THE
Bee rlrHR RE LIENS
BASTERN UNITED STATES.
FOR THE USE OF CLASSES IN ZOOLOGY AND
PRIVATE STUDENTS.
Nv
Dt
Ce ie bolt Nese 2A Me,
PROFESSOR OF NATURAL HISTORY AND CURATOR IN THE SOUTHERN ILLINOIS
NORMAL UNIVERSITY.
NEW AND REVISED EDITION.
WG
PHILADELPHIA:
J be WheRINCOrn (COMPANY:
LI00:
Copyright, 1885, by G. H. Frencu.
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PREFACE.
For a number of years the writer cf these pages has
recognized the necessity of some form of manual to be
placed in the hands of students in zoology, to enable
them to identify the animals that should come before
them for examination. Jordan’s “Manual of Verte-
brates” supplies this demand as to the vertebrate ani-
mals, but there are many other specimens of interest
within the reacn of every student that do not belong
to this great branch of the animal kingdom, among
the most attractive of which are butterflies. Several
years ago, analytical tables of the butterflies of Ili-
nois were prepared and published for the use of our
classes in zoology. These tables, followed by: others
on the moths, notwithstanding many imperfections,
served so good a purpose in the class-room, and were
sought by so many private students, that the prepara-
tion of a more extended work on the Butterflies of the
Eastern United States has been undertaken. The work
embraces a brief description of the several stages of
butterflies, methods of capture and preservation, an ana-
lytical key, and a more complete description of all the
species that have been found in this region. In the
last part the preparatory stages are given so far as they
3
4 PREFACE.
are known. ‘These preparatory stages are often essential
to a proper understanding of the relation that species
bear to one another, besides adding much to the interest
of the study of butterflies.
The locality represented in this work is shown on the
map on the opposite page, being all east of the western
boundaries of Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas,
and Louisiana, as indicated by the heavy line. This
differs a little from what is denominated the Hast-
ern or Atlantic Province on the zoo-geogrephical map
by Dr. A. 8. Packard, Jr., in the third report of the
United States Entomological Commission, in that the
western boundary is by State lines, instead of following
a more sinuous line caused by variations of elevation,
ete., and the whole of Florida and the New England
States are included, but the portion of Canada included
in the map referred to is omitted here. For several
reasons it was found more convenient to take the bound-
aries as here given, making the field represented essen-
tially the same.
I would gratefully acknowledge here the valuable aid
I have received from Mr. William H. Edwards, of Coal-
burgh, West Virginia, in the loan of specimens for
description, in the free use of his writings, from which
nearly all the descriptions of the preparatory stages have
been taken, in the use of advance-sheets of his new
catalogue of the “ Butterflies of North America,” for
the purpose of getting localities and arrangement of
species, and in many suggestions kindly given. Mr. C.
EK. Worthington, of Chicago, also loaned me specimens
for description, thus aiding me much. I wish to
acknowledge also the aid and encouragement I haye
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G PREFACE.
of the accentuated names of the buiterflies of the Eastern
United States. Last, but not least, { would acknowledge
valuable aid and encouragement from my wife, who has
been the companion of my studies in natural history for
many years, making it possible for me, at this time, to
orepare this volume. In the few instances where I have
not had specimens for description, the back volumes of
the “Canadian Entomologist” and the American En-
tomological Society’s publications, Professor Fernald’s
‘“ Butterflies of Maine,” and some other works, have
peen used.
Electrotypes for illustrating this volume have been
received from the following persons :
From Professor C. V. Riley, Nos, 8, 9, 10, 11,12,
13, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29; 30, 36) 3% 3830 mau
60, GIy 62, 63) 64, 65, 66,67, 68,69, 91s 92 oar
From Henry Holt & Co., of New York, the figures
from Scudder’s Butterflies, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 88, 41,
A2, 45, ol, 52, 54, 55, 71, 73, 75, 76, 77%, 78, 79, 80neie
22:83, 81188, oo,) 90:
From Dr. A.S. Packard, Jr., the figures from “ Guide
to the Study of Insects,” Nos. 4, 6, 40, 44, 46, 47, 48,
49, 53, 72, 84.
From J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, the
figures from Saunders’s “ Insects Injurious to Fruits,”
Nos. 17,182 19) 20021 2208, 74:
From A. A. Tenney, the figures from ‘Tenney’s
‘‘Klements of Zoology,” Nos. 14, 15, 16.
All the rest were made specially for this work by
the St. Louis Type Foundry Company, from: photo-
graphs taken by Mr. A. Hudson, of this place.
In the arrangement of species and nomenclature,
PREFACE ”
Edwards’s “ New Catatogiie of ‘he Butterflies of North
America” has been followed.
It has been suggested that I should give, in addition
to the table for tracing species to their description, a table
of larvee. In my opinion cuz present knowledge is not
sufficient to make a satisfactory one. Though much is
known of the preparatory steges of our butterflies, there
are still too many gaps: these, however, are being filled
up, so that in a few years a table can be given that will
be more satisfactory than any that could be prepared
now.
G. H. FRENCH.
CARBONDALE, I1s., June &, 1285
BaD hACH EO THIRD HDITION.
In an addenda to the second edition of “ Butterflies
of the Eastern United States” three species were added
that were not known to occur here when the first edition
was published,.—Colenis Delila, Neonympha Mitchellia,
and Pamphila Aaroni. These were referred to their
appropriate places in the body of the work by number
and the number of the pages. Since the publication of
the second edition seven species and four varieties have
been found in the territory covered by this work that
were not known to exist there before. Five of the
species and three of the varieties were new to science,
having been described since 1890, and the others have
wandered from their former known habitats.
8 PREFACE.
The descriptions of species and varieties in this edition
that were not in former editions are to be found at the
close of the volume, each numbered so that its place in
the general arrangement can be readily found. In the
body of the book where these would oceur they are re-
ferred to by a “See Addenda.” As, for instance, on
page 119, Calhidryas Statira is thus referred to, and on
page 389 this species will be found with a number 174,
thus indicating that it should stand between Nos. 17
and 18.
G. H. FRENCH.
CARBONDALE, ILu., May 13, 1895.
CONTENTS,
Wlassiticahione. sc ee es alae
Different Stages of Development:
MOVE er tots. (3) 3 fs) 7, POUR LO aco hate ROMA!
laomle caraemeum me shetty ee oes ete) All fa (ais oy Var ule yay
bee Canvsalis more Upa | 2. 6 sw 8 *
MihepimacovorWertect Butterfly, 20. 6 1s ne
PA USO ITC LCTMNCS ro Me 0 fel rel ek se ee ek
Collecting Butterflies,—including Materials for Collect-
ing, Killing, and Preparing for the Cabinet; Cabinet ;
Rearing Butterflies from Eggs and Larve .... .
WiceronmtinerAmalytical: Key. 9. 29. 5 4. 2 eee
UNE SRO Me ULLETMNCS Ni.) 3) 3) 0) Mel geo) Le veoh ete es
Accentuated and Syllabicated List of the Butterflies of
thepvasternyWinited States’ 29.0.6. 6 Gb ee
Analytical Key for the Determination of the Butterflies
mune MasterneWmited: States). -. 4s. ss 5 se
eermmmilivaleyoulOmidse nis hie ees ee nw ye Sues
Subfamily Papilionine,—Papilio .......4...
Subfamily Pierine,—Pieris, Nathalis, Anthocharis, Cal-
lidryas, Kricogonia, Colias, Terias ........
AGUrTMUlivge Npysp ages Meee ctle evs ss) ss el wi
Subfamily Heliconine,—Heliconia .........
Subramuly Danaince.—Danais. 99.20) 3 3 se ©
Subfamily Nymphalinz,—Colenis, Agraulis, Argynnis,
Kuptoieta, Melitsza, Phyciodes, Eresia, Grapta, Va-
nessa, Pyrameis, Junonia, Anartia, Eunica, Timetes,
Victorina, Diadema, Limenitis, Apatura, Paphia.
Subfamily Satyrinea,—Debis, Neonympha, Satyrus,
Clicnobasw sas Nae ees rN Con a al Oe
15-16
16-18
19-23
23-26
26-32
32-36
36-49
49-50
50-51
51-57
57-82
83-140
83-105
106-140
141-252
141-148
148-147
147-229
229-250
250-252
9
®
10 CONTENTS.
Hamily: Erycimid gary. irey atic nave wise coe tsi cence te
Subfamily Erycininz,—Calephelis, Eumenia. . .. .
Ramilydoycsnidtey 2s eee She ee
Subfamily Theclina,—Thecla ab oat
Subfamily Lycveninw,—Feniseca, @hiyeonhs mus, ie
COON eeuieh cue mouleteem ucts! 7s isin
Hamil sHlespeniclea i ssauew tsa: saav eat ec ual itounel ee ae Neues
Section 1,—Carterocephalus, Ancyloxypha, Thymel-
icus, Pamphila, Amblyscirtes ...... :
Section 2,—Pyrgus, Nisoniades, Pholisora, Badan!
Hrycides; Megath yams: © oie insciaistienae tel iatuemeeite
Addenda. .... sites aaietfel ceitelinonnciss Ss), ey) lta Won
GOBBATY irc a0 rss eer cena ued con ollie tc seveay ocee) oulkenae
Index’... 0 « SPE aACUne ye cr udu ie Net ieaw yes
PAGE
252-254
263-254
254-298
979
255-279
279-298
299-387
299-352
352-387
389-393
395-402
403
mit OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
0,
Py eiieropyieot ere of Colias Philodice. ....-... . > 18
Zaanceon Vanessa, Antiopa ; . 230. 9.) 22. 4 2 alere, 19
peeeuou Manas -Arehippus’ . : so. 2s 2 oie ace 8) 20
4. Three facets of an insect’s acca hp DG AP ORO hice Fata AL
5. Head of Eudamus Tityrus .. . RseaeeNal = Utah PEA HO
6. Venation of the wing of a bmeniy RSIS Us eens Gea Koo, .
i; penles from the wing of a butterfly .......-... 61 h
BaBEOECEL-MCT eye, ies. 2)» 2 6 22s eect a teetist Joe ate, OO |
OID TEAM Bl i i fy Le
ele eens eae of) Al
Pea GIIOM MNCNON, IMAGO: 2. 6 ee ne be ee BT
ZEA A MMIENOL, TATA). 20315 ole ee “eee el fe aia a 2 8B
ROOM NICHON: PUPA, 2 2.» ies al 6 ele! oe cl ai 8D
Poeeapiio asterias, imago, male... sie. « ees 2 oe OO |
POMEEOUNOPASLETIAS, IATVA 5 is. 07 2s a oe wa! Ue) wl we 1 QZ
LADINO PAStetIAS, pPUpa . 2. 2 os 2 2's se te fs 2 as 92
eA MMOMLMINIS AMALO | <0 2 se Pd slay ay sue, 98
PApINOULUYnUS, IATVA . 9. 1s Fo, “slo i6 se) le (|) «2 Jey 100
PPeLAPINO MTHS, PUPS «2 a+ 2 2 lee ee 2 2s wo je LOL .
ip caApiio Crespuontes, WACO. < «2 2. 2 2 2) fe elas » 102
Meio Crespuontes, 1ATVA) 4-255 2 6 5 le 02 lee) wee) 108
Po eEABUIG O@resphonies, PUPA. 9. 6) ole die ve let a, woe) 104
Poeiaetia trovodice, Imago, male... -. 05) 2:10) t's 2! ote ~ oy.) 108
Zee tseris, Protodice, imago,female 2. ..2 . - .%. + « » »- 108
PaeeActis) ErOLonice, larva and pupa 22) 2 Ad. 2.2124, 109
26. Pieris Oleracea-hiemalis, imago and larva ...... . 112
WIM CEIS OLETACEA CRE 5.0 ef 1 2) 2-5) ct fee woe Satter ie) at ales o, 1B
Le ICUs mapa, IMAO, MAIC. 5 oe) oe le a epee 2 LIA
Zometoris apa, umaro, female 222 aia in ars et we ce wo (LDA
AO eris Maps, larva and pupal. .7. <, 2) so ). 2) 6, 2) 116
11
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
J Nathalis lolesimacostemale sy. -mcn seh iso enum
. Colias Cesonia, imago, male ..... Mt 6 bin
e ANTES INTO VE YONG 6 Sb o G6 oo oO) ou OG, BG
34.
. Heliconia Charitomia,simiago 9) ve seis -eteters orient
se Damais Archi US. stile Oboe costal colton tentacle eeanets
. Danais Archippus, egg .
Meriase Mexicana sina Om om )
ted
~
kapilio Cresphontes (natural size),
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 103
inner margin just below the ocellus. Ocellus jet-black,
with an orange bent bar, and clouded with blue on the
basal side. There are some blue clouds inside the yellow
row. Tail .4 of an inch long, black, with an ovate yellow
spot near the tip. |
Most of the ground color of the under side yellow,
the blue clouds more distinct, and some orange beyond
the discal cell of hind wings and at the anal angle.
Body black above, sides and under parts yellow.
Ege spherical, a little flattened at the base, pale ochre,
with sometimes a greenish tinge, at other times inclining
fo orange.
Bie. 21.
P. Cresphontes, larva.
The young larva is dark brown, beset with tubercles,
rom which spring short hairs, the sixth and eleventh
segments straw color. After the first moult there is but
little change, as also after the second. After the third
104 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
moult the body becomes shining, the tubercles disappear-
ing, except on joints 2 to 5; thickest through joint 4;
from joint 4 to 5 an abrupt decrease in size, as shown
in the figure. Head olivaceous, the ridge on joint 2
pale olivaceous, parts of joints 6 and 7 creamy tinged
with olivaceous; the terminal part of the body some-
what enlarged and pearly-whitish on the back, tinged
with olivaceous round the edges; the rest of the body
olivaceous brown.
The mature larva is 1.75 inches long, shaped much
as before the last moult, a prominent ridge extending
across the second segment, along the sides and over the
back of segment 4, this being the highest part. Inside
this space it is somewhat flattened. The dark parts are
dark brown; a white band extends from above the head
round to the elevation on joint 4, the lateral portion
being mottled with olive and brown ; several white rings
on the elevated ridge,
Fra. 22. and a few on the dor-
: sum of joint 5. On
the dorsum of joints
6 to 8 isa light space
extending a little
over on the sides;
another similar space
on the posterior part
of the body; from
two to four small blue
spots on each joint
back of the third.
The chrysalis is 1.5 inches long, some a little shorter ;
shaped as in the figure; the abdomen with a subdorsal
P. Cresphontes, pupa.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 105
row of small tubercles. Color variable. One form gray
marked with dark gray and brown, another pale green
marked with gray and brown ; the latter color mostly on
the head and down the ventral part of the thorax.
There are two broods of this insect in a season in
this latitude, the larva feeding on prickly-ash, orange,
hop-tree (Péelea trifoliata), and Dictamnus Frazxinella.
Southern and Western States; Ohio, West Virginia,
Michigan, New York, Connecticut.
8. Papmio PotypAmas, Linn.
Expanse of wings 3.5 inches.
