NO. 12C8. REVIEW OF SOME AMERICAN MOTHS— BUSCK. 747 
sprinkled with fuscous; tarsal joints on the outside black, tipped with 
yellow. 
Alar expanse. — 23 mm. 
Hahitat. — Pennsylvania. (W. G. Dietz.) 
%>(?.— No. 6130, U.S.N.M. 
FooclpJan t. — Betula nigra. 
A very distinct species, belonoing- to the group with veins 2 and 3 
in forewing separate, near Dej^ressaria nervosa Haworth, easilj^ sep- 
arated by the much broader wings and the obtuse fascia. 
I am indebted to mv friend Dr. Dietz for the finely preserved type 
which he has bred. A cotype is in his collection. He has kindly sent 
me the following notes on the larv^a: 
Collected May 24, 1900; larva in silken tube between spun-together leaves of black 
birch; larva pale green, each segment with two dorsal, one dorso-lateral, and two 
lateral spots, the latter being placed somewhat obliquely. Moths issued June 27, 
1900. [Dietz.] 
34. DEPRESSARIA NERVOSA Haworth. 
Deprf.ssaria ?ien'osa Haworth ; Staudixger and Rebel, Cat. Lep. Eur., II, 1901, 
No. 3306.— Walsixgham, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1881, p. 317.— Rilev, 
Smith's List Lep. Bor. Am., 1891, No. 5270. 
Foodplant. — Sixim^ Cicuta., etc. 
The larva is dark bluish-gray, lateral line orange-yellow; spots black, 
white circled; head ])lack; thoracic plate ))lack, bisected, anterior edge 
whitish; among spun flowers. Pupa in stem of foodplant. [Meyrick.] 
This species, recorded by Lord Walsingham from southern Oregon, 
I have not seen except in European specimens, a good series of which 
is in the U. S. National Museum. 
35. DEPRESSARIA BARBERELLA, new species. 
Antenn;« dark reddish brown, indistinctly annulated with black, 
basal joint and pecten l)lack. Labial palpi with large well-developed 
spreading brush, light ocherous, sprinkled with brown; a spot on the 
outside of second joint and base of terminal joint black. Face light 
ocherous; sides of head below^ and around the eyes deep black, which 
color continues as a streak on the side of the thorax and outward in a 
black longitudinal line on the forewing, described below. Top of 
head and thorax reddish ocherous with posterior tip of thorax black; 
patagia rich brown streaked with black. Ground color of forewings 
light ocherous, but so denseh' dusted with fuscous, reddish and black 
scales as to appear dark colored to the naked eje. From base, parallel 
with basal third of costa, is a thin deep black line, mentioned above, 
edged on both sides with reddish ]>rown. Just before it ends at the 
costal edge there begins a narrow longitudinal interrupted white line, 
diverging somewhat from the costa, crossing the costal veins and 
reaching nearlj" to the tip of the wing; this line is also edged and 
