10 
Journal New York Entomological Society. [VoL.v. 
Food-plants observed. —Willow, oak, wild cherry, bayberry, lin¬ 
den, witch-hazel, chestnut, beech and sour-gum {Nyssa). 
EXPLANATION OF PLATE I. 
Fig. 
it 
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Tortricidia fasciola. 
1. Larva in stage I, side view, enlarged. 
2. Larva In stage VI, side view, enlarged. 
3. The same, front view. 
4. One segment, stage VI, showing setae. 
5. Skin granules at one of the setae of lateral row. 
6. Mature larva, enlarged, dorsal view. 
7. Moth of T. fasciola. 
Adoneta spinuloides. 
8. Larva in stage I, side view, enlarged. 
9. Mature larva, side view, enlarged. 
10. The same, front view. 
11. The same, back view. 
12. One of the short horns of subdorsal row and adjacent skin granules. 
13. A single spine, enlarged. 
14. Caltropes from a lateral horn. 
15. Moth of A. spinuloides. 
Euclea indetermina Boisduval. 
1864— Ca l loch lor a vernata Packard, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil. Ill, 339- 
1882— Pa rasa chloris Grote, Check List, 17. 
1891— Parasa viridus Dyar, Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. XVIII, 154’ 
1891_ Parasa viridus Smith, List Lep. 28. 
1893— Euclea indetermina Dyar & Doll, Ent. News, IV, 311. 
1894— Euclea indetermina Neumoegen & Dyar, Journ. N. \ . Ent. Soc. II, 68. 
Larva. 
1797—Smith & Abbot, Lep. Ins. Ga., pi. 73 * 
1832—Boisduval, Cuvier’s An. Kingd. (Griffith), PI. 103, Fig. 8. 
1852—Harris, Ins. Inj. Veg. 323. 
1858—Duncan, Nat. Libr. XX, PI. 21. 
1878—Andrews, Psyche, II, 271 (as Parasa chloris ). 
1885—Edwards & Elliot, Papilio, III, 128. 
1885—French, Can. Ent. XVII, 161. 
^93—Dyar & Doll, Ent. News, IV, 311. 
1894-—Dyar, An. N. Y. Acad. Sci, VIII, 214. 
Special Structural Characters. 
Dorsal space broad, narrowing only slightly at the ends, curving 
down anteriorly and posteriorly at joints 3—5 and 11—13. Sides nearly 
