452 Forty-sixth Report on the State Museum. 



Transformations of Daremma undulosa Walkee. (Twenty- 

 fourth Annual Keport on the JS^. Y. State Museum of ISTatural 

 History, for the year 1870 : 1872, pp. 128-131. Entomological 

 Contributions— ko. II, 1872, pp. 24-27.) 



Remarks on rearing Lepidopterous larvae on their living food-plant inclosed 

 in a net. Description of the larva of D. undulosa in each of its five stages, 

 and of the pupa: its food-plants. 



^N'otes on Platarctia Parthenos (Harris). (Twenty -fourth Annual 

 Eeport on the iS^. Y. State Museum of Natural History, for the 

 year 1870 : 1872, pp. 132, 133. Entomological Contributions — 

 JSTo. II, 1872, pp. 28, 29.) 



Notes on the young larva and dates of seven molts, hibernation and pupa- 

 tion, and markings of the imago. 



[In the Smith "List of Lepidoptera of Boreal North America," 1891, this 

 species is referred as a synonym to hyperborea of Curtis.] 



]^otes on Euprepia Americana (Harris). (Twenty-fourth Annual 

 Report on the N. Y. State Museum of ISTatural History, for 

 the year 1870: 1872, pp. 134, 135. Entomological Contribu- 

 tions— Xo. II, 1872, pp. 30, 31.) 



Description of the egg and notes on the larval molts : regarded by some 

 v^riters as identical with caja of Europe: Packard's description of the larva. 



[Catalogued as a variety of E. caja (Linn,) in the Smith List of 

 Lepidoptera,] 



Notes on Euchaetes egle (Drury). (Twenty-fourth Annual Report 

 on the ]!^. Y. State Museum of JS'atural History, for the 

 year 1870: 1872, pp. 136, 137. Entomological Contributions 

 — 'No. II, 1872, pp. 32, 33.) 



The caterpillar described in its last^three stages with their habits : parasites 

 . from the larvae : a difficult species to carry to its imago stage. 



Transformations of Lagoa crispata Packard. Twenty-fourth 

 Annual Report on the X. Y. State Museum of IS^atural 

 History, for the year 1870 : 1872, pp. 138-145. Entomological 

 Contributions — Xo. II, 1872, pp. 34-41.) 



Its eggs, from Quercus ilicifolia, described : the young larva, and habits 

 and features after each of its five molts : its stinging power : the cocoon 

 with its peculiar lid : pupation, and the pupa : emergence of the imago : 

 abundance of the larvae at Center, N. jY. : a parasitic attack. 



