Appendix. 621 
Johlotia (?) mogilasia. Dyar and Iinab (1907). 
Journ. N. York Ent. Soc. XV., 206 (1907). 
Locality. —Panama. 
Genus Lesticocampa. Dyar and Knab (non. nud.) (1906). 
This genus was founded on larval characters. The authors refer 
to this genus six species, but all I can see of the genus is that it is 
allied to Bunchomyia, but differs in the absence of the conical frontal 
process. 
“ The species upon which the genus was founded appears to be 
now undescribed,” the authors say. “ It was identified by Coquillett 
and accepted by us as Johlotia lunata , Theobald.” 
A re-examination of the type lunata shows the clypeus not to be 
hairy as I pointed out in Yol. IV., p. 594 (1907), and as the genus. 
Trichoprosopon must stand I placed this species in Blanchard’s 
genus Johlotia (1901), this name must consequently supercede Dyar 
and Knab’s Lesticocampa. 
Lesticocampa rapax. Dyar and Knab (1906). 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. XIX., 137 (1906). 
“ cf .—Head clothed with dull violet scales behind, with a row of 
black erect forked scales; thorax with dull brown scales with faint 
purple reflection; pleurae and coxae silvery ; abdomen with steel-blue, 
violaceous in certain lights, the first segment with brighter blue, 
scales, eighth with bright violet scales, golden at the sides ; venter 
golden; last segment with bright violet-blue scales with numerous 
bristles below. Legs entirely blue-violet. Palpi longer than antennae, 
upcurved. 
9 .•—Similar to the male, palpi short, as long as four joints of the 
antennae. 
One d , Trinidad, B.W.I. (F. W. Urich), bred from larvae 
described as L. lunata , Theobald (Dyar and Knab, Jour. N. York 
Ent. Soc. XIV., 226, 1906); three $’s, Sao Paulo, Brazil (A. Lutz) ; 
Patulue, Guatemala (D. G„ Eisen). 
Type in U.S. Nat. Mus.” 
Lesticocampa vonplesseni. Dyar and Knab (1906). 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. XIX., 137 (1906). 
“ 9 .—Head with dull indigo-blue scales behind; palpi as long as 
six joints of the antennae, black; thorax elongate, with sooty scales ; 
abdomen dull blue above, golden below ; legs black with blue reflection. 
Four specimens; upper Pastazza River, Ecuador (Baron von 
Plessen, through Dr. M. Graham). 
Type in U.S. Nat. Mus.” 
