THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. | ie bal 
LTypena evanidalis, Robinson, p. 311. This species is allied ie is 
humuli, Harris, and has probably been confounded with it. In a paper 
on the North American species of the genus in MSS., the differences are 
pointed out. 
Schoenobius sordidellus, Zeller, p. 31. 
_ Schoenobius longirostrellus, Zeller, p. 312. 
Schoenobius melinellus, Robinson, p. 313. | 
Schoenobius clemensellus, Robinson, p. 313. This is Chilo aquilellus, 
Clemens, but the name had been previously used. 
Schoenobius dispersellus, Robinson, p. 313. 
Schoenobius unipunctellus, Robinson, p. 314. 
Schoenobius tripunctellus, Robinson, p. 314. 
Crambus minimellus, Robinson, p. 315. 
Crambus satrapellus, Zeller, p. 315. 
Crambus bipunctellus, Zeller, p. 316. 
So far as known to me, the above list contains mention of all the 
writings for which the late President of the American Entomological 
Society was alone responsible. 
INSECTS OF THE NORTHERN PARTS OF BRITISH AMERICA. 
COMPILED BY THE EDITOR. 
\ a . . 
From Kirby's Fauna Boreali-Americana: Insecta. 
(Continued from Page 96.) 
238. PACHYTA LITURATA X7rby.—Length of body 7-9 lines. Several 
specimens taken in Lat. 54° and 65°. 
[r79.| This is the American representative of P. quadrimaculata, trom 
which it differs principally in being not so hairy, with hoary instead of 
yellow-tinted hairs: the punctures of the prothorax and elytra are more 
minute; the antennae are rather shorter, and the elytra, instead of two 
subquadrangular black spots, have three less black linear ones, the two 
anterior ones being partly parallel, and in some specimens confluent. 
GENUS LEPTURA, Lz. 
This genus may be thus subdivided with Teer to the species about 
to be described. 
