206 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 
mentions this character in his description of C. orina in the following 
words: ‘les deux lignes medianes fines, blanches, disposees en trapeze 
plus ouvert par le bas que chez Zrafezina.” Except that the hind wings 
are paler, I hardly see any other difference and I do not see the discal 
point beneath. In one specimen the “ points terminaux” are “bien 
marqués,” as in the var. A of #rapezina, but the wings are not “ teintés de 
rouge—brique clair.” 
ERRATA ET ADDENDA TO MR. GROTE’S PAPERS. 
P. 143, line 19, for Basilarclia read Basilarchia. : 
de ‘ 31, add ‘ Polygonum had been previously used in Botany.” 
P. 144, line 29, add “ Hubner’s cereus is a South American species. 
Westwood’s caenius is our very distinct pumila. Hubner does not, in 
fact, refer to pumila at all. It is no part of his genus Polystichtis.”’ 
NOTES ON THE LARVA OF COSMIA ORINA, GUEN. 
BY THE EDITOR. 
A smooth, yellowish green larva, found feeding on oak, taken by bush 
beating, June 2oth. 
Length nine tenths of an inch, form cylindrical. 
Head rather smooth, flattened in front, slightly bilobed, pale whitish 
green, with a few fine yellowish hairs not visible without a magnifyer. 
Body above pale yellowish green, with a dorsal line of yellow, less 
distinct on the anterior segments, and covered with fine dots and short 
streaks of yellow, less numerous on second and terminal segments. There 
are a few fine short yellowish hairs scattered over the surface similar to 
those on the head. Spiracles small, oval, whitish, encircled with dull 
red. 
Under surface of a slightly darker shade of green sprinkled with many 
minute yellowish white dots ; feet pale and shining, prolegs green, both 
faintly tipped with brown. 
One specimen which entered the chrysalis state on the 24th of June 
produced the imago on the 18th of July. 
