S74 FIFTH REPORT OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL COMMISSION. 
and then la I tubercle beneath. Hence the caterpillar represents a large rough 
twig, with leaf-fcar-like tubercles. Anal plate sharp, triangular, tuherculated. 
Anal Legs large. Length S8»". 
Pupa is rather thick; the body in front. Including the wings, horn-brown, 
ipeekled with blackish j abdomen reddish brown. Spiracles distinct black. Termi- 
nal spine large, ending in two long straight acute spinules. Length IT"" 11 . 
Moth.— Body and w ingfl uniformly eream-white ; wings nnspotted, with a single 
dull, ocherous, oblique, straight line extending from just beyond the middle of 
the inner edge to the costa, ending just before the apex: hind wings with no line, 
immaculate. No discal dots on either wings. Beneath immaculate, the band not 
re-appearing on the fore wing. Expanse of wings 1.7.") inches. 
It dirVers from T. erocallata by the cream-white wings, the dull ocherous line on 
the ton' wing, while the apex of the fore wing is not so pointed as in T. erocallata or 
tiKj>ilate8, and there is no line reproduced beneath, and no traces of a discal dot 
beneath. The hind wings are much more obtuse than in T. erocallata. 
11. Caripcta divisata Walker. 
Order Lepidoptera; family Piial.enidjE. 
One larva of this species was found September 15, 1884, feeding on 
hemlock. It changed to a pupa October 11, and gave out the moth 
July 2, 1885, having been sent as a larva to the office of the United 
States entomologist at Washington, where it was reared. 
Larva. — Head pale grayish-brown, with darker, transverse, tine, wavy lines. 
Dorsum grayish yellow with a medio-dorsal pale dusky arrow-like mark, its point di- 
rected forward, on each segment. Piliferous warts black. Lateral line yellow, 
around the stigmata orange. 
Pupa. — Body very thick and stout, pale brown, somewhat frosted over on the head 
and thorax, the body becoming mahogany brown towards the tip of the abdomen. 
Surface coriaceous, rough, with elongated pits. Cremaster flattened, very rough 
at base, ending in two large down-curved hooks and two pairs of very small curved 
lateral bristles. Length, 14 mm . 
Moth.— This fine moth may be recognized by the nearly white ground-color of 
the wings, with the broad, mesial, blackish, mottled baud, darker on the edges, bor- 
dered on each side with a broad white band, and inclosing a large oblong, oval, white 
discal spot. It differs so much from C. angustioraria that it would scarcely be re- 
ferred to the same genus. Expanse of wings 1.55 inches. 
1*2. Eupithecia luteata Pack. 
Order Lepidoptera ; family Phal.exid.e. 
(Larva, Plate x; Fig. 4.) 
Feeding on the leaves late in August in Maine, a slender-bodied 
measuring inch-worm of the general color of the terminal twigs, and 
not quite so wide as a hemlock leaf. Head not so wide as the body, 
with a moderately deeply impressed median line; pale flesh-colored, 
mottled, with pale reddish brown spots, and with long brown hairs. 
Body mostly greenish yellow, the tints pale and delicate. A dorsal 
row of diffuse elongated spots, extending backward from the transverse 
blackish stripes on the sutures between the segments. On each of the 
three thoracic segments is a transverse row of black warts and hairs, sit- 
