Parker, Am. Ent. & Bot. ii, 271, 1870. 

 Thymelicus garita Plotz (not Reakirt), Stett. Ent. Zeit. XLV, 287, 1884. 

 Scudder, Butt. New Eng. iii, 1859, 1889. 

 Holland, Butterfly Book 343, pi. xlvii, f. 4, 1898. 



Described from thirty-one males and two females taken June 21, 1870, 

 at Grinnell, Iowa. It has also been taken in Colorado and South Dakota, 

 and I have observed it personally so near to the Minnesota line in Iowa 

 that it probably enters that state. Michigan (Woleott). 



Genus ADOPAEA Billberg 



Adopaea Billb., Enum. Ins. 81, 1820. Type Papilio thaumas 

 Hufn. 



Similar to Copaeodes but with the antennal club larger and 

 relatively longer, and with a rudiment of the apiculus. The 

 outer margin of the primaries is more oblique, relatively shorter, 

 and more deeply sinuate. The stigma of the male is similar. 



This genus has been incorrectly used in the past in our fauna 

 for eunus and wrigMi; it is represented only by an introduced 

 species. 



1. ADOPAEA LINEOLA 

 Papilio lineola Oehs., Schmett. Eur. i, (2), 230, 1808. 

 Morris, British Butterflies, 153, pi. 70, 1890. 

 Spuler, Schmett. Eur. t. 18, ff. 6a, 6b, 1910. 

 47th Rep. Ent. Soc. Ont. 142, 1917. 



Introduced from Europe. The reference in the report of the Entomolog- 

 ical Society of Ontario records its capture at London, Ontario, on July 1, 

 1910, and every year from then until the date of the publication. 



Genus COPAEODES Speyer 

 Copaeodes Speyer, Edw. Cat. Lep. 49, 64, 1877. Type Heterop- 

 terus procris Edw. 

 Palpi upturned ; second joint densely scaled ; third fine, point- 

 ed, not quite as long as in Ancyloxi/pha. Antennae scarcely 

 two-fifths as long as primaries; club rather small, stout, blunt. 

 Primaries trigonate; eosta straight except at base and apex; 

 outer margin slightly sinuate; anal angle almost rectangular. 