Color of upper surface greenish black ; a single row
of yellow spots to each wing, nearly parallel with the
outer margin. The apex is more produced than in the
preceding species, and the row of spots only partly fol-
lows the flexures ; the row on the hind wings not curved
so much as the outer margin, and forming a continuous
band but for the black veins. No ocellus or tail.
On the under side the black has a brownish tinge ;
the yellow spots of the fore wings are repeated except
towards the apex, but the yellow spots of the hind wings
are absent; but close to the margin are seven red spots,
the anal one a bar, the rest more or less figure-3-shaped.
Body black, with a narrow orange stripe on each side,
and orange spots on the collar.
Indian River, Florida ; Cuba, Mexico.
106 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
SUBFAMILY PIERIN A.
In the Eastern United States this subfamily contains
all of the Papilionids except the genus Papilio. The
butterflies do not have the tail to the hind wings, though
a few have an angle in the outer margin of these wings ;
and the inner margin of the hind wings is convex and °
bent downward so that the two sides form a gutter, in
which the abdomen apparently rests. The larvee are
cylindrical, have a few scattered hairs over the body,
sometimes a fine short pile also, but lack the scent-
organ of the Papilios. Some of the chrysalides, as Pieris
and Colias, resemble those of the Papilios except in size,
but others are strongly projecting ventrally so as to be
nearly triangular. |
9. Preris InArre, Godt.
Expanse of wings 2.5 inches.
Wings white ; the apex brownish black, the costa and
the anterior two-thirds of the outer margin bordered with
the same; a very slight border of black in the fringe of
the hind wings. This color is not repeated on the under
side except along the costa. The basal part of the costa
of the hind wings is tinged with dark yellow. Body
black, with white hairs.
Indian River, Florida; Texas, Arizona.
10. Preris Monustr, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Wings white, costa black, a black border on the outer
margin, covering about the outer fourth of the wing at
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 107
the apex, but narrowing toa point at the posterior angie.
This border is serrated on its inner edge, with two or
three white rays extending nearly across the border near
the apex. Hind wings with a very narrow border com-
posed of triangular spots. Female has a bowed. black
line on the middle of the fore wings.
The under side has the border less distinct than above,
the veins colored, and a shade partly across the middle
of the hind wings. In the female the border is more
prominent than in the male.
This species, the largest one of the genus with us, is
spread over the Gulf portion of the Southern States,
where it is known as the Larger Cabbage Butterfly.
According to Professor Riley, the eggs are light yellow,
subovoid, with the base applied to the leaf, smooth.
The larva, when full grown, is about 1.6 inches long,
lemon-yellow in color, with four longitudinal bands of
a purplish shade. Hach joint is somewhat spotted with
black and covered with sparse delicate bristles.
The chrysalis is pale yellowish marked with blackish,
and characterized by two black filamentous spines on
the middle of its body.
The food-plants are cabbage, kale, lettuce, turnip ;
and it has also been found feeding on a species of Cleome
and Polanisia.
Southern States, Texas.
11. Preris Proropicr, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.8 inches.
Summer form, PRoropicr, Bd.—Lee. Male—Upper
surface white, fore wings with a broad black dash or bar
across the end of the discal cell (I*ig. 23), and a submar-
C=)
108 THE BUTTERFLi#zS OF THE
vinal row of three more or less distinct spots, the last
almost or quite touching the hind margin. There are
Pieris Protodice, male (natural size).
traces of rays run-
ning from this row
to the outer edge.
Hind wings with-
out spots.
On the under side
the spots and bars
are repeated; the
veins of the hinc
wings are broadly
marked with green-
ish yellow sprinkled with brown scales, and the tips of
the fore wings tinged with greenish yellow.
Female (Fig. 24).—The color is the same, and the
Fig. 24.
h \
P. Protodice, female (natural size).
fore wings have the
bar at the end of
cell and the sub-
terminal row of
spots, but these
show a_ tendency
to blend, and the
outer margin sup-
ports a border of
triangles connect-
ing with the sub-
terminal row by rays. The hind wings have a zigzag suk-
terminal blackish line, the outer portions sending rays to
the margin, where they are somewhat expanded. The base
of both wings is more sprinkled with dark scales than in
the males. The under side similar to that of the male.
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 109
Winter form, VERNALIS, Edw.—-This form is smaller
than the summer form, and the dark colors are more
prominent. The spots of the subterminal row of the
fore wings are more inclined to be connected. It ex-
pands scarcely 1.6 inches.
Body black, with some white hairs and scales.
The eggs are long, slender, pointed, and deposited
singly on the under side of the leaves of its food-plant,
often a number on one leaf.
7)
P. Protodice, larva and pupa.
The larva when first hatched is of a uniform orange
coler, with a black head. When full grown it averages
1.15 inches in length and is nearly cylindrical. The
mest common color is green verging into blue, each
joint with six transverse wrinkles. ‘There are four
longitudinal yellow lines each equidistant from the
other, and each interrupted by a pale blue spot on the
first and fourth wrinkles of each joint. There are traces
of another substigmatal line. On each wrinkle is a row
of various-sized, round, black, piliferous spots, those on
wrinkles one and four being largest and most regularl;
10
a
110 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
situated ; a black hair arising from each spot. Head
concolorous with the body, covered with black spots, and
usually with a yellow or orange patch each side.
The chrysalis is .65 of an inch long, varying in color,
but mostly bluish gray more or less sprinkled with black,
with the ridges and prominences edged with buff or flesh
color.
This butterfly is usually known as the Southern
Cabbage Butterfly, though it is to be found in all parts”
of the United States, from Canada to the Gulf, and from
the Atlantic to the Pacific. Though it has such a wide
range, it is to be met with as an injurious insect only
in the Southern States and the States bordering on.
these. In the Northern States P. Rape is more
common, in many places driving out Protodice. Where
the two occur, the European species is more destructive,
as the larvee of this species not only eat the outer leaves,
but may be found boring into the head as well, while
the Protodice larvee feed mostly on the outer leaves.
There are several broods during a season, the broods
somewhat intermingling, so that larve of various stages
of growth may be found at any time. It hibernates in
the pupa state.
Middle, Southern, and Western States to the Pacific.
12. Pieris Nap, Esper.
It has been shown by Mr. Edwards that some one
or more forms of this variable species are to be found
from Arctic America as far south as California on the
west, and Michigan and New England on the east,
being mostly represented in the regions farther to the
north. As a mere matter of information, the full ar-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 11] |
rangement of the forms as found in Mr. Edwards’s new
catalogue is given, with the locality of each, after which
those occurring in the Eastern United States will be
considered.
Pieris Nari, Esper.
Arctic form, Bryonta®, Ochs.—A laska.
Var. Huutpa, Edw.—Kodiak, Alaska.
1. Winter form, VENosA, Scud.—California to British
Columbia. il
Aberr. Fuava, Edw.—California. |
2. Winter form, OLERACEA-HIEMALIS, Harr.
Var. BoREALIS, Grote.—Labrador, Anticosti. il
Var. Friama, Scud.—Boreal America. |
Aberr. VirGInriensis, Edw.—New York, Ontario. |
3. 1. Summer form, AcapicaA, Edw.—Newfound-
land.
2. Summer form, a. PALLIDA, Scud.—California to
British Columbia.
6b. CasToriA, Reak.—California to British
: Columbia.
Aberr. Fuava, Edw.—California.
3. Summer form, OLERACEA-STIVA, Harr.— i
New England to Michigan ; Ontario, Quebec. i
)
Aberr. VIRGINIENSIS, Edw.—Expanse of wings 1.7 |
inches. Upper side white, less pure than the form
Oleracea, and much obscured by gray-brown scales,
which are scattered over the whole surface, but are dense
on apex, costa, and basal half of fore wings, and at base
and along the subcostal and median venules of hind
wings ; a gray patch on costa of hind wings.
11Z THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
Under side white, the venules all bordered with gray-
brown, most conspicuously on the median vein of both
wings and the branches of this vein on hind wings;
shoulder pale orange.
The female expands 1.9 inches; similar to the male,
the surface usually still
Fra. 26. more obscured.
2 New York.
Summer form, OLE-
RACEA-2STIVA, Harr.
This is often of larger
size of wings, and the
wings are thinner, and
purer white on the
upper side, than in
Pieris Napi, winter (ori Oloraces hematin? hiemalis (Fig. 26). Also
GylBEN as the base is less obscured,
and the costa, apex, and outer margin not at all. On the
under side it is either white or delicate yellow; the veins
of both wings but scantily edged with brown scales, and
often not at all over considerable areas.
The females have the basal and apical areas pale gray,
and not infrequently there is a trace of the spot of Napi
on upper median interspace; sometimes also a trace of
the second spot, and of the gray bordering to the hind
margin of fore wings. The veins beneath are more
edged with brown scales than in the male. The shoul-
ders of hind wings are of a very pale yellow, and often
there is no color at all.
New England to Michigan.
The eggs, represented in Fig. 27, are somewhat. pear-
shaped, pale greenish white in color, marked with about
CS ee
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 1132
fifteen sharp longitudinal ridges with cross-lines between.
Length about .05 of an inch.
The young larva is of a glassy white, thinly clothed
with fine short hairs. As with several other species, the
ege-shell from which it emerges forms the
first meal of the young larva.
The mature larva is about 1.25 inches
long, of a pale green color, with a darker
dorsal line, the entire surface covered with
fine short whitish hairs.
The chrysalis is of a greenish or whitish
color finely speckled with black, and shaped
much as the other species.
The larva, when ready to pupate, leaves __p, napi, form
the cabbages and seeks some protected place —_ leracea; ees;
; x21.
on the under side of a board or a fence-rail,
where it spins its button and loop of silk and changes
to a pupa. This habit is not confined to this species,
but is common to the rest of the genus occurring in the
eastern United States.
Fig. Pall
13. PreRIs VIRGINIENSIS, Edw.
This is a form occurring in West Virginia, like Ole-
racea, except that it has no yellow on the under side of
the wings. It is single-brooded, producing no summer
form, while farther north the aberrant form Virginien-
sis is one of the spring forms of Oleracea, and the parent
of Oleracea-cestiva, a summer form. The preparatory
stages are lilke those of the preceding species, it seeming
to be a descendant of one of its forms, probably Ole-
racea-estiva.
West Virginia.
h 10*
114 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
| 14. Preris Rapa», Linn.
wit Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.8 inches.
HH Upper surface white, the usual form having a brownish-
i or grayish-black patch across the apex. ‘The male has a
ii submarginal round
spot in the first me-
dian interspace (see
Fig 28), and a some-
what elongated spot
on the costa of the
hind wings. ‘The
females have a sec-
ond round spot at
the same distance
i from the outer margin on the upper side of the subme-
dian vein. The base of the wings is dusted a little with
gray scales, more so
in the female.
On the under side
the fore wings are
white, pale yellow to-
wards the apex, and
with two black spots
in both sexes corre-
ae ince aca sponding to the two
1) P. Rape, female (natural size). ;
| on the upper side of
the fore wings of the female. Hind wings pale yellow,
without marks, but sprinkled with black atoms.
Body black above, white beneath.
Var. Nov-ANGLIA, Scud.—This form occurs, so far
as is now known, only in the Eastern States and New
York. Ground color of both wings dull sulphur-yellow.
Pieris Rape, male (natural size).
A
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 115
Farther south the winter form, or the one that comes
in early spring from chrysalides that have hibernated,
tends to pure white on the upper surface. One male
in the writer’s cabinet has an obscure patch on the apex
of the fore wings, and the costal mark of the hind wings
about as much obscured, no trace of the spot in the me-
dian interspace except what shows through from below.
Another male has scarcely a trace of the apical patch, or
the costal mark, with perhaps half a dozen scales in the
median interspace. On the under side these specimens
differ a little from the usual form, both being more suf-
fused with black on the hind wings, the fore wings with
scarcely any or no yellow at the apex, and only a few
scales in place of the usual dots.
Var. Manni, Mayer.—This is a pale yellow form,
having all the usual markings, but the upper surface pale
yellow of a clear type and not ochraceous-tinted. Under
side like the others. Found in both sexes.
Georgia ; Chicago, Illinois.
The larva of this species feeds on cabbage, turnips,
and some other plants. It is not a native of this country,
but was introduced from Europe about 1863, since which
time it has spread over the most of the United States.
It is usually known as the European Cabbage Butter-
fly.
The eggs are deposited irregularly over the surface of
the leaf of the food-plant, mostly on the under side.
They are somewhat pear-shaped, flattened at the base,
and the apex truncate. In color they are yellowish,
marked with twelve longitudinal ribs, crossed by very
fine lines between.
The young larva is pale yellow. - It first eats the shell
116 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
of the egg from which it emerges, then covers a space
with silk, where it rests except when feeding.
When full grown, the larva is about an inch and a
half long, of a pale green color, finely dotted with
black; a pale yellow dorsal stripe,
sometimes indistinct, and a row of
yellow spots along the region of the
stigmata.
The chrysalis (Fig. 30, 6) varies in
color from a dull yellowish green to
an ash-gray, a light gray with nu-
merous black points being the most
common form.
There are probably two broods of
this species in the most northern por-
tions of the United States, in the lat-
itude of Southern Illinois three at
least occur, and it is quite probable
that still farther south there are four or five. Like the
other species, it hibernates in the pupa state.
New England to the Rocky Mountains; south to
Georgia.
pupa.
15. Natuauis Ioxe, Bd.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.15 inches.
Upper surface yellow; a large patch of black across
the apex of fore wings, and a stripe of the same along
the hind margin. The fringes and a little along the
outer part of the costa are yellow; and the black along
the hind margin does not quite reach that margin, nor
does it extend to the end of the wing, but bends forward
a little before reaching the posterior angle, where it is
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 117
more or less completely separated from the apical patch
by yellow.
The hind wings have a black stripe along the basal
two-thirds of the costa, the rest of the wing being yellow
in the male, except a few black
scales on the outer ends of some
of the veins; but in the female
there is a partial broad, dusky
outer border, separated from the
black of the costa by a yellow Wy »S
space, the surface having a tinge Nathaligiolettemate!
of yellow.
On the under side the posterior stripe of the fore
wings is repeated, in the female somewhat dull, the
bent portion being replaced by three dots ; in the female
these three dots, or spots, form a prominent posterior
part of a subterminal row, the posterior stripe wanting
or dull. The anterior and outer portion of the fore
wings is, in both sexes, washed with orange; the apex
and hind wings of the female grayish.
Var. Ireng, Fitch.—This has the under side of the
fore wings destitute of a blackish central dot, and of the
three black spots near the posterior angle, the posterior
one is connected with the posterior stripe ; and the base
of the wing instead of its outer margin is orange-yellow.
Illinois, Missouri to California, New Mexico, Arizona.
Fra. 31.
16. ANTHOCHARIS OLymPIA, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.25 inches.
Upper surface white, gray at base of wings; a large
gray patch at the apex of the fore wings, partially re-
placed by white. Costal margin slightly specked with
OS — —
118 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
black ; a black bar at the end of cell. The hind wings
have a few black scales at the outer angle and a small
wedge-shaped black spot near the base on costa.
Under side white. The fore wings have a small gray
subapical patch on costa, nearly covered with green
scales, and a faint greenish patch on the outer margin.
