Catalogue of North American Sphinges. 291 



with a rosy white tinge, and a brown edge above ; abdomen with 

 a longitudinal dorsal brown line. Expands from two and a half 

 to two inches and three quarters. 



My specimens, a male and a female, were captured at Cam- 

 bridge on the Azalea viscosa. 



3. <S'. Myops. Smith-Abbot. = Rosacearum. Boisd. 

 Chocolate-brown ; fore-wings siiuiated and angulated on the 



outer edge, varied with wavy whitish and brown bands, with a 

 white Z at tip, and a tawny yellow spot on each of the outer an- 

 gles ; hind-wings with abbreviated whitish and brown bands 

 upon the front edge, ochre-yellow next to the body, with around 

 black eye-spot having a pale blue centre near the anal angle ; 

 head and shoulder-covers glossed with bluish white ; a rusty 

 brown stripe in the middle of the thorax ; abdomen with a few 

 tawny yellow spots on each side. Expands from two inches and 

 three lines to two inches and six lines. Larva, as figured by Ab- 

 bot, (Ins. Georg. p. ol, pi. 26,) apple-green, the head margined 

 with yellow, and two rows of rust-red spots with six oblique yel- 

 lowish bands on each side of the body. Abbot says that it eats 

 the leaves of the wild cherry-tree, and buries itself in the ground 

 to undergo its transformations. Pupa deep brown. 



M. Boisduval has named and figured but has not described this 

 species, in the first volume of his Species General des Lepidop- 

 teres, pi. 16, fig. 4 ; moreover the name given by him is subse- 

 quent to that of Sir J. E. Smith, which is an additional reason 

 why it cannot be adopted. 



* * Antcnnoi pectinated on both sides in the males. 



4. S. geminata. Say. 



Rosy ash-gray ; fore-wings angulated and with a sinuous outer 

 margin, varied with transverse wavy rosy gray and brown lines, 

 a brown spot and angulated band near the middle, and a deep 

 brown semioval spot at tip; hiud-wings rose-colored in the mid- 

 dle, with a large semioval black spot including two pale blue 

 spots near the anal angle ; thorax with a large central semioval 

 brown spot. Expands from two and a quarter to more than two 

 inches and a half. 



I am indebted to the Rev. L. W. Leonard, of Dublin, N. H., 

 for my specimens, both of which are males. The figure of (S. 

 ocellatus Jamaiccnsis, in Drury's Illustrations, Vol. II, pi. 25, fig. 

 2, 3, very nearly resembles the geminata, but it has only one blue 

 pupil in the eye-spot of the hind-wings. Mr. Kirby's aS. Cerisii, 



