PLATE VIII.

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GEOMETRA TRANSVERSATA.

Plate VIII. fig. 2.

Order: Lepidoptera. Section: Nocturna. Family: GeometridÆ, Stephens.

Genus. Geometra, Linn. Stephens. Ennomos, Treitschke, Duponchel.

Geometra Transversata. Alis angulatis fusco-fulvescentibus undique strigis minutis transversis fasciÂque tenui communi obscur notatis. (Expans. Alar. 2 unc.)

Syn. PhalÆna (Geometra) transversata, Drury, Append. v. 2.

Habitat: New York.

Upper Side. The antennÆ are filiform, half an inch in length. The head, thorax, abdomen, and wings, of a brown orange. All the wings are angulated and besprinkled with small short transverse streaks parallel to each other. A narrow brown line, beginning at the external angle of the anterior wings, and running in a transverse direction, crosses them and the posterior wings near the middle, meeting above the extremity of the abdomen.

Under Side. Exactly like the upper in every circumstance, except that the brown line is not to be seen.

This species seems nearly allied to the moths, which English collectors call the Thorns, and to which Stephens restricts the name of Geometra, but which M. Duponchel terms Ennomos.

BUPALUS CATENARIUS.

Plate VIII. fig. 3.

Order: Lepidoptera. Section: Nocturna. Family: GeometridÆ, Steph.

Genus. Bupalus, Leach. Fidonia, p. Treitschke. PhalÆna (Geometra), Drury.

Bupalus Catenarius. Fronte fulvÂ; alis albis lunul mediÂ; anticis strigis duabus undatis (scil. ante et pone medium), posticis strig unicÂ, nigris. (Expans. Alar. 1 unc. 9 lin.)

Syn. PhalÆna (Geometra) catenaria, Drury, App. v. 2. Fabr. Ent. Syst. III. 2. p. 140. No. 41. Gmel. Linn. S. N. 2461. 660.

Habitat: New York (Drury). "In Indiis" (Fabr.).

Upper Side. The head is orange-coloured; the eyes black; the antennÆ are broad, and pectinated; the thorax white, with three spots of orange colour, one at each shoulder, the other at the base of the abdomen, where are two small black specks. The abdomen is white, and on each ring is a small black speck. The wings are white; and, on each anterior one, are two denticulated lines, running cross the wing, from the anterior to the interior edge, in a circular manner; the one near the base, the other near the external edge, which last forms, on each nerve, a small black speck like an arrow head. Between the two lines is a black spot near the anterior edge. The posterior wings have a similar line running cross them, from the anterior to the interior edges, in a circular manner, and, meeting a little above the extremity of the abdomen, with a black spot in each near the middle.

Under Side. Is similar to the upper, only the black spots are more conspicuous.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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