The Moths and Butterflies 



425 



described in the thinly scaled, not hairy, condition of the wings and the 

 prevalence of black and white in the pattern instead of warmer colors. H. 

 maia, expanding 2} inches, is subtransparent black with a broad middle 

 transverse band of white on each wing; in this band is a small blackish blotch 



FIG. 610. The lo emperor-moth, Automeris to, and cocoon; female moth above; 

 male below. (After Lugger; natural size.) 



isolated in the hind wings, but connected with the black of the base in the 

 fore wings. This species occurs in the eastern states; a similar species, H. 

 nevadensis, being found from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific; H. electro, 

 found in southern California, has the hind wings blackish red; other species, 

 found in New Mexico and Arizona, are mostly black and white with a red- 