Discal spot narrow, lunate, enclosing a white streak.
Hind wings crossed by bands of yellow-green on a
eray ground. The one near the base is slightly trifid
on the costa, the outer one broadly trifid, but running
from the outer margin instead of the costa, the middle
and outer one joined on the median vein. ‘There is also
a spot of the same color between the anterior ends of the
second and third.
Body black above, the under side white, the thorax
tinged with greenish yellow.
West Virginia, Indiana, Nebraska.
17. ANTHOCHARIS GENUTIA, Fab.
Eixpanse of wings 1.55 inches.
Upper surface white, with a large orange apical patch,
bordered outwardly with black, in which there are seven
yellowish-white spots on the edge of the wing. ‘There
is a black dot at the end of the discal cell, some specks
on the costa, and several somewhat triangular spots on
the outer border of both wings.
Under side of hind wings and apex of fore wings
pale greenish yellow, the rest of fore wings tinged very
slightly with this color; hind wings and apex of fore
wings finely netted with black. Discal dot of fore wings
reproduced.
Body biack above, white below; antenne annulate
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 119
with black and white. Apex oi fore wings produced
so that the outer margin is excavated below the apex.
N. Y. to Va.; Western States, Texas. (See Addenda.)
18. CaLuipRyas Eusu es, Linn.
Expanse of wings 2.5 inches.
Upper surface bright lemon-yellow, usually paler on
the internal margin of hind wings; and the male with
paler rays of raised scales extending inward from the
outer margin of the fore wings between the veins, the
anterior five of these rays extending almost to the eell,
the rest triangular. The hind wings have a similar
border, but it is narrower and more continuous. The
male is without spots; the female has a dark brown
spot with a ferruginous centre. at the end of the cell
of the fore wings, and the costa and fringe brown, with
brown at the ends of the veins.
The under side of the male is almost a greenish yellow,
with a more or less distinct ferruginous bar at the end
of the cell of the fore wings, and a white or silvery spot
eircled with ferruginous on the cell of the hind wings. In
some examples there are no other marks, but in others
there are traces of marks which are more distinct in the
female.
The under surface of the female is greenish yellow,
but little darker than the male, with the costa rosy and
the fringe ferruginous brown. There is a bar at the end
of cell of fore wings composed of five rosy spots circled,
and separated by brown and ferruginous. On the end
of cell of hind wings are two silvery-white spots circled
hike the others, and set in a patch of brown and fer-
ruginous scales. On the fore wings beyond the cell are
126 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
two rows of elongate, wavy, ferruginous and brown
patches, one of these, of three spots, extending from near
the apex obliquely inward, and the other, of two spots,
submarginal and nearly parallel with the outer margin.
The hind wings are similarly marked, except that the
first row has only two spots; there being also six more
or less distinct round spots near the base,—two above the
cell, one in the cell, two below the cell, and one at the
insertion of the wings. ‘There are also three others
farther out below the cell. The fore wings are usually
sprinkled with fine ferruginous scales.
Thorax black above, the head and prothorax more or
less rosy, abdomen yellow; all the under parts yellow.
Antenne rose tipped with ferruginous.
In the larval state this species is said to feed on the
species of Cassia.
Southern States to West Virginia and Ohio, Illinois,
Iowa, Arizona, Southern California; occasionally in
New York and Rhode Island.
19. CALLIDRYAS SENN#, Linn.
Iixpanse of wings from 2 to 2.75 inches.
Male.—Upper surface clear lemon-yellow, the same
shade as C. Hubule. Like that species, this has an outer
border of interyenular spots of the same shade of yellow
as the wings, and the scales composing these spots are
slightly raised, as though placed over the others, so that
in certain lights they seem lighter than the other parts,
the remainder of the wing having in the same lights a
slight greenish tinge. On the fore wings, beginning at
the costa, those in the first and second subcostal inter-
spaces reach almost to the base of these spaces, the same
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 121
as they do in Hubule, the third does not go quite so near,
while the fourth does not extend more than a third of
the distance from the margin to the cell, in Hubule both
of these going as near to the cell as do the first and
second. The remainder are blunt ccnical, similar to
those of the border of Hubule, but a little more blunt.
In one small specimen from Indian River, Florida, all
of these are more abbreviated than in the above descrip-
tion. On the hind wings the border is a band scarcely
sinuous on the inner edge, narrowing towards the anal
angle. In the small specimen the border extends along
only the anterior half of the margin. Like Hubule,
there are no colored spots on the upper surface.
Under sidea little darker than above, slightly orange-
tinted, except along the hind margin of the fore wings.
Marked after the pattern of Hubule. There are on the
fore wings two purplish-brown spots on the end of the
cell, the lower twice as large as the upper, elliptical, with
an elliptical rosy patch in the centre; the upper with
rosy scales on the cross-vein. In addition, there are
the usual three series of spots along the outer margin,
—the first three parallel with the apical portion of the
costa, and situated in the first three subcostal interspaces ;
the next three in the next three interspaces, extending
obliquely inward, the lower spot not quite half-way from
the margin to the cell; the third series contains only
two spots, lying nearly parallel with the outer margin :
these spots vary from a washing to sprinkling of dark
brown scales with a few rosy.
Hind wings have one spot at the end of the cell with
a central silver spot, and four rows of somewhat scattered
spots, all of them a little oblique: the first row consists of
F 11
122 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
a rosy spot at the base of the wing and a dark one on
each side of the costal vein in line; the second, passing
obliquely through nearly the middle of the cell, contains
three geminate spots; the third, not quite in a straight
line, contains the spot at the end of the cell, which is
composed of several small spots ; the fourth, submarginal,
consists of four elongate, irregular patches, the third near-
est the margin. Besides these, both wings are sparsely
sprinkled with orange scales. The margin of each wing
is edged with a fine line, with orange-brown points at the
ends of most of the veins.
Female.—About three forms of this sex are to be
met with. One is of the same color above as the male,
with a dark brown round spot at the end of the cell,
nearly divided by a rosy orange line; and a brown
edging along the outer margin of the fore wings, with
small spots at the ends of the veins, these being mere
points on the hind wings, and the edge orange. Another
form is dirty whitish yellow, the discal spot a little
larger ; and both wings have a terminal border of quite
prominent, slightly lunate spots, there being four or
five small clusters of scales within the margin in the
subcostal and discal interspaces. Another form is more
like the first, but less clear yellow. A fourth form is
smaller than the others, expanding about two inches.
In this the general color is darker than in the male, with
the hind wings considerably orange-tinted. The spot at
end of cell is fully twice as large as in the first, with the
central spot shorter and broader, the outer border broader
than in the second form, some of the spots approaching
conical, with, on the fore wings, the three series of three
spots each of the under side represented by small patches
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 123
of scales. On the hind wings the two small spots of the
under side at the end of the cell show through.
Under side of the same orange-tinted color as in the
male, but darker; marks the same, but generally heavier.
The first form has the two discal spots at the end of the
cell blended, an irregular dark brown outline within in a
rosy orange patch, with some silver scales in the centre ;
the hind wings have a round silver mark at the end of the
cell on the cross-vein, and another above and outside,
both in a rosy orange patch, with a sprinkling of orange
scales, the other spots not heavier than in the male. The
second form is dirty whitish yellow as above, as also the
third ; the discal spot of the fore wings is larger and mostly
rosy silver, the terminal border more prominent. The
fourth example differs from the others in having the
marks much heavier; the spot at the end of the cell
of the fore wings is a large silver patch, somewhat
divided into four parts; the subterminal spots and the
rows on the hind wings are inclined to blend, and the
outer margin has a terminal border of rosy scales which
shades out into the general color, almost reaching, on
the fore wings, the subterminal spots ; and the surface is
more sprinkled with the rosy scales.
Thorax black above, with whitish hairs; abdomen
yellow ; head brownish rosy, extending to the tip of
palpi, sides rosy ; beneath yellow, more or less tinted
with orange.
The larva is said to be deep citron-yellow, punctured
with black, and a blue transverse line on each segment ;
abdomen below and feet yellow, with a lateral range of
small blue lines above the feet.
Food-plant, Cassia.
i
124 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
Indian River, Florida; Texas, Arizona, Southern
[linois.
20. CALLIDRYAS PHILEA, Linn.
Expanse of wings 3.5 inches.
Female.—Upper surface dark yellow, washed a little
with orange along the costa, with a prominent orange
border to the hind wings not quite reaching the apex,
there being a marginal row of dark brown spots along
the outer third of the costa to the apex and round the
outer margin of both wings. At the apex these are
blended into an apical patch. Discal dot not very
prominent. The fore wings have a submarginal row of
spots answering to those usually found on the under
side.
Under side yellow, heavily sprinkled with ferruginous,
more prominent towards the base of the hind wings.
Marks similar to those of C. Senne, but heavy, and the
brown has a washing of rose color.
The males are yellow, with a patch of light orange
near the anterior margin of the fore wings, nearer the
base than the outer margin. Hind wings with the
orange border similar to that of the female, except that
it lacks the brown spots.
Occasionally in Texas, [linois, and Wisconsin.
21. CALLIDRYAS AGARITHE, Bd.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface clear light orange, a little paler
over the inner portion of the hind wings ; without spots,
but with a terminal border of elevated scales which in
certain lights seem to be paler; the border in width
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 125
nearly one-fourth the length of the fore wing, but about
half as wide on the hind wings; crenate on the inner
edge on the fore wings.
Under side paler yellow than above, but orange-tinted,
scarcely darker than the under side of the male Senne ;
nearly without marks. At the end of the cell of the
fore wings there is usually a smail blackish-brown spot,
with or without a few rosy scales, some examples not
having either the black or the rosy. There is a more or
less distinct oblique stripe of dark scales extending from
near the apex to near the hind margin, usually stopping
at the lower branch of the median, opposite the lower side
of the cell, almost half-way from the outer edge to the cell.
The hind wings have at the end of the cell a faint dark
brown circle, and one in the interspace above outside
the cell; in some examples scarcely a trace of these.
Besides these there are traces of a submarginal row of
spots, and a row through the end of the cell like Senne,
but they are represented by a few scattered scales or not
at all; also some scales in the places along the costa and
near the base of the cell, representing an inner row.
Female.—This is more of the color of the dirty yellow
form of Senne, or dirty whitish yellow. At the end of
cell of fore wings an elliptical blackish-brown spot ; the
costa blackish brown, the costal margin sprinkled with
this, the apex blackish brown; along the outer margin
a series of brown semi-oyal spots at the ends of the veins,
which are not quite connected, these extending along the
hind wings nearly to the anal angle. Extending from
the apical patch on the fore wings is an oblique row of
six spots separated by the veins, and three smaller ones
in the subcostal interspaces. The hind wings have three
ites
126 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
submarginal spots, which are not quite so distinct as those
on the fore wings.
Under side whitish sprinkled with rosy scales, es-
pecially along the outer margin and apex of fore wings
and outer margin of hind wings; subterminal row of
spots of the upper side repeated, but not the terminal.
The spot at the end of the cell is large, long, silvery,
surrounded with blackish scales, broken into four or five
parts, much as on Senne.
The hind wings have the silver spots, one on the cross-
vein at the end of the cell and the other on the inter-
space above and outside, these circled with blackish
brown and with rosy scales. Besides these there are
the same traces of spots that are found on the male,
though a little more prominent.
Thorax black, with whitish hairs, abdomen yellow,
head and palpi above dark, below concolorous with the
wings; antenne brown, with brownish tip.
Florida, Texas, Kansas, Arizona, occasional in Ne-
braska. (See Addenda.)
22. Kricoconrs Lysipk, Godt.
Expanse of wings from 1.7 to 1.95 inches.
Upper surface white, in some examples very slightly
green-tinted. The fore wings with the basal third
bright lemon-yellow, shading a little into the white on
the outer edge; the apex yellow-tinted ; the base of the
wing black-edged. Hind wings uniform white, except a
little tinting of yellow at the base.
There are two forms of this, a winter form, LysIDE,
Godt., which has the upper surface as above described ; the
under side of the fore wings as on the upper surface, ex-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 127
cept that there is more yellow at the apex, and the costal
margin is yellow-tinted. The hind wings uniform pale
yellow, heavily sprinkled with whitish or slightly buff-
tinted scales, giving the wing a slight grayish cast; a
few brown scales on the middle of the cross-vein. |
Summer form, Terissa, Luc., is like the winter form
above, except that there is a bronzy black bar about .15
of an inch long on the hind wings from the costa back
about two-thirds the distance from the base. ‘The under
side of fore wings the same, but the hind wings are more
yellow-tinted, lack the whitish scales, and the brown on
the cross-vein is more distinct.
Texas ; Indian River, Florida
23. CoLIAS CzmsontiA, Stoll.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 2.5 inches.
Upper surface yellow, with a broad terminal border,
the inner part bent inward along the costa, and making
a deep sinus between the second discal and the second
median venule. The base of the wing has a heavy
shading of black scales, the anterior portion extending
half-way across the wing, and from the median vein to
the costa. This leaves the yellow portion somewhat
resembling a dog’s head, the discal dot answering for an
eye. Hind wings with a narrow black border, dentate
on the inside; an orange discal spot, and a smaller one
just outside the cell.
In the female the yellow of the fore wings is more
encroached upon by the black basal shading, with a
sprinkling of black atoms over the “dog’s head,” and
rays of black between the veins of the hind wings.
There is also a slight blue reflection over the “ dog’s
128 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
head.” Costa, antennz, and portions of the fringe
rosy.
On the under side the discal spots are more prominent
than above, and pupilled with silver ; a submarginal row
Fra. &2.
Coliaa Ceesonia, male (natural size).
of dots are black on the fore wings, but red on the hind
wings. Ground color of hind wings and apical portion
of fore wings dark yellow; a rosy ray from the body
outward on the hind wings.
The larva is said to be green, with a lateral white
band, punctured with yellow ; besides this band, there is
on each segment a transverse black band, bordered with
yellow. It feeds on the different species of clover.
Southern States, Mississippi Valley, Texas to Cali-
fornia ; occasional in Minnesota.
24. CoLias EuRYTHEME, Bd.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.35 inches.
Varying considerably in color, but the usual form of
male orange-yellow, shading to sulphur-yellow on the
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 129
costa of both wings and on inner margin of hind wings ;
the base and inner margin sprinkled with black scales.
Outer border black, broadest at apex, somewhat irregular
on inner edge, extending a little on the costa and hind
margin of fore wings; the anterior veins yellow where
they cross the black. In width the border is about one-
fourth the length of the wing. Discal spot black. On
the hind wings the border is narrower, and does not
reach the anal angle. Discal spot of hind wings orange,
composed of two spots. Both wings have a roseate
reflection.
Under side yellow, middle of fore wings tinged with
vrange. On both wings a subterminal row of dots, the
three posterior of the fore wings black, the rest brownish,
also two dots on the costa near the apex. Discal spots
repeated, the anterior black, with a few light scales;
posterior geminate, silvery, annulate with roseate brown
or ferruginous; a dash on the costa of the hind wings
near the apex, and a rosy spot at the base.
