380 LEPIDOPTEEA. 



It was of a pale sea-green color above, marked with ash, 

 blended into white ; and beneath of a brilliant orange, spotted 

 with vivid black. When in motion its whole appearance 

 was changed, it extended to the length of two inches, and 

 two thirds of an inch in breadth, its colors brightened, and 

 a transverse opening was disclosed on the back, two thirds 

 of an inch from the head, of a most rich velvet-black color. 

 It was sluggish and motionless during the day, and active 

 only at night." Mr. Abbot found the caterpillar of the 

 Velleda lappet-moth on the willow-oak and on the persim- 

 mon ; and in his figure it is represented of a dark ashen- 

 gray color, with a velvet-like black band across the upper 

 part of the third ring.* The cocoon of the specimen sent 

 to me by Mr. Fessenden resembled grocers' soft brownish- 

 gray paper in color and texture, with a very few blackish 

 hairs interwoven with the silk of which it was made. It 

 was an inch and a half long, and half an inch wide, bor- 

 dered on all sides by a loose web, which made it seem of 

 larger dimensions ; its shape was oval, convex above, and 

 perfectly flat and very thin on the under side. The moth 

 came forth from this cocoon on the loth of September, or 

 about forty days after the cocoon was spun. 



The Chinese silk-worm and its moth, Bornbyx 'mori, the 

 Bombyx of the mulberry, should follow these insects in a 

 natural arrangement; for the former is slightly hairy when 

 first hatched from the egg, and, though naked afterwards, it 

 has, like the lappet-caterpillars, a long fleshy wart on the top 

 of the eleventh ring. The history of the silk-worm, how- 

 ever, does not belong to the subject of this treatise. 



There are several kinds of caterpillars in the United 

 States whose cocoons are wholly made of a very strong and 

 durable silk, fully equal to that obtained in India from the 

 tusseh and arrindy silk-worms. These insects, together with 

 some others, whose cocoons are much thinner, and consist 

 more of gummy matter than of silk, belong to a family called 

 Insects of Georgia, p. 103, pi. 52. 



