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ceeded by pale rust red between the tubercles and the first pair of fil¬ 
aments ; behind these, variously marked with light and dark brown. 
An oval dark spot behind the last pair of tubercles and extending into 
the anal plate. Anal legs rusty, lined above with a whitish line. 
Length .70 of an inch.—Packard. 
Angerona crooataria, Fab. 
This beautiful moth may be found from July to September, at 
twilight. It expands about an inch and a half, the wings and body 
are bright yellow, the first spotted with pale reddish brown, and 
crossed by a bn>ad broken band of the same color a little beyond the 
middle. On the fore wings, midway between this band and'the body 
is another band more broken than the outer one and the spots of 
which it is composed are smaller. It is one of the brightest colored 
of the geometrid moths. 
The larva is, according to Packard, when full grown an inch and a 
half long, the body gradually incieasing in size to the first pair of 
abdominal legs, the head flattened so as to be square above, whitish 
green with three longitudinally brown lines. The first segment of 
the same color with two of the brown lines extending across and 
uniting at the posterior part and forming an inverted V. The rest 
of the body is pale grass green with the sides swollen ; four minute 
black dots, a whitish, indistinct subdorsal line and a lateral white 
line. It feeds on the currant and strawberry in May or June accord¬ 
ing to the latitude and season, but not generally injurious. 
Endropia biliniaria, Packard. 
Further than the fact that the larva of this species has been found 
feeding on oak, little is known of it, though the moth is occasionally 
taken by collectors. It may be briefly described as follows. 
Spec. Char. Moth .—Expanse from 1.30 to 1.65 of an inch. Color of 
wings and body clear fawn or yellowish brown, the costa of the fore 
wings paler and having more of a yellowish hue than the rest. 
There are two pale bands extending transversely across the fore wings 
parallel with the outer margin, the outer band edged on the outside 
and the inner on the inside with a fine brown line. The two bands 
are separated by a brown shade. Male antennae heavilv punctured. 
The hind wings are marked like the fore wings, except that the inner 
transverse band is wanting. The outer margins of both wings are 
dentate, the middle of the fore wings also somewhat angled. 
Eugonia subsignaria, Hub. 
This species is pure white, the wings entire in the male, but den¬ 
tate in the female, expanding a little over an inch and a half. It 
may be known by the “snow white body, angulated fore wings and 