The typical female is of the same general color,
little more yellow along the costa and beyond the diseal
cell. The border instead of being solid black contains
a row of yellow spots, the third from the posterior end
on the fore wings subobsolete. The hind wings have
the border wider than in the mates, and it contains the
rudiments of a row of spots. The black scales scattered
over the base cover more of the wings than in the male.
Under side similar to that of the male.
A white or albino female form is sometimes found,
with all the markings as in the yellow form. There
are the following séeonel and local variations rani the
typical form.
$
130 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
Winter form, ARIADNE, Edw. ‘This has an expanse
of wings in the male of from 1.3 to 1.6 inches; in the
female, of from 1.6 to 1.8 inches. The upper surface is
of a bright lemon-yellow. On the fore wings an orange
patch extends from the hind margin to the median vein
or beyond, sometimes very pale, but usually decided and
gradually passing into the yellow beyond.
Hind wings sometimes slightly tinted, but more often
without orange save the discal spot. Marginal borders
narrow, scarcely half as wide as in the form MKeeway-
din. 7
Under side more greenish yellow than Keewaydin, a
large double discal spot on the hind wings, silver, annu-
late with ferruginous, and placed in a patch of pink
ferruginous. :
In the female the orange on the fore wings is much
as in the male, the hind wings greenish yellow much
dusted over with black scales. Marginal borders narrow,
the border on the fore wings only partly enclosing the
submarginal spots, or even without trace oO spots, es-
pecially on the hind wings.
This form is found Sate in the Southern States, more
distinctly marked in Texas than elsewhere: here the
summer form Hurytheme flies through the summer, but
the forms Ariadne and Keewaydin, from chrysalides win-
tered over, take its place in the spring, Ariadne being the
first one that emerges. In the Northern States Keeway-
din is the winter form, while in the mountain regions
Keewaydin and Hurytheme are found flying together
during the summer.
Winter form, KEEwAypiIn, Edw. This may be
known from the typical Hurytheme by its smaller size,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 131
its duller yellow and less roseate reflection, and both
sides more sprinkled with black scales. The costal yel-
low of the fore wings is broader, encroaching more upon
the orange, the latter being deepest near the base. In
some specimens there is very little or even no orange on
the fore wings, and in the latter case there is no orange
on the hind wings except the large discal spot. Those
specimens that have considerable orange on the fore
wings have the hind wings washed with orange, but not
so deep as the fore wings. The orange discal spot is
larger than in the form Hurytheme.
On the under side the yellow is less of a deep yellow
and more of a greenish yellow, resulting from a sprink-
ling of fne black scales. The discal spot of the fore
wings is more or less triangular, white in the centre;
the hind wings have one or two discal spots, annulate,
with roseate scales, less ferruginous than the typical form.
Summer form, EuRyTHEME, Bd.—This is the form
first described.
The egg of this species is .06 of an inch long, narrow,
fusiform, tapering evenly from the middle to each ex-
tremity, the base broad, the summit pointed; ribbed
longitudinally, and crossed by numerous striz. Color
buff-white when first deposited, but after one or two days
changing to crimson, and near the close of the stage to
black.
The young larve are cylindrical, of even diameter to
the eleventh segment, each segment several times creased,
and or the ridges thus formed many black points, from
which spring white hairs. Color dark brown or choco-
late.
After the first moult the length is .125 of an inch;
132 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
shaped as before; body covered with minute black
tubercles, disposed on the ridges so as to form both
longitudinal and transverse rows, each tubercle sending
out a white hair. Color dull green, head ovoid, dark
brown.
After the second moult the length is .28 of an inch.
Color dark green, head as before.
After the third moult the length is .45 of an inch;
cylindrical, long and slender. Color dark green; at
base of body a white stripe, through which runs a crim-
son line, and under this stripe are black, semicircular or
ovate spots, sometimes seen only on segments 3 to 6, but
usually from 3 to 11, sometimes wanting. Tcwards the
last of the stage a paler subdorsal line. Tvberculated
and pilose as before.
After the fourth moult the length is .56 of an inch.
Color dark green, but varying, some examples having:
the sides only dark, the dorsum yellowish ; the subdorsal
stripe sometimes wanting, but usually present. Head
ovoid, ‘yellowish green.
The mature larva is from 1.1 to 1.2 inches long,
cylindrical, each joint as in the early stage several times
creased, and on the ridges thus formed several fine
papille, white or black, each supporting a fine short
white hair. Color dark green, at the base of body a
band of pure white, through which runs a bright crimson
line from segments 2 to 11 almost continuously. Be-
neath this band, from joint 3 to 12, is a large semicircular
or semi-ovate black spot to each joint, the anterior ones
largest. There is a faint white subdorsal line thickened
at the posterior end of each joint so as to present a well-
defined white spot. Above this a line of crimson, broken
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 13
en each segment. Beneath these lines, on joints 5 to 10,
is a black dot to each joint. Under side, feet and legs
pale green ; head ovoid, pale or yellow green.
The chrysalis has the anterior part and the wing-cases
dark green, the abdomen yellow-green. There is-a light
buff stripe on each side of the abdomen from the end
of the wing-cases to the extremity, and on the ventral
side of this stripe a demi-band of dark brown. Between
the stripe and the bend are three black dots, one to each
seoment, with a submarginal row of black dots on the
wing-cases,
Clover forms the food-plant of this species.
Western States to the Pacific; occasionally in the
Middle States to Massachusetts.
25. CoLiAs PHILopIcE, Godt.
Expanse of wings from 1.75 to 2.5 inches.
Upper surface of wings sulphur-yellow, with a broad
terminal border of biack, broader on the fore wings of
the female than on those of the male, and containing a
submarginal row of yellow spots which are absent in the
male. Discal dot of fore wings black, elliptical in the
males, oval in. the females; on the hind wings orange,
usually with a smaller accompanying dot. The antenne,
eosta, collar, and fringes are roseate.
Under side about the same color as above, but sprinkled
more or less with brown scales, except from the cell to
the posterior margin of the fore wing, the winter forms
more heavily sprinkled than the summer. Discal spots
silvery in the centre, the anterior annulate with black,
the posterior brown set ina pinkish-brown patch. ‘here
is a submarginal row of dots, the last three on the fore
12
134 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
wings black, all the rest brown with pink-brown scales;
a roseate spot at the base of hind wings.
A female form occurs with the wings nearly or quite
white, and also a black form. The winter forms, or
those from hibernating chrysalides, are usually somewhat
smaller than the summer forms.
The eggs are pale yellow when first deposited, but
change in « few hours to a dark crimson. They are
spindle-shaped, attached by one end, ribbed longitudi-
nally, and crossed by numerous striez. ‘These are de-
posited on the leaves of clover, Medicago (lucern), buf-
falo-pea, and some other allied plants. From these a
brownish-green larva hatches in six or seven days which
is .06 of an inch long, cylindrical, of uniform size from
segment 2 to segment 11, then tapering to the last. Color
brownish green, each segment creased by four or five
transverse creases; each ridge with several black dots
on each side, each dot supporting a short whitish clubbed
process. Head obovate, dark brown. At first the larva
eats little holes in the leaves, but as it grows older it
eats the whole leaf from the outside. :
After the first moult it is .12 of an inch long; shaped
and creased as before; the whole upper surface covered
with minute whitish tubercles which are black at their
summits, these tubercles forming longitudinal and trans-
verse rows on the ridges. Color dull green ; head black.
After the second moult the length is .3 of an inch.
Color blue-green, showing a faint whitish lateral stripe ;
head pale green; tuberculated as before. )
After the third moult the length is .7 of an inch; the
principal changes are: lateral stripe white and distinct,
with usually a red or orange discoloration on the anterior
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 135
segments, sometimes black lunate spots beneath the
stripe.
The mature larva is 1.2 of an inch long; cylindrical,
tapering slightly from joint 7 to the anal and from joint
5 to the head; the tubercles and white hairs as_ before.
Color dark green, pale on the under side; in line with
the spiracles a white or creamy-white stripe, through the
middle of which runs a streak of crimson, broken at
the junction of the segments; frequently below this
stripe is a series of lunate black spots. Head pale
green.
The chrysalis is an inch long, of a yellowish-green
color, with a yellow line along each side. From the
time that the egg is deposited to the emergence of the
butterfly from the chrysalis is about forty days during
the warm part of the year, and the number of brcods
will vary according to the locality. This is not usually
considered a very injurious insect, but Professor C. H.
Fernald, of Orono, Maine, estimates that these cater-
pillars often destroy as much as twenty-five per cent. of
the entire clover-crop. Their numerous parasites and
other enemies serve in a great measure to keep them in
check.
Atlantic States to the Mississippi Valley.
26. Cotas INTERIOR, Scud.
Expanse of wings 2.25 inches.
Professor Fernald says that the males of this species
closely resemble those of C. Philodice, except that the
submarginal row of dots on the under side of the wings
is entirely wanting in both sexes, and the terminal black
band of the fore wings does not reach the hind margin,
136 THE. BUTTERFLIES OF THE
and is almost wholly wanting on the hind wings of the
females.
Maine.
27. TERIAS NicrpPr, Cram.
‘ixpanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.9 inches.
Upper surface orange ; a black terminal band in the
males unbroken from the posterior angle of the fore
wings to the base of the costa, but broadest at the apex ;
the basal portion on the costa washed with yellow. On
the hind wings the border extends from apex to anal
angle, the inner edge irregular. Inner margin of hind
wings yellow.
The female has the border of the fore wings broken
at the posterior angle, and the anal half of the border to
the hind wings is so much suffused with orange as to
leave only scattering black scales, most numerous on
the veins. There is a narrow black discal spot on the
fore wings of both sexes.
This species may vary from the color given above to
sulphur-yellow, but orange is the color of most speci-
mens.
Under side of the hind wings canary-yellow, the fore
wings yellow along the costa and terminal border, the
rest orange. Males with a brown spot on the costa of
hind wings two-thirds the length from the body out,
and brown scales scattered over the surface ; discal spot
of fore wings not prominent. Females have a white
space towards the outer end of the hind wings enclosed
in a subterminal row of brown spots, the first two united
and continued obliquely inward nearly across the white
space ; on the inside three spots in a row, the middle of
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 137
which is on the end of the cell. Fore wings as in the
males.
This species feed on senna, Cassia Marilandica, and
possibly other species. The eggs are long, narrow, spindle-
shaped ; the sides marked by about thirty longitudinal
ribs without cross-striez. When first deposited they are
greenish yellow, turning red after a few hours.
The young larva is whitish, semi-translucent, a few
whitish clubbed appendages to each segment.
The mature larva is about an inch long, cylindrical,
thickest through joints 2 and 3. Dorsa! surface pale
green, the lower part of the sides soft whitish green.
Each joint has four or five creases, and on the ridges are
small tubercles, which send out short hairs. Along the
basal ridge is a whitish stripe, sometimes containing an
orange patch to each joint, or there is an orange line the
whole length. The chrysalis is long, slen-
der ; the ventral side greatly produced, so Fra. 85.
as to be somewhat triangular. Color of
dorsum pale green or whitish green, with
a darker line; of wing-cases and ventral
side of abdomen, yellow-green, side-ridges
cream color, with several brown spots on
different parts of the body. pores ie pe
pupa.
Pacific to the Gulf of Mexico, Missis-
sippi Valley, Arizona, California; occasional in New
England.
28. Terias Mexicana, Bd.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.9 inches.
Upper surface pale yellow, the anterior half of the Lind
wings deeper yellow. Fore wings with a broad black ter-
Wes
138 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
minal border, attenuated on the posterior margin to near
the base, a broad quadrate of yellow in the middle ex-
tending two-thirds the distance across the border. Fringe
Fia. 34.
Terias Mexicana, male.
and apical portion of the costa white. The hind wings
have a prominent angle at the end of the first median
venule, a narrow terminal border ending before reaching
this angle, with scarcely a trace of a discal dot. The
female is a little more yellow.
Under side yellow, except the posterior two-thirds of
the fore wings, which are almost white. Discal dots
more prominent than above; a broken brown bar ex-
tending nearly across the hind wings from above ‘the
anal angle, and some brown scales scattered over the
surface.
This species seems to be gradually spreading over the
North and East; the habitat as given in Mr. Edwards’s
new catalogue being Texas, Arizona, Southern California,
Kansas ; occasional in Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, and Wis-
consin, and Ontario, Canada; the last four places having
been added since 1877.
EASTERN UNITED STATES.
29. Tertas Lisa, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.15 to 1.48 inches.
Male.—U pper surface yellow, a black terminal border
broadest at the apex, narrow at posterior angle, the inner
edge of the border somewhat dentate, the costa suffused
with black scales. The hind wings have a narrow border
also dentate within ; a few black scales on the cross-bar
of fore wings. Fringe roseate, antennee and collar black.
Under side uniform yellow, with scattered brown
scales, part of those on the hind wings forming a more
or less distinct submarginal row of spots; a pinkish or
pinkish-brown apical spot to the hind wings.
The female differs from the male in the border of the
fore wings not reaching the posterior angle, in that of the
hind wings being more or less abbreviated, in the ground
color being a duller yellow, and in the base of the fore
wings being more densely powdered with blackish.
Specimens occur having the ground color whitish or
white.
The larva is green, with four lines along the body, end
is said to feed on clover and some other leguminous
plants.
Isle of Shoals, Maine; south to the Gulf of Mezico ;
Western States, Arizona.
30. Terras Detia, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 1.15 to 1.5 inenes,
Upper surface citron-yellow, with a broad, black,
terminal border, broadest at the apex, and somewhat
dentate internally, terminating abruptly before reaching
the posterior angle; costa sprinkled with black scales.
140 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
A black bar runs along the posterior part of the fore
wing, parallel with the hind margin, not reaching the
posterior angle, and bordered with darker yellow below.
The hind wings have a somewhat triangular apical
patch in line with some indistinct marginal points or
rays on the ends of the veins. Fringes rosy above.
Under side of the fore wings yellow, with the outer
margin and apical portion wine-red. Hind wings tinged
with wine-red, and having a transverse undulate, brown-
ish, interrupted band.
On the female the black longitudinal bar is nearly
wanting, and the base is sprinkled with blackish.
The larva is green, with a longitudinal white line above
the feet, and is said to feed on clover, Cassia, and per-
haps other allied plants.
Gulf States.
31. TerraAs Jucunpa, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.4 inches.
Closely related to the preceding, but is white on the
under side of the hind wings, and without pink or wine
color on the under side of the fore wings. The white
is sprinkled over with gray scales.
The female is paler, marked like the female of 7.
Delia, the fore wings powdered with blackish. Under
side like the male.
Gulf States.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 141 -
FAMILY NYMPHALID.
THESE may be known by their ample wings, slender
antenne, the knob slender or not, and by having in both
sexes, with the exception of the genus Libythea, only
four feet adapted for walking. The front pair of legs
are present, but have no developed tarsi, being mere
lappets placed against the prothorax; the second pair
are directed forward, and the third or hind pair back-
ward. The larve are more or less hairy, or covered
with more or less branching spines; the head is more or
less bilobed, the apex of these lobes often supporting
branching spines. The chrysalides are naked, often very
irregular in shape, and attached to a button of silk by
the hooks of the cremaster alone. The family is repre-
sented in the United States by five subfamilies,—Helico-
nine, Danaine, Nymphaline, Satyrine, and Libytheine.
