6 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 95 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. n, art. i, p. 27, 1917 (Tallahassee, Fla., 

 Apr. 17; Biscayne Bay, Fla.). — Draudt, m Seitz, Macrolepidoptera of the 

 world, vol. 5, p. 871, 1922 (diagnosis; widely distributed in North and Cen- 

 tral America) ; p. 1048 {pscudocellus, treated on p. 871 as a form of cellus, 

 separated as a distinct species) ; pi. 169, rows a and b. — Forbes, in Leonard, 

 List of the insects of New York, Mem. loi, Cornell Univ., Agr. Exp. Stat., 

 p. 670, August 1926, issued January 1928 (Brooklyn, N. Y. ; presumably a 

 stray). — Holland, Butterfly book, revised ed., p. 338, pi. 45, fig. 12, 1931 

 (the Virginias southward and westward to Ariz, and Mexico; common in 

 the Carolinas ; Mexican specimens are larger and the light band is nar- 

 rower). — A. H. Clark, Science, n. s., vol. 80, no. 2068, pp. 163-164, Aug. 17, 

 1934 (brief account of the life history). 



Achalarns cellus Holland, Butterfly book, p. 2)^6 (the Virginias southward and 

 westward to Ariz, and Mexico; common in the Carolinas) ; pi. 45, fig. 12; 

 reprinted, 1910. — Coolidge and Clemence, Ent. News, vol. 22, no. i, p. 4, 

 January 1911 (compared with A. pscudocellus, spec. nov.). — Hollaind, The 

 butterfly guide, p. 202, New York, 1915 (Virginias southward to Ariz, and 

 Mexico) ; pi. 132, p. 202, fig. 2 (colored) ; reprinted, 1923. 



Achalaurus cellus Girault, Ent. News, vol. 11, p. 439, 1900 (abundant in Anne 

 Arundel Co., Md.). 



Cccrops festus Ktrby, Zutriige zur Sammlung exotischer Schmetterlinge .... 

 von Jacob Hiibner und Carl Geyer, new English facsimile edition, p. 24, 

 Brussels, 1908-1912 (Mexico; figure is of a female); p. 92 (distribution, 

 North America). 



Eitdamus (Rhabdoidcs) cellus Skinner, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 37, p. 189, 

 1911 (description of imago, larva, and pupa, the first from French, 1886, the 

 last two from Scudder, 1889; W. Va. to the Gulf of Mexico; Tex.; Ariz.; 

 Mexico; Putta; Colima; Milpos; Cuernavaca; Xucumanatlan ; Omilteme; 

 Pinal; Mexico City; Oaxaca ; Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 19 (Osborn) ; Talla- 

 hassee, Fla., Apr. 17 (Maynard) ; Ga., Apr. 25 (Abbot) ; food plant 

 Breiveria aquatica; apparently two broods). 



Cccropterus cellus, Lindsey, Univ. Iowa Studies, Studies in Nat. Hist., vol. 9, 

 no. 2 (in reality no. 4). ist ser., no. 43, p. 31, Feb. 15, 1921 (synonymy; Pa., 

 July; Va. and W. Va., May and June; Tex. and Ariz., April and August) ; 

 fig. 9, a (club of antenna), b (detail of neuration of anal area of secondary), 

 p. 30. — Skinner and Williams, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 48, no. 2, 

 p. 120, June 1922 (description of male genitalia) ; fig. 19, p. 119 (male 

 genitalia; Mount Graham, Ariz.). — Barnes and Benjamin, Check list of 

 the diurnal Lepidoptera of Boreal America, San Diego, California, p. 21, 

 1926 (listed; jestus Geyer included as a synonym, and aereofusciis Gunder 

 as an aberration) ; republished a few days later in Bull. Southern Cali- 

 fornia Acad. Sci., vol. 25, part i, p. 21, January-April, 1926 (same). — 

 Harris, A list of the butterflies of Georgia, Trans. Georgia Naturalists 

 Club, vol. I, no. I, p. 21, January 1931 (Macon, Ga.). — Lindsey, Bell, and 

 Williams, Denison Univ. Bull., Journ. Sci. Lab., vol. 26, p. 31, April 1931 

 (Pa., July; Va. and W. Va., May-August; Tex. and Ariz., April, July- 

 September; synonymy) ; pi i, fig. 10, a, b (from Lindsey, 1922) ; pi. 5, fig. 2 

 (male genitalia).— A. H. Clark, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 157, p. 204, 1932 

 (D. C, June 25, 1889; Difficult Run, Va., June 23, 1920; Collington, Md., 

 July 30, 1930) ; pi. 50, figs. 3, 4 (specimen without data). — Richards, Bull. 



