Lepidoptera of New York and Neighboring States 355 



5. C. extrincicella Dyar. Light brown. Head paler, fore wing with a broad 

 whitish antemedial band, edged outwardly toward costa with silver, and filled 

 with silver below. Outer half, except extreme margin, cream, shaded with 

 ochreous and light brown; above, with black streaks; below, with a large black 

 patch containing two silvery spots; a yellow-brown terminal band. Hind wing 

 whitish. 12 mm. {Millieria). 



June. 



Western Pennsylvania; Wisconsin; Regina, Canada; California. 



6. C. leucobasis Fernald. Head, thorax, and base of fore wing white; or pale 

 gray with a white antemedial band. Outer two-thirds of wing dark fuscous, 

 dusted with white, and shading into a white central patch; three oblique white 

 streaks near apex of costa, the largest at apex. With scattered metallic spots, 

 especially below the white patch. Hind wing fuscous. 12 mm. {Millieria). 



June to September. 



Vermont, Massachusetts, and Ontario to British Columbia. 



4. GLYPHIPTERYX Hiibner 



Palpi upturned about to vertex, smooth; ^ocelli present. Fore wing long and 

 narrow, with strongly oblique outer margin and sometimes with marked anal 

 angle (tigs. 214 and 215) ; the apex tending to be subfalcate, but rounded off. 

 Hind wing narrower, and much shorter; typically oblong; sometimes lanceolate, 

 but with rounded apex; R sometimes running to apex. Cell very small in ample- 

 winged forms. M 3 connate, stalked, or united with CUj. Hind tibiae smooth- 

 scaled. Quingueferella of California is not a Glyphipteryx but a Hilarograpna. 



1. G. saurodonta Meyrick. Dark bronzy gray. Head with a white line above 

 eyes; palpus with three whorls of white-tipped black scales; apex of third segment 

 black with white lateral lines. (Wing form and venation not stated.) Fore wing 

 with a semioval white dorsal spot before the middle; six white, dark-defined costal 

 striae, the first two oblique, extending half way across the wing, the first at a 

 third way out, and the second at the middle; the others shorter and erect, the 

 last two being approximated. A wedge-shaped dorsal streak beyond the middle, 

 nearly meeting the second costal, and a shorter erect subterminal streak with a 

 whitish area before it. Two lead-colored metallic spots on disc and three - on 

 dorsal half of outer margin. Apex blackish with a silvery dot. Fringe gray, dark 

 at the base; apical hook black, with a white streak below it. 10 mm. 



September. 



Toronto, Ontario. This species is unknown to me. 



2. G. circumscriptella Chambers. Hind wing narrow and short, but trapezoidal; 

 the fringe wider than the wing; venation normal; M 3 and Cllj connate. 



Dull grav-brown with slight iridescence; a large white dorsal triangular streak 

 with straight outer, and slightly bent inner, edge; hardly dark-edged, and running 

 two-thirds wav across the wing; beyond, with two erect silvery costal streaks, 

 extending half way across wing, and one dorsal one. Speculum black, extending 

 to a rudimentary second outer dorsal streak, interrupted by two silver spots, 

 containing also a couple of silvery and several yellow spots, and with a black- 

 dusted, straw-yellow patch above it. A curved blue streak from middle of outer 

 margin to three-fourths way out on costa and a white subterminal bar beyond it. 

 12 mm. 



Fabiola shalleriella has been mistaken for this species, but can be easily dis- 

 tinguished by its much longer palpi and hairy hind tibia. 



July. 



Mt. Wachnsett and Amherst, Massachusetts; Essex Countv, New Jersey. The 

 species is in tbe Robinson collection, presumably from "New York. 



3. G. quadragintapunctata Dyar. Palpus apparently like that of Abrenthia, but 

 wing with markings of Glyphipteryx. Fore wing dark brown; the median area 