SUBFAMILY HELICONIN &.
In this the wings are long, rather narrow, with a
slender body and antenne. It is represented by but
one species, Heliconia Charitonia, where the characters
of imago, larva, and chrysalis may be found.
32. HELICONIA CHARITONIA, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 4 inches.
Wings long and narrow. Upper surface black, banded
with lemon-yellow, as in Fig. 35; three of these on the
fore wings and two on the hind wings. The outer one
on the fore wings is obliquely transverse before the apex,
the second nearly parallel just outside the eell, the third
142 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
extends from the base on both sides of the median vein te
the third venule, from which it bends obliquely outward,
reaching the margin in a dot.
The two basal bands of the hind wings form a straight
line when the wings are spread; below this is 2 line of
Fia. 35.
dots, the outer end bending round so as to form a sub-
marginal row from about the middle of the outer margin
to the apex. There are a few marginal dots at the anal
angle, and usually two or three red dots at the base.
Under side dull black, with the yellow lines and dots
repeated, though paler. The costa of the fore wings
with red at the base, three red dots on the base of tie
hind wings, and two below the first band.
The egg is described by Mr. Edwards as cylindrical,
one-half higher than broad, flat at base, tapering very
slightly from base to about three-fourths the length,
then conoidal, the top flattened and a little depressed.
Marked by fourteen longitudinal ridges crossed by low
horizontal ridges. Color yellow.
The young larve are cylindrical, tapering slightly
frem about the seventh segment; marked by four prin-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 143
cipal rows of flattened tubercles and two rows of smaller
ones. Color pale reddish brown.
After the first moult the color is light brown, chang-
ing as the stage proceeds to greenish white mottled with
brown ; armed with six rows of spines, which are short,
slender, tapering, and black, with a few short black
bristles on the sides. The truncated head is a little
depressed in the middle, and each vertex armed with a
short tapering black process thinly beset with bristles.
There are but few changes during the next inter-
vals, except in size, and in the color gradually becoming
whiter.
The mature larva is from 1.25 to 1.5 inches long,
cylindrical, armed as after the first moult. Color dead-
white, with no gloss, smooth, no hairs, and spotted with
black or brown.
The chrysalis is very irregular in shape, two leaf-like
appendages extending from the head. Color brown,
marked with varying shades of the same, and some gray
or whitish.
This insect feeds on the passion-flower ; and there are
many interesting things connected with its life and habits.
Florida to South Carolina.
SUBFAMILY DANAINA.
In this group the head is broad, the palpi far apart.
The wings are ample, the discal cell of the fore wings
open, but that of the hind wings closed, or with 9 vein
across the outer end of it. The larve are cylindrical,
banded transversely, two fleshy appendages from the top
of the joints near the end. The chrysalides are well
represented in Vig. 39.
144. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
33. DANAIS ArcHIPPuS, Fab.
Iixpanse of wings from 3.75 to 4.5 inches.
Upper surface tawny red or fulvous, with the veins
heavily marked with black, a black terminal border
containing two rows of white spots, and a complete and
a partial row of white or lighter fulvous spots in a black
space beyond the cell of the fore wings. The males have
Fia. 36.
Danais Archippus, male (natural size).
a black spot beside the second median venule, near the
middle of the hind wings.
The under side is paler than above, especially the hind
wings, and the white spots are more prominent.
Body black, with white spots.
Usually the larva of this species is to be found on
the different species of milk-weed (Asclepias), but it
feeds on other plants of the order as well.
When first deposited, the eggs are white, but in two or
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 145
three days they turn yellow, and just before hatching
they change to dull gray. They are somewhat conical
in form, and marked by about twenty-five longitudinal
ae
Z
Z
: 2
aggasse>—y
0 im 2 5) FERS
FEE EES
S|) cary | GaN | CAD) oy| cp g|
: mal aT | o> os
SMD} | TMS! ¢7 Qe
ago
ua
Danais Archippus: a, egg, X50; ¢, natural size.
ribs, with about the same number of transverse ridges, as
shown in Fig. 37.
The young larva, which hatches from this in about a
week, is yellowish white, with a large black head. It
first eats the egg-shell, after which it eats the leaves.
Danais Archippus, mature larva (nataral size).
The mature larva is about 1.75 inches long ; the head
yellowish, marked by two triangular black stripes. The
body above is marked with transverse stripes of black,
yellow, and white, as shown in Fig. 38. Joint 3 supports
G k 18
146 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
two long, black, fleshy horns which point forward ; jomt
11 has a similar pair which point backward, but they are
shorter. Under side black, with green-
Fia. 39. ish between the joints.
The chrysalis (Fig. 39) is about an
inch long, color bright green dotted
with gold, and with a band of golden
dots extending more than half-way
round the body above the middle.
The band is. shaded with black, and
RS tne cremaster is black. There are
Danais Archippus, two or more broods in a season, and
chiyenlis: it hibernates in the butterfly state.
United States generally.
34. Danats BERENICE, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 2.75 to 3.5 inches.
Upper surface reddish chocolate-brown, with a biack
terminal border containing two partial rows of white
dots on the fore wings, but the dots are obliterate on the
hind wings. The fore wings have two oblique rows of
white spots beyond the cell, the inner one crossing the
end of the cell, and a few dots forming a submarginal
row. The males have a black spot beside the second
median venule of the hind wings.
The under side is similar to the upper, except that the
terminal border contains two full rows of white spots,
and the veins of the hind wings are heavily marked
with black edged with gray. 2
The larva is “whitish violet, with transverse stripes
of a deeper color; a transverse band of reddish brown
on each ring, divided in its length by a narrow yellow
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 147
band. Along the feet a longitudinal band of yellow-
citron. Long, fleshy processes of brown-purple, disposed
in pairs on the second, fifth, and eleventh rings.”
The chrysalis is similar to that of D. Archippus ;
green, with golden points on the anterior side, and a
semicircle of the same color on the dorsal side, a little
beyond the middle, separated from a blue band by a row
of small black dots. The larva feeds on Nerium and
Asclepias.
Southern States, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona.
SUBFAMILY NYMPHALIN A.
The palpi are approximate, more or less porrect ; the
discal cells generally open, and the veins of the fore
wings not dilated at the base. The wings are various,
but none of ours have as narrow wings as the Helico-
nine. The larve are cylindrical, and furnished with
several (usually seven) rows of more or less branching
spines or tubercles. ‘The chrysalides vary from nearly
cylindrical to considerably depressed on the dorsal side
just back of the thorax, as in Figs. 41, 47, 51, ete.
35. CoLANIS JULIA, Fab.
Expanse of wings 3.1 inches.
Upper surface clear reddish fulvous, the prominent
veins of the fore wings narrowly black ; the fore wings
with a narrow terminal black border without spots, but
the border on the hind wings twice as broad as the one
on the fore wings, and containing two more or less com-
plete rows of narrow fulvous spots. Costa black, with a
narrow fulvous line between the black costal and sub-
costal veins uter third of costal region and round
148 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the apex has the black border a little widened. Above
the outer end of the cell begins a curved black stripe
which runs from the subcostal vein across the upper part
of the end of the cell, and along the first median venule
to the outer border; a spur from the border above this
stripe extends inward one-third the distance to the cell.
The subcostal vein beyond the cell is fulvous to the black
at the apex. 3
Under side pale fulvous brown, paler on the outer
third, and somewhat clouded. The hind wings have at
the base two small white spots annulate with black, and
a fulvous spot. At the posterior angle of the fore wings
are two geminate whitish spots in black, at the anal
angle two pairs of these spots, and one pair at the apex :
these spots form part of two indistinct pale fulvous ter-
minal lines. Fore wings long and narrow, the hind
margin not more than half the length of the costa ; hind
wings triangular.
Southern Florida, Texas. (See Addenda.)
36. SGRAULIS VANILLA, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 3 inches.
Upper surface rich reddish or yellowish fulvous, the
veins of the fore wings black on the outer two-thirds of
the wing, the black enlarged at the ends of the median
venules and submedian vein. There are three white
spots in the cell of the fore wings, each set in a black
patch, one at the end and two in the middle; and three
black spots between the submedian vein and the median
venules. Hind wings with an outer border of black
containing circular fulvous spots between the veins, and
three black spots, one in the cell and two submarginal.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 149
Under side of hind wings and apical portion of fore
wings yellowish brown streaked a little with yellow, the
rest of fore-wings fulvous. There are twenty-three or
twenty-four silver spots edged with black on each of the
hind wings, and about ten on the apex and outer margin
of the fore wings; those on the hind wings and apex
of fore wings mostly large.
The eggs are conoidal, truncated, the top a little arched ;
the sides more or less convex, marked by fourteen ribs
from base to top, and crossed by eleven tiers of strie;
the spaces between the ribs are quadrangular, the spaces
at the summit hexagonal.
The young larva is cylindrical, thickest at joint 4,
tapering slightly to the anal extremity. Color brownish
orange, glossy ; on each side of the dorsal line, on each
joint after the second, is a row of conical, pale black
tubercles, and two similar rows on each side forming
transverse rows of six tubercles, from the top of each of
which springs a short black hair. On joint 2 is a black
dorsal collar with fine tubercles. Head brown.
After the first moult the color is about the same, but
after moulting again it is more of a dark o1 red brown,
with a subdorsal greenish-brown band, and head black.
After the third moult the color changes to dark glossy
orange, with the dorsal stripe olive-brown and a sub-
dorsal of the same, and the lower part of the body olive-
brown.
The mature larva is 1.5 inches long, of a red-orange
color, with a broad dorsal line of greenish black, and a
broad slate-black band outside this reaching to the first
lateral, except a narrow stripe of the ground color. Base
slate-black, orange through the region of the spiracles.
13*
150 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
Each segment is furnished with six long, tapering black
spines, blunt at the top, from each of which springs a
bristle. Feet and legs black ; head ovoid, deeply clett,
with high conical vertices, on each of which stands a
stout, spinous, recurved process.
The chrysalis is a little more than an inch long,
slender, the thorax much compressed, the wing-cases
very prominent, forming a narrow carinated hunch,
which rounds abruptly on posterior end. Colors varia-
ble, some specimens buff with greenish markings, or on
the abdomen greenish brown; some black, the wing-
cases and anterior parts mottled in light and dark black ;
some with the anterior parts pink-tinted mottled with
greenish black.
The larva of this beautiful insect feeds on the passion-
flower. It is found in the Southern States; Arizona,
California, and occasionally as far north as Coalburgh,
West Virginia; Cape May, New Jersey; Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
37. ARGYNNIS IpALIA, Drury.
Expanse of wings from 2.75 to 3.6 inches.
Male.—Upper surface of fore wings fulvous, black
along the costa, with a black outer border which is a little
wider than the costal border; base and hind margin
brown. In the cell are three black bars, at the end an-
other bar with an open § united to it enclosing a fulvous
spot. Beyond the cell runs a transverse zigzag line, a
submarginal row of black dots, and next the border a
row of black crescents. On the costa, instead of a sub-
terminal spot there is a black patch, with another between
this and the zigzag line.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 151
Hind wings black, with violet reflections ; the base of
the wing washed with fulvous. There is a black spot in
the cell, an irregular row of yellowish spots beyond the
cell, and a marginal row of fulvous spots. Fringes alter-
nate spots of black and white. Under side of fore wings
fulvous, white along the costa, a msvginal row of silver
spots enclosed in black crescents, and some silver on the
costa and near the apex. The black of the upper side
repeated. Under side of hind wings yellowish brown,
with twenty-nine silver spots and patches, besides some
silver shading.
The female differs from the male in being larger, in
the terminal band of the fore wings being broader and
containing a row of white spots, with six more white
spots near the apex, and in the outer row of spots on the
hind wings being of the same color as ‘he inner.
An aberrant form, ASHTAROTH, more suffused than
the typical form, is sometimes found.
Mr. Edwards describes the ege as conoidal, truncated,
rounded at the base, the sides well rounded, depressed at
the summit, marked vertically by about eighteen ribs,
half of which extend to the summit, and between these
equidistant transverse slightly-raised strize.
In about twenty-five days the larva hatches from
this. It is cylindrical, somewhat thickest in the middle.
Color pale yellow-brown, translucent ; each segment from
3 to 12 marked by a transverse row of eight elongate
tubercular dark spots, the whole forming eight longitu-
dinal rows; one or two long, black, curved hairs arising
from each tubercle. Head bilobed, the vertices rounded.
After the first moult the color becomes cinereous,
mottled and striped with brown ; a macular stripe along
152 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the dorsal rows of spines, and another just outside the
first laterals. The spines from six rows are long, fleshy,
black, each beset with short black hairs. Head black.
After the second moult the larva is mottled and striped
with light and dark cinereous, the spines longer, each dull
yellow at base.
After the third moult the dark portions become black,
and the light a dirty white, and the dorsum has a white
stripe with a central black line ; at the juncture of several
segments a transverse white stripe, on which are short
black lines. Each segment is crossed longitudinally by
black stripes, interrupted by the spines, with a wedge-
shaped mark between the spines. Head light brown.
The color after the tourth moult is buff, with the mark-
ings much as before. The larva moults five times before
reaching maturity, when it is 1.75 inches long, velvety
black, banded and striped with ochrey yellow changing
to dull orange or red, and furnished with six rows of
tapering, fleshy spines, each of which has several small
black bristles. Two of the rows along the back are
silvery white, with black tips, those at the end of the
rows somewhat smaller. The spines of the rows along
the sides are smaller, and yellowish or orange at the base.
The head is reddish above and black beneath.
The chrysalis, to which the larv:. changes in some shel-
tered place, is 1.1 inches }>ng, and shaped as in allied
species. ‘The color is brown and yellow over the ab-
domen, the mesonotum pinkish brown, the wing-cases
brown, pink-tinted, with dark brown and black patches
over the body.
This species, like others of the genus, feeds on violets
in the larval state. In the North it is single-brooded,
‘
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 153
but in the southern part of its range there are two
broods in a season. It occurs from Maine to Nebraska,
New Jersey, Arkansas.
38. ARGYNNIS Diana, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 3.25 to 4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface from the base to beyond the
middle of the wings dark velvet-brown, the rest of the
wings deep orange, forming a wide band, crenate next:
to the brown, and with a brown shading along the veins
almost to the edge, and a brown line near the margin.
Inside this line are two rows of brown dots more or less
distinct, one submarginal, the other next to the brown
space.
Under side of fore wings black at base, beyond which
are the zigzag and other markings found on the under
side of A. Cybele and other related species, the color
between these markings that of the outer part of the wing
above, but somewhat suffused with black. Outer part
sunilar to that above, but paler.
Hind wings with the basal two thirds of a leaf-brown
color, the outer part same as above, without spots. Be-
tween these parts is an edging of black, more or less
covered with silver scales, terminating at each margin
in a triangular silver spot. Between the costal and sub-
costal veins is a silver erescent edged internally with
black ; some silver scales at the juncture of these veins,
and in the cell. Just within the margin rests a continu-
ous band of silver crescents.
