242 UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO STUDIES 



Family VESPIDAE 



fPalaeovespa wilsoni Cockerell, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. for 1914, p. 640. Florissant 

 (Wickham). 



Family EUMENIDAE 



fOdynerus percontusus Cockerell, t. c, p. 639. Florissant (Wickham). 

 fO. wUmattae Cockerel], 1. c. Florissant (W. P. Cockerell). 



Family SIRICIDAE 



Tremex columba race aureus Bradley, Jour, of Enlom. and ZoSl., Vol. V (1913), p. 26. 

 Clear Creek, Berkeley, Denver, and Ft. Collins. 



Family ORYSSIDAE 



Oryssus relativus Rohwer, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., Vol. XLIII (1912), p. 155. Colorado 

 (Baker). 



Family XYELIDAE 



Xyela brunneiceps Rohwer, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., Vol. XLV (1913), p. 269. Sugar 



Loaf Mt., Boulder Co. (Rohwer). 

 X. coloradensis Rohwer, t. c, p. 272. Colorado (Baker). 

 X. salicis Rohwer, t. c, p. 266. Graham's Peak, Rio de los Pinos, Colo. (Baker). 



Family CEPHIDAE 



t Janus disperditus Cockerell, Proc. U.S. Not. Mus., Vol. XLIV (1913), p. 346. Florissant 

 (W. P. CockereU). 



Family TENTHREDINIDAE 



tCIadius petrinus Cockerell, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. for 1914, p. 641. Florissant 



(Wickham). 

 fEriocampa celata Cockerell, t. c, p. 642. Florissant (Wickham). 

 Macrophya zanthonota Rohwer, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., Vol. XLIII (1912), p. 218. Ft. 

 Collins. 

 fTenthredella toddi Cockerell, Canad. Entom., January, 1914, p. 32. Florissant (J. H. 



and J. C. Todd). 

 Tenthredo (Labidia) alienatus Rohwer, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., VoL XLIII (1912), p. 224. 



Silverton, Colo., 12,000 ft.; also "Russell County, Colo." (H. S. Smith). 

 T. anomus Rohwer, t. c, p. 225. Colorado (Baker). 



T. opimus coloradensis Rohwer, t. c, p. 224. Short Creek, Colorado. No collector 

 is cited, but it was collected by Cockerell, and recorded by him as Labidia opimus 

 in Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, Vol. XX (1893), p. 345. 



Order LEPIDOPTERA 



Family NYMPHALIDAE 



Brenthis aphirape alticola Barnes and McDunnough, Contr. Nat. Hist. Lep. N. A., 

 Vol. II, No. 3, p. 98. April, 1913, T. 1., Hall Valley, Colo. (Barnes). This is the 

 Colorado so-called triclaris. 



