Article beginning on page 25.
Psyche 1:25, 1874.
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from various parts of the
istrations of the Zyg*
a. Vol. I. Part 1 to 9.
icisco, (Gal.,) June Is6
ii, iy, 242, \\-it11 12 fig-
,s (1-10) containing 167
mumprateil, 37 described and
ih en11111crated, IS dcscrib~d
lie& List of die CO~~O-
$&m, Mass., Naturalists'
I.
vol. viii, as far as p. 884,
63.
die of North America (1$73),
,C C~llp~~hoh and 'i'l~ysa~~ura
eul~tributions to Hx~A~II's Gtl~
wy of thu Tci-ritoriea (lB73),
Inscctes (1873), by S. H. 8-,
,f Stretch's "tllnstrittions of the
-it& (1874), p. 223; of Cr0kli's
ofih of Mexico (1874). p. 303;
npcrs on 'North American Spi-
PSYCHE.
ORGAN OF THE CAMBRIDGE ENTOMOLOGICAL CLUB, IGDITKD BY n. PICKMAS MANX.
3 r - . . . - . -- --. A
Val. I.] Cainbrictge, Mass., November, 1874. [No. 7. -. ------L7- -:.=- -.2--L----
- -
. ..
Summer Butterflies at the White Mountains. I am indebted to Mr. Scudder for the privilege of examining the Eiclviince slieots of his fortlicoming paper on " The Distribu- tion of tlw Insects it1 Now Hiunpsl~i~," Hi.'? lahs on the mountain fanna liai-c been so tliorough that iwsrl,v nil its char- acteristic ft.'ntiwes tiiivo been recorded, sit It-ast so far as the Diurnal Lepi(loptern and Orthoptera are coticeri~'d, Still the collections inside during the exctirsim of tlie Caitibridge Ento- inological Club to Mt. Wnshitigtoii, fmn June 21; to July 11, this year, show the occurrence of otw new form, find furnish thta for the determinntioit of the time of appc.iraiicil and rela- tive abundance of many others.
The following is a, list of the
butterflies taktw at that tune.
&is semidea S:iy.
Nothing new WAS disco-i-owl in regard
to +his species.
Tin; first specimens iipjwwed iibout July Ist, and in a few days it hecame very (Auiutant. Speciitiuns were
taken as low down ns Satiborn's camp, or about tlic middle of Mr. Scnddar's sub-alphe fogion.
As semidm was the only
butterfly ciil~t~ii-e~l in uninbws, wliich has its liahi tn t on tlie upper portion of the mountain, but little can be produced, as far us the Diurnals are concerned, either in favor of, or against the presence of two distinct faunal areas above the tree line ; but in a list of the Noctuidie to appear in a future number of P~YCHE, I have some observations to offer on the distribution of the moths, which bear on this point.
hdia ettydice Linn.
Two specimens captured in low
fields, - one below tin; first saw mill, on June 29, an- ther near the Glen House, on July 2.
&odes tharos Drury.
Common in the Glen.
yciodes hamaii Scudd. Titis species was found inhabiting
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NOVELTIES it; A-MIIERST, MASS.- So far as known, tlic frilbwins (ipc- cios have not been taken hitherto in this vicinity: Yniiivsii roi-Jui, ?. Jub 28th, and both sexes aftwward. J u h coetaia, 9, Jnly 2311. on tiiktlcs - Fli
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p. 1:
Tn
*
Hun
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