The female has the upper part blue- or green-black,
the outer third of fore wing a little paler, with three rows
of blue or whitish spots; the inner row reinforced by
154. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
three more at the end of the cell. The hind wings have
the style of the marks more like that of the males.
On the under side the basal two-thirds of the fore
wings are marked like the males, but the colors are
black and pale blue; the apical portion dark brown,
an apical whitish spot edged within with silver, a row
of whitish spots near the margin, another answering to
the inner one above, and between these several light bars
tinged a little with pale buff. Hind wings with the
basal two-thirds dark brown, the outer portion with the
veins brown, and the part between the veins black
washed with brown. The silver marking the same as
in the males.
The egg is conoidal, truncated, depressed at the summit,
marked vertically by about eighteen prominent, slightly
wavy ribs, eight of which extend from base to summit
and form there a serrated vein or crown, the ribs crossed
by about twelve transverse striz.
The young larva is about .05 of an inch long, cylin-
drical, greenish brown, with rows of tuberculated darker
spots, from each of which grows a black hair; head
brown.
The mature larva is velvety black, the body armed
with six rows of long fleshy spines which radiate from it
like spokes, and from each of which proceed several short
black bristles. The length of most of these spines is .2
of an inch, but the two on the top of the second segment
are .3 of an inch long and bend forward over the head.
The base of the spines is deep orange or fulvous. Be-
tween each pair of dorsals are two whitish dots placed
transversely. The head is brown in front and fulvous
behind. When full grown it is 2.5 inches long.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 155
The chrysalis is cylindrical, with a depression on the
dorsal portion near the anterior part, and several slight
elevations on the anterior part. Color brown, marked
with different shades of the same.
Food-plant, violets.
West Virginia to Georgia, Southern Ohio to ifaes
Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas. (See Addenda.)
39. ARGYNNIS CYBELE, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 3 to 3.5 inches.
Upper surface fulvous or yellowish fulvous, the base
of the wing to the end of the cell, and below this to the
zigzag line, yellowish brown, there being more of the
yellow in the male. in the cell of the fore wings are
the usual five black bars, all but the fourth bent outward
in the lower half, the two outer united above. Beyond
the cell are the usual zigzag black line and the subter-
minal row of dots, the middle ones of the fore wings the
largest. Just within the outer margin is a terminal
narrow line, and within this, and on the fore wings, with
their points resting on this line, is a series of crescents ;
the fore wings edged with the same color. The cell of
the hind wings with three more or less distinct bars.
Under side of fore wings pale yellowish brown, the
apical space yellowish and enclosing a bright brown
costal patch ; the lines and dots the same as above, but
near the apex more brown. The apical five or six of
the spaces enclosed within the submarginal crescents are
wholly or partly silver, with three silver patches within
this line.
The hind wings have the basal two-thirds reddish
brown more or less mottled with yellow, the outer
156 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
boundary of this color a row of seven silver spots.
Quter margin brown, fading into yellow at the anal
angle, and within this another row of seven large silver
spots rounded within and edged with brown. Between
these two rows is a bright yellow band without spots.
In al! there are twenty-four or twenty-five silver spots
to each wing.
Like both the preceding species, this feeds on violets.
The egg is conoidal, truncated, broad at base, the sides
moderately rounded, depressed at the summit; marked
by eighteen longitudinal ridges, half of which reach the
summit, with transverse stria between the ribs.
The young larva is like that of A. Diana. The mature
larva is from 1.8 to 2 inches long. Color velvety black,
the under side chocolate-brown. As in A. Diana, there
are six rows of slender black spines which are reddish
yellow at the base, and beset with many short black
bristles. Between each dorsal pair of spines on the
joints from 8 to 11 are two gray transverse dots. The
spines of the second joint are wholly black, and directed
forwerd, but they are not longer than the others. Head
small, subcordate, the front flattened and finely tuber-
culated, the back rounded, the vertices having on the
anterior side of each a small black process. Color of
front dull dark brown, of back reddish yellow.
‘The shape of the chrysalis is similar to that of A.
Diana. ‘The color is variable, sometimes glossy dark
brown, with fine mottlings of reddish orange not dis-
tinct, or dark brown mottled with drab, or dark-brown
mottled with light brown.
Atlantic and Western States to Nebraska.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 157
40. Arnaynnis APHRODITE, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Upper surface of wings bright reddish fulvous ; the
basal third of both wings washed with cinnamon-brown.
The black markings, similar to those of A. Cybele, but
not quite so heavy, are shown in Fig. 40.
The bizck bars forming the median zigzag line are
often not connected by black on the veins, so that they
Fig. 40.
> Sy,
Argynnis Aphrodite (natural size).
form a broken line. The two lines at the outer margin
of the female are more or less blended, and the two are
present on the hind wings of both sexes. The under
side of the fore wings is pale reddish fulvous, the apical
portion and along the costa buff, with pale brown mark-
ings; six iaarginal and three submarginal silver spots.
The hind wings are cinnamon-brown, marked as in A.
Oybele, but the submarginal yellow band is narrower,
spotted with brown, almost or quite obliterate on its ex-
tremities. The silver spots are smaller than in A. Cybeie,
and are more or less edged with black.
14
=
158 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
This may be known from Cybele by its smaller size,
by its being less brown on the base of the wings on the
upper side, and by the submarginal band on under side
of hind wings being narrower and spotted with brown.
The preparatory stages are almost identical with those
of A. Cybele, though the larvee are a little smaller ; and
this also feeds on violets.
It is found in the Northern, Middle, and Western
States to Tennessee; also in Nebraska, Montana, and
Kansas.
41. Araynnis ALcEstis, Edw.
Exxpanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
This closely resembles the preceding, the upper sur-
face being fulvous, in the female a little more yellowish
than in A. Aphrodite, and the brown at the base a little
wider, but narrower than in A. Cybele, extending on the
fore wings from the inner bar of the cell outward to
the lower end of the zigzag line; this line being contin-
uous instead of broken on the fore wings of the female.
On the hind wings of the female there is a round black
spot in the cell nearer the base than the other usual
‘marks.
Under side of fore wings of the male reddish fulvous,
the apex cinnamon-brown, with the usual black and
silver spots. Under side of hind wings uniform brown,
without the submarginal yellow band, the silver spots
the same as in the preceding species. The under side
of the female is the same, except that the color on the
apex of the fore wings and the whole of the hind wings
is rather dark reddish brown, with sometimes a few
yellow scales near the central silver spots. ‘The female
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 159
has nine silver spots on each fore wing and twenty-five
on each hind wing, and the black marks of both sexes
are heavier than in A. Aphrodite. This species may
readily be known from the preceding by the absence of
the yellow submarginal band on the under side of the
hind wings.
The eggs are described as conoidal, truncated, not
so broad at the base as Idalia, the sides less rounded ;
depressed at the summit; marked vertically by about
eighteen prominent, slightly wavy ribs, half of which
reach the summit; and crossed by transverse striz.
The young larva is translucent greenish brown, each
joint from 3 to 12 marked by eight rows of tubercular
dark spots, from each of which arises a long, black,
clubbed hair, which is curved forward. On the second
segment is a blackish dorsal patch, with two small spots
on each side, all furnished with hairs.
The color after the first moult is yellow-green mottled
with brown on the dorsum; as in the other species, six
rows of spines; the dorsals begin at joint 2 and run to
13, the laterals begin at 5 and stop at 12 and 13. The
spines are long, tapering, black, and beset with many
short and fine bristles. Head subcordate, black.
After the second moult the color is black-brown, the
sides less dark than the dorsum. ‘The tubercles of the
dorsal spines are buff on the outside; the first laterals
have black tubercles, the second buff; the intermediate
tubercles on anterior segments are yellow. . After the
next moult the color is velvety black with a brown tint,
with the buff changed to dull yellow and a little of it
on the first laterals. The head has the front shining
black ; the back is yellow. After the fourth moult the
160 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
yellow is orange or reddish yellow, and the lower lateral
spines are of this color half-way to the tip.
The mature larva is about 1.5 inches long, cylindrical,
velvety black. The six rows of spines are of about
equal length, the dorsals about .15 of an inch, those on
the top of the second segment directed forward, and all
are beset with short black bristles. Those on the dorsal
rows are translucent brown at base, except on joints 3
and 4, where they are dull yellow; all of the two lateral
and the intermediate rows are dull yellow from the base
half-way to the top; tops of all the spines black. Head
subcordate, deeply cleft, flattened in front, on each vertex
a small conical process. It moults five times in coming
to maturity.
The chrysalis is of the same shape as that of Diana,
the color varying. Some are red-brown irregularly
mottled with black, others are drab and black.
Like the others, the food-plant is violets.
Michigan, Illinois, Lowa, Montana, Colorado.
42. ARGYNNIS ATLANTIS, Edw.
Expanse of wings about 2.5 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, obscured by brown scales on
the fore wings from the second bar in the cell obliquely
to below the median zigzag line on the hind margin ;
the two marginal lines of both wings so blended that
not much of the ground color is left. Marks as in A.
Aphrodite.
The under side of fore wings is reddish fulvous, the
costa and apex light buff, the apical patch and outer
margin brown, with the usual apical silver spots. The
hind wings are dark red-brown, much mottled with
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 161
greenish gray or drab, the submarginal band pale yellow,
usually pure from margin to margin. Silver spots the
same as in Aphrodite.
This species resembles A. Aphrodite, but may be
known by its smaller size, and by its being ~
more brown at the base of the wings above, ¥!% 4:
and having a darker color on the under side of
the hind wings.
The early stages are almost the same as those
of A. Oybele and Aphrodite, and the food-plants
are violets. ‘The pupa, or chrysalis, is repre-
sented in outline in Fig. 41. It has been found areynnis
in New England, New York, and Iowa. eee
pupa.
43. ARGYNNIS Myrna, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 1.7 to 1.85 inches.
Upper surface yellowish fulvous, less than the basal
fourth of the wing dusky brown. In the cell of the
fore wings are the usual five bars, the second and third
united, but not the fourth and fifth, the fourth an open
3. Beyond the cell the usual black zigzag line; and
below the cell under the double bar a longitudinal dash,
with projections towards the cell, the inner running to
the base of the wing. Outer margin black, inside this
a line composed of crescents, with the usual submarginal
row of black dots, the whole more or less blended at the
apex, so that the marginal line and the row of crescents
form a band containing a row of fulvous spots.
Hind wings with the margin and row of black spots
as in the fore wings, except that they are less prominent
anteriorly. Within the median zigzag line is another
crossing the end of the ceil, where it sends out a short
l 14*
162 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
spur, the cell containing two more or less distinct round
spots.
The under side of the fore wings is fulvous, the
apical portion yellow, the markings on that and the
outer margin rusty brown; the black marks much as
they are above; a marginal row of silver crescents, and
three subapical.
The hind wings rusty brown mottled with patches
of yellow, mostly through the middle and outer por-
tions; a marginal row of seven and a sub-
M1e.42. marginal row of eight silver spots ; between
the two rows a row of black-brown dots.
Inside the second row about eight more
silver spots, one in the cell pupilled with
black.
The eggs are pale green, shaped some-
Egg of Argyn- What like the frustum of a cone, and marked
v4. With about fourteen longitudinal ribs and
fine transverse strise (Fig. 42).
The young larvee are pale green, with a brownish-
black head. Brown patches nearly cover joints 5, 7, 9,
and 11. Black hairs arise from tubercles on all the
joints and curve forward. In passing from the young
to the mature larvee they moult four times. The mature
larve are an inch long, ashy brown mottled with velvety
black, with six rows of fleshy spines beset with black
bristles, those on the second segment three and a half
times as long as the others and pointing forward. Head
bronze-colored.
The chrysalis is .6 of an inch long; lght brown
streaked with darker, and armed with two rows of sharp
conical tubercles on the back. The perfect insect flies
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 163
from June to July, and is found from New England to
Montana, and in Colorado.
lt feeds on violets.
44. ArGyNniIs Montinus, Scud.
Expanse of wings 1.75 inches.
Upper surface rich reddish fulvous, much the color of
A. Bellona, marked with the usual zigzag line beyond
the middle and the row of round black spots ; the sub-
marginal row of black lunules and the black terminal
edge somewhat suffused on the fore wings, so that there
is but little clear fulvous between the edge and the
lunules. The cell of the fore wings is marked with four
marks,—three black bars almost straight, and an elon-
gate O: the latter is the second from the base, and may
be considered as formed of two bars, making the number
five, as in other species. Below the cell there is an open
V, the point turned outward. ‘The basal portion of both
wings is suffused with black, extending out somewhat
along the posterior and internal margins.
The under side of the hind wings and the apical por-
tion of the fore wings are deep cinnamon-red, the rest is
ochraceous fulvous, the markings of the fore wings faintly
repeated. Hind wings with the median broken line re-
peated less distinctly than above, obsolete opposite the
cell, and partially so between this and the costa. Costa
black, more or less bordered within by ochre scales. In
place of the round spots of the upper side there is a series
of ferruginous spots, some indistinct and others with a
few black scales. Between this and the median line is a
broken line or shade of salmon scales, not very clear,
and outside this the round spots are patches of ochre
164 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
scales. Just within the outer border is a series of spots
which are white rather than silver, the anal and the two
next the costa rather distinct, the rest not very promi-
nent. At the end of the cell is a curved black line, and
below this are two more, each bordered on the outside with
white or whitish. Above the cell is a straight black line,
outside of which is a white patch. Near the base are
three white spots with some black scales, and a black
spot with a few white scales near the end of the cell.
The males and females do not differ.
Found on the lower half of the barren summits of
the White Mountains, New Hampshire, during July and
August.
45, ARGyNNIS BeLLona, Fab.
Expanse of wings about 1.6 inches.
Upper side fulvous, the marks on the wing inside
the terminal border similar to those of A. Myrina, but
the dusky brown covers fully the basal fourth of the
wings. In the male the edges of the wings are scarcely
black, but in the female they are distinctly so. Inside
the terminal edging is a row of oval spots instead of
crescents, with some suffusion between this and the edge.
The under side of the fore wings is fulvous, with the
apical portion rusty brown, the apex yellow, the brown
tinged with purple. Hind wings rusty brown tinged with
yellow in the middle and outer two fifths, and a costal
patch washed with whitish purple, this portion containing
two rows of dark spots. There are no silver spots. The
yellow on the middle of the under side of the hind wings
is in scattered scales, not gathered together enough to
form a band or spots.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 165
According to Professor Fernald, the eggs of this species
are similar to those of A. Myrina in size, color, and
markings, and it closely resembles that species in all the
early stages. The mature larva, however, does not have
the spines on the second segment lengthened.
Food-plant, violets.
Northern United States, Colorado.
46. Kuprorera CLAUDIA, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 1.75 to 2.75 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, a paler band crossing both
wines near the middle, bordered on the inside by a zig-
Fia. 48.
Enptoieta Claudia (natural size).
zag black line similar to that in the species of Argynnis.
From this pale space to the base the wings are somewhat
duller fuivous and a little powdered with black scales.
Beyond the central pale band are two transverse lines,
with a row of round spots between them, the edge of
the wing black; all these lines are connected by black
along the veins. The cell of the fore wings contains
three black bars, the two outer united at the ends and
166 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE,
enclosing a pale space. Below the cell is a bar bent
outward in the middle.
