ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 413 
1 color is also in evidence. Third moult occurred on 
the seventh. The larvae are now about a half inch in 
igth, with the body of a dark brown color; otherwise, same 
- —) 
+ = 
wo females placed in the cage on May twenty-fourth de- _ 
posited some thirty eggs on the twenty-fifth. The egg is al- 
lost round, of an opake white color, and finely reticulated. 
first larvae appeared on the eighth of June. The larvae 
when first hatched are of the same color as the egg, but twenty- 
ir hours after feeding they assume a dark green color. The 
head and collar are almost black, and but slightly punctuated. 
First moult occurred on June seventeenth. Shortly after 
 moulting the larvae were of a yellowish green, and covered 
___ with numerous brown spots. A dorsal line is plainly visible. 
Second moult occurred on June the twenty-eighth, but I no- 
tice no change in the larvae since first moult. The third moult 
occurred July the sixth. With the exception that the larvae 
are larger, and the dorsal line more distinct, I notice no 
_ change since last moult. July sixteenth the fourth moult oc- 
curred, but I notice no change in the appearance of the larvae 
since the third moult. On July the twentieth a number of the 
color. The first imago made its appearance July twenty- 
eighth. Between July the twenty-eighth and August fifth some 
twenty imagoes made their appearance. The species is double- 
brooded in the vicinity of Philadelphia. 
9. Pamphila manataaqua. 
A female of this species was placed in the cage on June four- 
teenth, and during the fifteenth she deposited a number of eggs. 
The egg is somewhat broader than high, and is of a pea green 
' color; distinctly marked with numerous punctuations, and the 
__ apex is slightly flattened. I was successful in raising this spe- 
_ © cies, but aside from this description of the egg I cannot give the 
