PRC 



x. p. :alf 



THE ENTOMOLOGIST 



Vol. XLVL] MARCH, 1913. [No. 598 



ILLUSTRATIONS OF AMERICAN LEPIDOPTERA. 



By Olive J. Cockerell.* 



(Plate V.) 



Oiketicus toivnsendi, Cockerell, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1895, 

 xv. p. 208. Fig. 1. — Male moth. Fig. 2.— Male larva, natural 

 size. Fig. 3. — Anterior end of male larva, enlarged. Fig. 4. — 

 Head and thorax of female larva, enlarged. Fig. 5. — Bag of 

 larva, on apricot tree. Fig. 6. — Bag of larva, on tornillo 

 (Strombocarpa) . 



Fig. 7. — Epicnaptera dyari (Rivers), Canad. Entom. 1893, 

 p. 144. 



Fig. 8. — Tolype brevicrista, Dyar, Canad. Entom. 1895, p. 246. 

 From a cotype. 



These were all collected in the Mesilla Valley, New Mexico. 



AN ADDITION TO THE LIST OF BRITISH PLECO- 

 PTERA: RE-INSTATEMENT OF CHLOROPERLA 

 V EN OS A. 



By Kenneth J. Morton, F.E.S. 



(Plate VI.) 



In the " Catalogue of British Neuroptera " by McLachlan 

 and Eaton (Ent. Soc. Lond. 1870) two species of Chloroperla are 

 listed, viz. C. rivulorum, Pict., and C. grammatica, Poda. The 



* My sister Olive Cockerell (1869-1910), when living with me in New 

 Mexico, rnade a number of drawings for Dr. A. S. Packard, intended to 

 illustrate his volumes on American moths. Two of Dr. Packard's volumes 

 have been published, and on examining the MSS. he left, it is found that a 

 third (Saturniidae and Hemileucidse) can be issued, but beyond this there 

 are only miscellaneous fragments. As the drawings now presented repre- 

 sent hitherto unfigured species, I have sought and obtained Mrs. Packard's 

 kind permission to publish them. — T. D. A. C. 



ENTOM. — MARCH, 1913. G 