Under side of fore wings fulvous to the zigzag line,
with discal pale spot. The outer half of the wing is
pale, with a little submarginal reddish wash below the
apex, and a large gray triangle on the costa. A brown
spot near the posterior angle sends a marginal streak
>
towards the apex.
The hind wings are pale brown in the basal half,
streaked with white along the veins, and with transverse
strie of darker brown. Beyond the middle they are
whitish, shading off into the same brown as the base,
with more or less whitish along the margin, the anal
portion of the outer half being nearly as dark as the
base, while the costal portion is almost white. There
are about three indistinct submarginal ocelli.
The ege is conoidal, depressed at the top, flat at the
base, shaped much lke the eggs of Argynnis, but
taller in proportion to the breadth, and the sides less
rounded ; marked by about twenty longitudinal ribs,
half of which reach the summit, forming a serrated
vein round the depression, marked by cross-strie.
The young larvee are cylindrical, thickest from joint
6 to jomt 9. Color greenish yellow, each joint from
3 to 12 crossed transversely by two irregular rows of
dark tuberculated spots or points on a pale ground, with
a black hair from each. The second seement has a black
stripe across the dorsum. Head black.
The color after moulting is reddish yellow, with two
dorsal rows and one lateral row of indistinct whitish spots,
which cover the junction of the segments and are in line
with the spines. ‘There are six rows of short, fleshy,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 167
tapering black spines, each beset with many short, fine
black hairs. Collar reddish, edged with white.
nineteen to twenty days. 10.
The young larva is cylindrical, translucent,
yellowish, a row of brown tubercles to each joint, from
each of which arises a pencil of hairs.
The mature larva is from 1.1 to 1.3 inches lorg,
cylindrical, the joints at the ends the smallest, the dorsum
and sides armed with
seven rows of long, Fic. 46.
tapering, fleshy spines,
each of which springs
from a round, shining,
blue-black tubercle, the
tubercles of each joint
nearly meeting. Each spine bristles with stout black
hairs, giving the larva the appearance shown in Fig. 46.
There is also another row of similar but much smaller
“pines below the stigmata; in this row joint 4 has no
spine, joints 5 to 10 each have two in line, joint 11 has
one, and joint 12 has a tubercle without a spine. On
the under side of the body, on joints 5 and 6, in line
H 15
M. Phaeton, larva.
.
1
170 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
with the legs, is a single small tubercle with a short
branching spine. Joints 2 and 3, part
Kia. 47. of joint 4, and the last two or three
joints are black; the others are deep
reddish fulvous striped transversely with
black.
The chrysalis (Fig. 47) is shaped
much as in Argynnis, the abdomen and
thorax furnished with several rows of
tubercles. Color white, marked and
spotted with brownish black, the tuber-
cles orange.
M. Phaeton, pupa.
(enlarged). The food-plants are Chelone glabra,
Lonicera ciliata, and Viburnum dentatum.
United States east of the Rocky Mountains.
48. Mrevirma Harrisit, Scud.
Jixpanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.75 inches.
Upper surface of wings fulvous, the basal half and
terminal border black, with five fulvous spots in the
cell of the fore wings, two more below the cell, and
three in the cell of the hind wings. The base is not
wholly black, but is sprinkled with fulvous scales. The
border of the fore wings is broadest at the apex, where
it contains two pale dots; below this it extends inward
along the veins. ‘Towards the anal angle it is more
broken up, so as to present a black edge and two in-
distinct lines.
On the under side the wings are fulvous, with a large
black subapical patch, which sends backward a subter-
minal band, with two rows of white spots extending
more or less through it. There are four black bars in
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 171
the cell and one beyond, and a white costal patch. Hind
wings fulvous, with a median pale yellow band tray-
ersed by two black lines near the edges, so as to be three
nearly complete bands. Inside this band are six spots of
the same color,—two in the cell, three above, and one be-
low. Beyond the median band is a subterminal row of
crescents, with a row of black pupilled spots between the
band and the crescents ; all the light spots edged with
black. Fringes white, black at the ends of the veins.
The eggs are lemon-yellow, in shape the frustum of-
a cone, with fifteen or sixteen longitudinal ribs which are
elevated above the surface more in the middle than at
either extremity.
The young larva is cylindrical, yellow-green, some-
what pilose ; head obovoid, bilobed, the vertices rounded,
dark brown.
After the first moult the larva is armed with seven
rows of short black spines, tapering, and thickly set with
short black bristles. Color yellow-brown. Very little
change takes place after the second moult, save that the
color is ochre-yellow, with five transverse biack stripes
on each segment. After the fourth moult che color is
red or orange ochraceous, striped as before, three to a
segment. In coming to maturity it moults five times.
The mature larva is of a deep red fulvous color, crossed
by black stripes, one before and two after each transverse
row of spines, and with a dorsa! blacs
stripe. The last two joints are nearly
all black, and on joints 9 to 11 the
fulvous bands are spotted. The spines
are in seven principal rows, with a row
of smaller ones just above the feet. The spines are long,
Fira. 48.
M. Harrisii, larva.
We THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
a
tapering, bisck, each thickly set with long, divergent
black hairs.
The chrysalis (Fig. 49) is cylindrical, but
with a small depression on the back of the
thorax, abdomen with several rows of sub-
conic tubercles. Color pure white, marked
and spotted with black, or brown-black and
Kia. 49.
orange.
Sa EE The food-plants are Aster and Diplopappus
pupa. umbellatus, and the imago is to be.seen in
June.
New England, New York, Michigan, Wisconsin, I-
linois.
49, PuycropEs Nycrets, Doub.—Hew.
Expanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.75 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, a broad black terminai border,
on the fore wings broadest at the apex, enclosing a sub-
terminal row of fulvous
Pia. 50. spots, more distinct in the
female than in the male.
At the end of the cell is
a broad black patch con-
nected by a line with a
smaller one on the sub-
‘ median vein (see Fig. 50).
Phyciodes Nycteis, maio (nxtural size) In the cell and below
it several indistinct black
marks, the base biack, this extending outward along the
costa and hind margin to the black patches.
The hind wings have the basal half marked the same
as the fore wings, though sometimes more suffused.
4
ti
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 173
There is a broad terminal border almost meeting the
basal black on the costa, and sending a shade across the
wing through the fulvous space, also a subterminal row
of black spots, some of which are pupilled.
Under side of fore wings pale fulvous, with three or
four not very prominent bars in the cell, a somewhat
triangular patch beyond, and a terminal brown-black
border with the subterminal row of spots, three apical
silver-white lunules, and two more marginal near the
middle, the lunules resting on a terminal yellow line
edged within with brown.
The hind wings are dark brown broken by pale yellow,
especially in the basal portion, where it is the principal
color. A row of large silvery white spots crosses the
wing near the base, and a similar band crosses the middle
of the wing, broken by brown veins and edged on the
outside by a crenate brown line, and a marking of pale
yellow beyond. The subterminal row of round black
spots is reproduced, part pupilled with white. ‘There is
the terminal yellow line the same as on the fore wings,
with a row of silver-white lunules, the middle and two
apical much the largest.
The eggs are deposited in clusters of about a hundred
on the under side of the food-plant. They are whitish
green, somewhat in the form of a truncated cone, the
lower third of the outside smooth, the middle part
marked with hexagonal cells, and the top by longitudinal
ribs. They hatch in from nine to thirteen days.
The young larva is .06 of an inch long, with a dark
brown head, and a yellowish green body clouded with
brown, with scattered black hairs. After the first moult
it is smoky brown, and, like Melitea, armed with seven
15*
174 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
rows of stout, fleshy, tapering black spines, and a minute
row over the feet. After three or four days it moults a
second time, when the color is black-brown, and this color
remains through the next stage, with sometimes a broken
yellow stripe along the side. To come to maturity it
moults four times.
The mature larva is an inch in length, blackish brown
above and greenish brown beneath. Head black, cordate,
the sides high and rounded, and clothed with numerous
black hairs arising from black papille. The spines
long, black, tapering, armed with short black hairs, each
springing from a shining black tubercle, except those of
the lowest row, which stand upon greenish or yellowish
tubercles. A black band runs along the base, with a
yellow stripe in the line of the lower lateral spines, and
a broken yellow stigmatal stripe. In some cases this is
ochre or reddish yellow. The back and sides are much
dotted with white.
The chrysalis is similar in shape to M. Phaeton, with
five rows of conical tubercles on the abdomen. ‘The
color varies extremely : some are wholly greenish yellow,
others pink-brown, others gray-brown ; with usually but
few dark markings.
The food-plants are Diplopappus umbellatus, Aster,
Actinomeris, and sunflowers.
Maine to North Carolina and west, Mississippi Valley.
50. Puycropes Caruora, Reak.
Iixpanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface much as in P. Nycteis, except that
most of the wing is black, there being some fulvous spots
near the base of the fore wings, a fulvous band through
EASTERN UNITED STATES. hae
the middle crossed by the black veins, a subterminal row
of whitish dots in the broad black terminal border, and
a white lunule in the middle of the border near the edge
of the wing. In the female there are traces of other
white lunules just within the margin. ‘The hind wings
are similarly marked, except that there is a row of black
submarginal spots circled with fulvous, and the lunules
are faint in the males.
Under side of fore wings fulvous, marked about the
same as in P. Nycteis, except that there is more black
through the middle. The terminal border is as above,
save the terminal Junules. Between median venules one
and two there is a large conical whitish spot, the base on
the double terminal line; this double line running in
zigzag to the apex, the inner points silvered more broadly
towards the apex, and the inner point sending a white ray
to the margin. The same is repeated towards the pos-
terior angle, but with less silver.
The hind wings dark brown washed with whitish,
more towards the base, only two yellowish spots in the
cell. Near the base is a broken silvery band, and through
the middle a silver band crossed by the brown veins,
the outer margin dentate. The submarginal row of black
spots as above, only they are pupilled with white and not
circled with fulvous. ‘The margin is similar to that of
the fore wings, save that the large spot is silvery instead
of whitish.
Southern and Western States, Rocky Mountains, Mon-
tana to Arizona; occasional in West Virginia.
176 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
51. Puycroprs PHaon, Edw.
Ixxpanse of wings from 1 to 1.4 inches.
Upper surface of fore wings fulvous, the base, costa,
hind margin, outer margin, and a band through the
middle black. The basal half of wing contains several
irregular black marks, and the median black band is
expanded on the costa and hind margin. Beyond the
median band there are two light bands crossed by the
black veins and separated by a black shade which expands
into a triangle on the costa and hind margin. The first
light band is pale fulvous, almost buff; the second is the
same fulvous as the ground color, and contains a black
dot near the posterior angle. The outer edge brownish
black, with a pale lunule in the middle of the border.
Hind wings similar to the fore wings, only the inner
margin is fulvous, the median black band is narrower,
both light bands are fulvous, and the outer contains a
row of black dots. In most specimens there are only
a few narrow whitish lunules near the anal angle, but
sometimes these continue to the apex.
The under side of fore wings is orange fulvous, the
basal half marked with a darker shade, the median
black band as above, and also the two light bands, only
the inner is more whitish and the shade separating them
is obliterate except the triangles. Terminal border black,
pale at the edge, with a crenate black line near the edge,
and a pale yellow patch in the middle, and one at each
end.
There are two forms of this having the under side of
hind wings differently colored. The winter form is pale
buff washed with umber-brown, the basal half with more
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 177
or less complete bands of pale spots edged with brown ;
the row of black spots the same as above ; a submarginal
row of lunuies, the middle large, silvery, the others more
or less obscure. The summer form is pale buff, with
irregular transverse brown lines, the brown dots smaller,
a terminal brown border accompanying the submarginal
row of lunules and partly obscuring three of them, a
small brown patch on the costa and sometimes a little in
the centre.
Gulf States, Texas ; occasional in Kansas.
52. PuycropEs THaAros, Drury.
Expanse of wings from 1.15 to 1.5 inches.
There are two dimorphic forms of this species, the
winter form, Marcia, and the summer form, Morpheus.
It was supposed that these two forms were distinct species
till Mr. W. H. Edwards proved by rearing them that
they are seasonal forms of one species, the difference in
coloration being due to the effects of cold while hiber-
nating. Besides these two well-marked forms there are
several minor variations, only one of which is named.
Winter form, Marcra, Edw.—This has the upper
surface reddish fulvous marked with black. There are
two rows of more or less distinct coalescing circles near
the base of the wing, the first of two circles, the second
of four, and an ellipsoid at the end of the cell; a patch
of black beyond the cell on the costa and one on the
hind margin, sometimes the two being connected by a
dentate line. The outer border is broad, black, and
through it runs a crenated line with a yellowish or ful-
vous lunule in the middle, in some examples distinct, in
others connected with the central color ; a black dot near
| m
178 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the posterior angle. Hind wings very much as in P.
Phaon.
The under side of fore wings is yel!cwish fulvous,
with yellow spots and four black patches,—two on the
costa before the apex, one at the posterior angle, and one
on the hind margin; the outer margin with the lunules
as in P. Phaon, only yellow.
The hind wings resemble closely those of the winter
form of Phaon, the yellow perhaps a little deeper. The
terminal, costal, and middle brown patches are present in
some examples, the wing being well suffused with brown.
Summer form, MorrpHeus, Fab.—This is scarcely dis-
tinguishable from Marcia on the upper side, though the
black is more inclined to be in lines. The under side
of fore wings like Marcia. Under side of hind wings
yellow-buff, the brown patches on the costa and in the
cell absent, though in some specimens there is a slight
discoloration at the end of the cell. In some females a
slight costal patch is present.
Aberr. Packarpir, Saund.—This differs from the
usual forms in the wings being brown above, with a
cupreous tinge and sprinkled with fulvous atoms. The
fulvous is in bands: first a macular band near the base
of the fore wings, not quite reaching either margin; a
patch across the outer part of the cell; and a wide band
beyond the cell, crossed by black veins, narrow on the
costal end. On the hind wings a large fulvous patch
covers about the inner half, containing several roundish
black spots; beyond this is a macular band of fulvous
between two broad brown bands. Under side pale.
The eggs are deposited in clusters of two hundred o
more on different species of Aster, both wild and culti-
<7
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 179
vated. They are pale green, conoidal, depressed at the
top and rounded at the base. ‘The lower half is indented
like the surface of a thimble, the upper half has about
fifteen ribs. They hatch in from four to seven days.
The young larva is yellowish green clouded with
brown, with a dark brown head. It is covered with
scattered black hairs.
After the first moult the larva is armed with seven
rows of short, fleshy, brown spines, each thickly set with
short concolored bristles; also at the base of body a
row of small spines. ody striped longitudinally with
light and dark brown and sordid white. Head subcor-
date, the vertices rounded; two gray bands, the rest
black. There are but few changes after the second and
third moults.
The mature larva is .85 of an inch long, with a cor-
date, shining, bronze-colored head, having two oblique
white stripes on each side and a spot of the same color
above the mouth. The body is dark brown dotted with
yellow, and has seven rows of tapering fleshy spines
armed with blackish bristles.
