1897] 



ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 



29 



VERY RARE. 



Argynnis edwardsii 

 Graptaj -album 

 Vanessa californica 

 Chionobas varuna 

 Libythea bachmani 

 Lycaena isola 

 Meganostoma caesonia 

 Papilio tunius 



" cresphontes 



" philenor 

 Cystineura amymoiie 

 Pamphila viator 

 Nisoniades brizo 



" juvenalis 

 Protoparce cingulata 

 Trochilium fraxini 

 Utethesia bella 

 Pheosia rimosa 

 Nerice bidentata 

 Edema albifrons 

 Schizura ipomeae 

 Tolype velleda 

 Hepialus argentata 



But of these Grapta j-albjcm, M. C(sso7iia, P. cresphontes, P. 

 philenor and E. odora were undoubtedly travel-worn wanderers. 

 And beside these I have taken nearly fifty species which are yet 

 unnamed, mostly for the reason that they are too rare to risk 

 sending to be named. The field is by no means exhausted, for 

 each year adds species not found here before. 



Chytonix palliatricula 

 Noctua lubricans 

 Agrotis atricincta 

 Hadena auranticolor 

 Hydrcecia purpurifascia 



" necopina 



Scopelosoma devia 

 CucuUia montanae 

 Schinia nundina 

 ' ' arcifera 

 Melicleptria sueta 

 Acontia aprica 

 Chamyris cerintha 

 Erastria apico^a 

 Melipotis nigrescens 

 Catocala relicta 

 Erebus odoRi 

 Metrocampa perlaria 

 Probole aliearia 

 Psammatodes eremiata 

 Pantographa limata 

 Orneodes hexadactyla 



RHOPALOCERA OF RIVERSIDE, CALIFORNIA. 



Bv F. D. TwoGOOD, 



In the May number of the News, Mr. Albright gives a par- 

 tial list of the Lepidoptera taken at Santa Monica and vicinity. I 

 find it varies in many respects from the list taken here, especially 

 the butterflies. Santa Monica is on the coast and Riverside 

 fifty miles inland in a narrow valley with mountains on all sides. 



Within a radius of five miles of Riverside, which includes a 

 small mountain (Rubidoux, 1800 feet above sea level and 1000 

 feet above Miin Street), the river bottoms and Riverside proper 



