Tue Crane-Fiurzrs or New York — Parr II 891 
Fully colored pupae dark brown; cephalic crest paler; pronotal breathing horns pale yellow, 
darkening into brown at tips; wing pads light yellow, with dark venation showing clearly; 
pleurites of abdomen of a darker brown than sternites or tergites. 
Body somewhat similar to that of H. longicornis, but general form much stouter. Cephalic 
crest (Plate LVI, 287) prominent, tuberculate, consisting of four lobes, the posterior lobes 
somewhat the larger, on posterior and lateral faces with two stout setae; a stout seta on 
ventral face of anterior lobes. Scapal spine lacking. Clypeal tubercles large, blunt, with 
a small setiferous tubercle above each. Labrum bluntly rounded at apex. Labial lobes 
elongate, diamond-shaped, tips rather acute. Pronotal breathing horns rather long and 
slender, transversely wrinkled, longer than cephalic crest. Mesonotum (Plate LV, 279) 
more convex than in E. longicornis. Wing pads usually showing venation clearly on pale 
background; vein r connecting Ri with 22+: distinctive of this species, lack of cell Mm 
separating this pupa from that of H. spinosa and E. brachycera. Legs sheaths ending about 
on a level, the hind tarsi a little longer than the two inner pairs. 
Arrangement of setae on abdomen (Plate LVI, 288) about as in E. longicornis. Pleura 
with two stout setae dorsad and caudad of each spiracle, and a weak seta ventrad of spiracle 
and close to it; basal ring with a single pleural seta; spicules on caudal margin of posterior 
ring small and numerous, on intermediate segments about forty in number; seventh sternite 
with about four to six spines at each end of row, the broad median area devoid of spines. 
Female cauda (Plate LV, 276) with tergal valves exceeding the long sternal valves, 
earcely directed dorsad (this condition may be compared with that in EF. longicornis). Male 
aida with abdomen bluntly rounded at tip. 
Nepionotype.— Ithaca, New York, May 30, 1913. 
Ne notype.— With type larva, June 6, 1913. 
Paratypes.— Larvae and pupae with types. 
enus Penthoptera Schiner (Gr. sorrow + wing) 
1°63 Penthoptera Schin. Wien. Ent. Monatschr., vol. 7, p. 220. 
Larva.— Spiracular disk surrounded by four blunt lobes, the ventral pair a little the longer, 
nner face not marked with darker, at tip with one or more long setae. Head capsule about 
sin Eriocera. Coloration a deep saturated yellow. 
Pupa.— Cephalic crest with lobes rounded, setiferous. No distinct tubercles or spines 
mn head or thorax. Pronotal breathing horns short, stout, cylindrical, apex expanded into 
flattenel head, stem coarsely wrinkled, base enlarged. Abdominal armature weak. 
piracles not well developed. 
Penthoptera is a small genus which includes four European and three 
merican species, two of the latter occurring in tropical America. The 
astern North American Penthoptera albitarsis, discussed below, has been 
onsidered in some detail by the author in another paper (Alexander, 
915¢: 152-157). 
