Feb.,'o3] 



ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 



45 



Hypoprepia fucosa Hbn., rare. 

 Cisthene subjecta Smith., rare. 

 Euphanessa mendica Walk, com- 

 mon. 

 Ameria unicolor Rob. , rare. 



Arctiidax. 



Cydosia aurivitta G. & ^., rare. 

 Crocota rubicundaria Hdn., rare. 

 " ferruginosa Wa/k., rare. 

 " opella Grt., rare. 

 ** nigricans Reak., rare. 

 Utetheisa bella Linn., common. 



*' var. ornatrix Linn., rare. 



Callimorpha clymena Brown, 



rare. 

 Callimorpha lecontei Bdv., rare. 

 Arctia virgo Linn., rare. 

 " phyllira Dru , rare. 

 *' figurata Dru., rare. 

 " decorata Saund., common. 



Arctia nais Dru., common. 



" phalerata Harr., common. 

 Arctia' anna Grt., rare. 



" virguncula Kirby., rare. 

 " arge Dru., rare. 

 Pyrrharctia Isabella S. & A., com- 

 mon. 

 Phragmatobia rubricosa Harr., 



rare. 

 Leucarctia acraea Dru., common. 

 Spilosoma virginica, Fab., com- 

 mon. 

 Spilosoma latipennis Stretch., xavq. 



" antigone Strk., rare. 



Hyphantria cunea Dru., common. 

 Euchaetes egle Dru., common. 



" collaris Fitch., common. 

 Ecpantheria scribonia Stoll., rare. 

 Halisidota tessellata S. &i A., com- 

 mon. 

 Halisidota caryse Harr., rare. 



(To be continued.) 



Collection Notes (Coleoptera). — 1902. 



By F. C. Bowditch. 



I^ast year I captured at Dover, Mass., on red and black oak 

 sprouts which had been killed by drought, about fifteen or 

 twenty specimens of Elytroleptus floridanus Lee. All the spe- 

 cimens in my collection were from the South, and Messrs. 

 Blanchard and Fenyes, to whom I gave specimens, were inter- 

 ested in its capture so far North. This spring I brought into 

 the house some of the twigs on which I captured the beetles 

 in 1901, and six imagoes hatched in April. On the 20th and 

 30th of May I paid visits to the same place and took upwards 

 of one hundred specimens, most of them on the leaves. The 

 weather, however, was most unfavorable and I failed to learn 

 more of its habits. 



Five examples of Caliodes nobilis Say occurred at Dover in 

 June on oak stumps under the tender green sprouts which 

 come from the stumps the first year after the tree is cut. The 

 beetle is very lively, and upon being disturbed runs very 



