480 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
~ 
bent downward and produced toward the body into a short pro- 
cess; inferior pair not half so long, cylindric, curved upward at 
the tips; wings cinereo-hyaline, front pair with white dots in the 
cells, stigmatic region dark, subcostal region often dark fuscous. 
and with paler spaces, veins vellowish, cross veins mostly black 
«xcept the middle part of many toward the center of C-Se, cross. 
veins between all the branches of radius about 17 or 18, medius. 
with three branches, Cu, with four accessory veins; hind wings. 
scarcely paler than the others, subcostal area clouded, some of 
the cross veins dark. Length of body without appendages about 
45mm; alar expanse 120 to 1385 mm. 
San Antonio Tex. 
5 C. peruviana n. sp. 
Body brown; head brown, finely rugose behind; mandibles 
darker than the head; prothorax much longer than broad, 
the median hastate mark behind concolor, roughened areas. 
along each side reaching the whole length; legs and feet 
of same shade as the head; antennae of female slender, brown, 
black toward the tips; those of male stout, very long, slightly 
toothed, minute papillae all over, bright yellow, bases yellow, 
outer end black; wings subcinereo-hyaline, cross veins mostly 
darkened, a few of those in costal region lighter in the middle;. 
white and dusky clouds from stigma across to middle of Cu,, no 
white dots in the costal cells and none at all on the hind pair 
of wings; in front pair, cross veins between all the branches. 
of radius, about 28 to 30, media with four branches, Cu, with 
five accessory veins. Length to tip of wings 80 to 85 mm; alar 
expanse about 130mm. 
Types in Museum of Comparative Zoology; female from “ head 
waters of Rio Rimac, Peru, in the Cordilleras ”; maie labeled 
‘“Guatamala purchase.” 
6 C. lutea Hagen 
1861 Corydalis lutea Hagen, Synopsis Neur. N. Am. p.193 
1861 Corydalis vetula Hagen, Synopsis Neur. N. Am. p.321 (nomen 
nudum) 
1861 Corydalis armigera Hagen, Synopsis Neur. N. Am. p. 322 
(nomen nudum) 
