INSECUTOR INSCITI^ MENSTRUUS 139 



traces of ordinary lines pale, the outer followed by dark points. 

 Hind wing pale fuscous, the veins and margin stained with 

 reddish ; a dark fuscous discal point and crenulate broken 

 terminal line. Expanse, 30-32 mm. 



Types, male and female, No. 24341, U. S. Nat. Mus. ; San 

 Diego, California, February 11-12, 1920 (K. R. Coolidge). 



Subfamily CATOCALIN^ 



Nymbis succrassata, new species. 



Cellular area of fore wing and whole of hind wing below 

 covered with rough erect scales ; legs smoothly scaled. Dark 

 brown, the fore wing gray in basal space, shaded with purplish 

 beyond ; inner line oblique, denticulate, preceded by a round 

 blackish spot on inner margin ; an irregular medial shade line ; 

 stigmata obsolete, a brown shade running out from end of cell ; 

 outer line strongly incurved centrally, narrow, pale, with dark 

 ojjter edge ; terminal space blackish, with a row of small black 

 dots remote from the margin. Expanse, 45 mm. 



Type, male, No. 24342, U. S. Nat. Mus. ; Paramaribo, Suri- 

 nam (C. J. Herring, letter dated December 2, 1882). 



Family NOTODONTID.<E 



Disphragis cubana Grote. 



Heterocanipa cubana Grote, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., v, 252, 1865. 

 Paradise Key, Florida, March 8, 1919, male (Schwarz & 

 Barber). Hitherto unrecorded from the American mainland. 



Disphragis picta Felder. 



Packard's Heterocanipa obliqua, var. perolivata, is a syno- 

 nym of picta, as originally given by me (Bull. 52, U. S. Nat. 

 Mus., 254, 1903). Barnes & McDunnough have unjustifiably 

 changed the synonymy in their recent list (Check list Lep. Bor. 

 Am., 94, 1917). 



Paradise Key, Florida, March 3, 1919 (Schwarz & Barber). 



Disphragis georgiana, new species. 



Mistaken by Packard in the female for obliqua Pack., and 

 figured by him (Mem. Nat. Acad. Sci., vii, pi. 5, fig. 9, 1895). 



