316 Mr. A. G. Butler on some — 
me; whilst three specimens, undoubtedly referable to O. anti- 
gua, in the Museum collection from Nova Scotia, are paler 
than the majority of Huropean examples. I believe that 
O. nora is a bad species. 
25. Orgyta gulosa. 
Orgyia gulosa, H. Edwards, “ Papilio,” p. 61 (1881). 
Two males. Lake County, California. 
I had already separated these from a series of O. vetusta 
before I was aware that Mr. Edwards had described it. The 
specimens are smaller than O. vetusta, with rather less-pointed 
primaries; these wings are slightly browner, giving the 
imsect a more uniform coloration; the stripes across the pri- 
maries are more regular, the inner one straighter, and the 
white spot near external angle is a good deal smaller. 
26. Orgyia vetusta. 
Orgya (sic) vetusta, Boisduval, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xii. p. 28. n. 94 
(1868). 
Lake and Colusa Counties, California. 
Lasiocampide. 
(ZASTROPACHA, Ochs. 
27. Gastropacha Mildet. 
Gastropacha Mildei, Stretch, Zyg. & Bomb. p. 113. n. 1, pl. iv. fig. 12 
(1871-73). 
Rouge River, Oregon. 
One example. Rather smaller and of a more uniformly 
lilacine-grey colour than Stretch’s figure. 
Saturniide. 
PSEUDOHAZIS, Grote. 
28. Pseudohazis eglanterina, var. 
Saturnia eglanterina, Boisduval, Ann, Soc. Ent. France, 2° sér. x. 
p. 328. n. 95 (1852). 
California. 
A single extremely melanistic example, in which the 
orange-yellow areas are reduced to short dashes, those towards 
the costa of primaries washed with pink. 
