676 BitUetiti A merirtin Museum of Natural History [Vol. XLII 



miserabiliti. S<h^ Emphorop.sis. 



modesta Smith is from St. Vincent, Cape Verde Is., not W. I. as in Ash- 

 mead. 1900. 

 montana Cresson, 1869, p. 290. 9 Colorado; (J. Ridings). 



Townsend, 1896, p. 111. La Vega de San Jos6, New Mexico; VIII. 

 Podaliritis niontanus Cockerell, 1897c, j). 22. Mesilla Valley, New Mexico. 

 Birkman, 1899, p. 245. Fedor, Lee County, Texas. 



.^l. (Amegilla) montana Cockerell, 1901a, p. 131. Las Vegag, New Mexico; 

 VII; at Lyciutn vvlgnre and Cleome serrulata; (Porter, Winters, Garlick). 

 Cockerell, 1904, p. 8. Pecos, New Mexico; at Salvia lanceolata. 

 Cockerell, 1905d, p. 60. cf . Denver (VII), Fort Collins, Livermore, and 

 near Horsetooth Mountain, Colorado; at larkspur. 



Cockerell, 1906, j) 311. Organ Mountains, New Mexico. "Upper 

 Sonoran." 



morrisoni. See Emphoropsis. 



mucida. See Emphoropsis. 



nebracensis Swenk, 1909, p. 390. 9 . Warbonnet Canyon, Sioux 



County, Nebraska; VII; at Monarda fistulosa; (Carriker). 

 neomexicana . See bomboides neomexicana. 

 nigrocincla. See flavodncta. 

 nubiterroe. See Clisodon lerminalis. 

 nudata. See bidentata. 



occidentalis Cresson, 1869,, p. 292. 9*, cf. Colorado; (Ridings). 

 Putnam, 1876, p. 195. Spring Lake Villa, Utah County, Utah. 

 Cresson, 1876, p. 210. Boulder, Colorado; (Putnam). 

 Cresson, 1879, p. 227. Texas (? misprint for Utah). 

 Townsend, 1896, p. 111. La Vega de San Jos6, New Mexico; VIII. 

 Podalirius occidentalis Cockerell, 1897c, p. 20. Santa F6, New Mexico; 

 7(XX) ft.; (1898/, p. 79) sleeping in closed flowers of Argemone platyceras. 



Podalirius occidentalis Cockerell, 1899, p. 156. Mescalero Indian Agency, 

 Tularosa Creek, New Mexico; VII; (C. M. Barber). Melecta viiranda Fox, 

 probably inquilire. 



Tucker, 1909, p. 278. Colorado Springs, Colorado; VIII. 

 Cockerell, 1900a, p. 408. Las Vegas, New Mexico; VII; at Cnicus 

 ochrocentnis, Cleome serrulata, and Convolvulus sepium; (W. Porter). 

 Johrson, 1903, p. 290. Nests; Agenia architecta builds in them. 

 Cockerell, 1906, pp. 68, 70, 99, 311. MaylxiU (VIII) and Parker, Colorado; 

 (S. A. Johnson). Pecos, New Mexico. "Transition to Upper Sonoran." 

 At Carduus and Peritoma. 



Wellman, 1911, p. 17. Gove County, Kansas; 2813 ft.; V; nest con- 

 tained Homia gigantea. Sec also Entomological News, XXII, p. 132; 

 XXIII, p. 259; and XXV, p. 1. 

 Stevens, 1919, p. 210. Williston, North Dakota. 