The first brood passes four moults before reaching
maturity, when it changes toa chrysalis, from which the
imago emerges in from seven to thirty days. The larvee
of the second brood pass three moults, when they become
lethargic and hibernate. In the spring they revive, go
to feeding, and moult twice more before reaching ma-
turity, the chrysalides from these producing the butterflies
in from one to two weeks.
The chrysalis is about half an inch long, cylindrical,
with a deep depression back of the mesonotum, and
several rows of fine tubercles on the abdomen. The
180 THE BUTTER®LCIES OF THE
color varies much, being light cinereous covered with fine
abbreviated brown streaks ; or cinereous on dorsum, the
abdomen and wing-cases tinted with yellow-brown ; or
dull white clouded with brown; or wholly dark brown
speckled with gray.
The butterflies are to be seen from May through the
season. ;
United States generally, except the Pacific States,
53. PuyciopEs Baresi, Reak.
Expanse of wings from 1.25 to 1.63 inches.
Male.—Fore wings black, two transverse maculate ful-
vous bands beyond the cell, the inner pale, arising nearly
at the costa and converging to the hind margin. The
cell contains three or four abbreviated bars, none of them
extending below the median vein. The basal half of
the area below this vein is deep black, rarely containing
a narrow fulvous streak ; a spot of fulvous in the middle
of the outer margin.
Hind wings black, the two fulvous bands of the fore
wings continued nearly to the inner margin, much wider
than on the fore wings, the separating line very much
attenuated in the middle. The outer band contains a
series of rounded black spots between the venules, and
beyond these an indistinct row of connected lunules.
There are two fulvous spots within the cell, preceding
the first transverse band, the inner semicireled by the
outer. Fringes white or whitish, more or less cut with
black at the ends of the veins.
Under side of fore wings fulvous; a large triangular
black patch upon the middle of the hind margin is con-
nected at its apex with an irregular, dilating bar running
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 181
thence to the costa; a short bar between this and the
apex. Three connected black lunules, the central much
the widest, run from beyond the middle of the hind
margin to the third median venule. In some this line
is prolonged by the addition of one or two more very
delicate crescents.
Hind wings ochrey yellow, with indistinct pale fulvous
lines near the base, and a row of rounded dots followed
by pale lunules of the same color near the outer margin ;
rarely one of the last is bright ferruginous.
Female.—Similar to the male on the upper surface,
the inner band of the fore wings paler than in the male.
On the under side the reticulations are plainer.
West Virginia, Maryland, New York to Ohio.
54. Eresta Frisia, Poey.
Expanse of wings 1.4 inches.
Upper surface reddish fulvous, the base dusky. Across
the inner third are four more or less distinct sinuous
black lines, which are fine and nearly distinct on the hind
wings, but are heavier and more blended on the fore
wings, and in places connected by cross-lines. ,Beyond
the basal third the fore wings are crossed by three black
bands and a terminal border, the first and second united
into a broad band at the end of the cell, reaching from the
median vein to the costa, with a fulvous spot at the end of
the cell just within the edge of the band, the two bands
approaching each other near the submedian; the third
band expanded from the costa back to the fifth subcostal
venule, from which it gradually contracts across two
interspaces, expanding abruptly at this point, where it
unites with the second band, to separate again below the
16
182 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
second branch of the median, from which it continues
without much variation to the hind margin. The spaces
between these bands are paler fulvous than the base
and the hind wings, the subterminal being whitish. The
first and second of these bands of black are continued
across the hind wings in black shades hardly positively
enough marked to be called lines. The broad terminal
border of the hind wings contains a series of connected
whitish lunules.
The under side has a little more than the basal half
of the fore wings fulvous, with four or five large whitish
spots ; the terminal portion dark brown, with the border
whitish and two large whitish patches. The hind wings
are marked much like a Phyciodes, an oblong brown
shading from the base along the middle of the wing to
the centre ; a whitish band marks the outer third, a sub-
terminal row of whitish lunules, before which is a series
of brown sagittate spots.
This resembles to some extent some of the forms of
Phyciodes Tharos, but the difference may be seen by com-
paring the descriptions.
Found at Key West, Florida, and Cuba.
55. GRAPTA INTERROGATIONIS, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 2.3 to 2.75 inches.
This isa dimorphic species, the hibernating form being
known as form Fabricii, the other as Umbrosa. There
are about four broods in a season; and while the last
brood or hibernating butterflies are the pale forms, the
others are more or less mixed, as Mr. Edwards has shown.
Dimorphiec form, Fapriciu, Edw.—This has the upper
side fulvous, marked with ferruginous brown and spotted
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 183
with black. The fore wings have two black spots in the
cell, one round, the other a short bar, and a wide bar at
the end, broadest at the costa; and a row of four spots
from the hind margin to beyond the cell, all but the
last round. Outer border ferruginous brown, with a
subapical bar of the same. ,
Hind wings with four more or less distinct median
black spots, and a broad ferruginous brown border en-
closing a submarginal row of fulvous spots. Edges of
both wings whitish purple.
The costa is rather falcate, the apex truncate, and the
hind wings have a short tail.
Under side clouded in shades of brown, in some ex-
amples partly suffused with purple, without the striking
diversity of color found on Umbrosa, the common row
of black points more or less obsolete, costal edge of fore
wings near the base clouded with small yellow spots,
with some yellow color below. Discal silvery or golden
mark on the hind wing an interrupted C.
Dimorphic form, Umprosa, Lintn.—This has the
fore wings as in Fabricti, but with less purple edging.
The hind wings have the outer two thirds overlaid
with black, in some examples quite intense, the tail
purple.
The under side is variegated with ferruginous brown,
olivaceous, and more or less purple. The basal third is
limited by an irregular ferruginous, partly olivaceous
band, within which the ground color is yellow-brown
streaked with ferruginous. Beyond this band the fore
wings have a narrow belt of yellow-brown, and beyond
this the colors are brown and olivaceous. There is a
hlac patch near the posterior angle, and another sub-
==
184 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
apical. The costal margin of the hind wings is oltva-
ceous, with a median band similar to that of the fore
wings; the inner margin and tail portion of the outer
margin lilac. Crossing both wings is a row of black
points, those on the hind wings within a brown ferru-
vinous band.
The female differs from the above in having the under
side more of a brown suffused with blue-gray.
The eggs are pale green, conoidal in form, with the
base flattened. The sides are rounded, and marked by
eight or nine ribs, which are low near the base, but higher
above, terminating abruptly around a small flat space at
the top.
The young larvee are whitish yellow, somewhat marked
with brown, head shining black. After the first moult
their color is black more or less specked with white, and
they begin to be clothed with short spines, all black except
those on the eighth and tenth segments, which are whitish.
After the second moult they begin to assume the type
they retain to maturity. The spines are in seven rows,
fleshy at base, slender and many-branching at extremity ;
the dorsal and first lateral on joint 3 are black, on joints
2, 4, and 11 russet, the rest yellow ; the second laterals
black throughout, the lowest row greenish ; head bilobed,
black, with short black spines at vertices. After the third
moult the larvee vary greatly both in color of body and
spines. Some are black finely specked with yellowish ;
others are yellow-brown specked with yellow tubercles ;
others gray-brown, with indistinct reddish lines between
the spines on the dorsal and two lateral rows, and much
tuberculated ; others are black, with fulvous stripes and
profusely covered with yellowish tuberculated spots and
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 185
points. The spines vary from black to fulvous and
green and yellow. After the fourth moult
the larva feeds four or five days and changes
to a chrysalis.
The chrysalis (Fig. 51) is an inch long,
variable in color from light yellowish to
dark brown; the head deeply notched, a
thin prominence on the thorax, and eight
silvery spots on the back.
The food-plants are hop, elm, nettle, false
nettle, and basswood. G. Interroga-
United States yenerally, except the Pacifie ""*?"?*
States ; Arizona.
Fia. 51.
56. GRAPTA ComMaA, Harris.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 2.5 inches,
Upper surface fulvous, the outer border black, with a
little edging of lilac. The fore wings have a subapical
patch of brown, and another at the posterior angle, each
enclosing a fulvous spot. Like G. Interrogationis, this
species has two spots in the cell and a bar at the end,
but there are only three round spots between the cell and
the posterior angle, the lowest supplemented by a shade
above it.
Hind wings with ferruginous brown next the border,
shading out towards the middle, with a series of pale
fulyous spots next the border, and an irregular row of
black spots across the middle.
The under side is marbled with light and dark brown,
and washed with olive, and in the males with more or
less of pink. Across the middle the shades are darker,
clearly defined externally, beyond which it is washed with
Naya
186 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
pink. The hind wings have a discal silvery C. Both
wings have the submarginal row of dots in a more or
less distinct band of olive and ferruginous brown. In
the female these shades are not so distinct, with less
pink, in some specimens the whole surface being washed
somewhat with blue-gray.
This is a dimorphic species, the last brood of the
summer, or the one that hibernates, being known as the
winter form, Harris, Edw., from which the above
description is taken. The summer forms are called
Dryas, Edw., and differ from the others in having the
hind wings above suffused with black, as in Umbrosa of
the preceding species, and the under side more suffused
with brown.
This species feeds on the same plants as G. Inferroga-
tioms.
The eggs are green, and similar in form to those of
that species, with ten longitudinal ribs and cross-striz
between them.
The young larvee are one-tenth of an inch long,
black, covered’ with short hairs. After the first moult
the color is either brown-black or black, with whitish
lines at the junctures of the segments ; armed with seven
rows of branching spines, stout, black, and beset with
short bristles. In the black examples all the tubercles
are black; in the specimens with white lines, on seg-
ments 4, 6, 8, and 10 the spines spring from whitish tu-
bereles. Besides these there is a row of minute spines
over the feet. Head dark brown. After the second
moult the color is dark olive-brown, or black-brown, or
reddish brown, two or three fine white transverse lines
to each joint, and two white bars on the back. After the
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 187
next moult the color is black, with the stripes the same,
and a yellow substigmatal band.
The mature larve are from an inch to an inch and
a quarter long, and quite variable in color. Some are
black, with yellow bases to the spines, others are nearly
white, with red spots along the sides, while still others
have a reddish or vinous tint instead of black.
The chrysalis is about four-fifths of an inch long, of
various shades of gray or brown, with golden protu-
berances on the abdomen, and a flattened prominence
on the head.
Eastern, Middle, and Northwestern States; North
Caroline, ‘Tennessee, Kansas to Texas.
57. GRapra Faunus, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.25 inches.
Upper surface fulvous. Next the apex of the fore
wings, the base of both wings, and the inner margin of
hind wings dusky. The fore wings have a broad black
outer border, dentate at the apex, and bordered within
by a series of subobsolete tawny lunules. The markings
on the wings are much as in G. Conuma, but are heavier
and more black and less brown.
Under side of both wings dark brown on the base,
with an irregular common blackish band across the
middle darkest on its outer edge and within the ab-
dominal margin, where its outline is obliquely serrated.
Beyond this band the color is pale brown mottled with
grayish white, which is clearest on the fore wings. The
whole surface is clouded with vinous, and more or less
crossed by fine abbreviated streaks of brown. Apex of
fore wings yellow-brown, with three small lanceolate
188 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
ferruginous spots, the lower enclosing a blue or green
point. The outer margin of both wings, below these, is
bordered by a series of confluent blue-black—sometimes
olive-green—spots following the outline of the wing.
Within these is another series of rounded spots of the
same color. On the disk of hind wings is a white G
varying in form.
The mature larva is one inch and a quarter long ; head
black, furnished with two branching horns and a few
scattered white hairs. Upper side of joints 2 to 6 brick-
red striped transversely with blue, yellow, and black, a
few white hairs on joint 2. There are four branching
yellow spines, with black tips, on joints 3 and 4, and six
on joints 5 and 6. Joints 7 to 12 are white, with a
faintly-marked black stripe along the back, each joint
with three transverse yellow bands and two oblique black
spots. These joints have each seven spines, all white ex-
cept the one next the lowest, which is brown. Last two
joints black, with seven and four spines respectively. Sides
red, with two black bands, the lowest spotted with blue.
The chrysalis (Fig. 52) is grayish brown. Head
with two biforked horns, the outer point very short;
thorax with an elevated keel-like ridge on top,
with a small tubercle on each side. At the
base, below this, there is a larger tubercle, and
behind it another keel-like protuberance, hol-
lowed on top; there are six raised silver orna-
ments on the dorsal surface, the first resembling
\ in shape a capital G; the second is an oblong
G. Faunus, spot, and the third is a sharply-pointed tuber-
cle. ‘The abdominal segments are furnished
with eight rows of tubercles; on each side are five
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 189
brown spots, and below the spiracles there is a brown
stripe.
The food-plants are gooseberry, currant, willow, and
birch.
Mountains of New England and New York, Michigan,
Nebraska, Washington Territory ; occasional from West
Virginia to Georgia.
58. GRAPTA GRACILIS, Gr.—Rob.
Expanse of wings 2.25 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, darker at the base and fading
out paler in the outer half, the fulvous brown border
of the fore wings replaced on the hind wings by yellowish
edged internally by ferruginous brown. Next this border
is a series of elongate yellow lunules, confluent on the
hind wings, where they are supplemented internally by
a rusty brown shade. On the fore wings there is the
usual subapical brown patch, also one at the posterior
angle, usually connected with a shade of the same. In
the middle area of the fore wings are the usual five
dots and bar of black, and three black spots on the hind
wings.
The color of the greater part of the under side is
olivaceous yellow, with the usual vinous brown shade
through the middle, sharply defined outwardly, beyond
which the wing is paler. ‘There are three elongate
patches of this color, edged with darker, in the cell of
the fore wings, and the base of both wings is marked
with the same. The whole wing is marbled with fine
abbreviated streaks of either brown or a darker shade
of the ground color. There is the usual submarginal
row of points in an olivaceous band, the three subapical
140 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
preceded by white shading. Next the margin, along
the middle of both wings, is a series of elongate lunules,
dark olive or greenish, the posterior and anal angles
washed with white. There is also the usual discal G to
the hind wings.
This is found in the White Mountains of New Hamp-
shire.
59. GRAPTA PROGNE, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 1.75 to 2 inches.
] 8
Upper surface bright fulvous, a little paler near the
extremities. The border to the fore wings is black or
Kia. 53.
Grapta Progne,—right wing the under surface.
blackish brown, brown at the apex, with the yellow
lanules and subapical and posterior patches as in G.
Gracilis, as aiso the black spovs in the ceptzal area, as
shown in Fig. 58. The outer hai vu: the hind wings
blackish, shading with the fulvous; the yellow lunules
of Gracilis showing more or less as points, with the
hlack central spots more or less distinct.
Under side grayish brown, closely streaked with fine
xbbreviated i:nes of dark brown, with the usual median
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 191
dark brown shade. Beyond this onthe fore wings the
ground color is pale gray, whitish near the costa, with
the usual row of points. Just within the edge is a row
of confluent crescents, greenish edged with black within.
Discal G slender and somewhat abbreviated.
The ege is conical, the base rounded ; marked by eight
or nine vertical ribs, which gradually increase in promi-
nence from the base upward and are crossed by many
transverse striae.
The young larva is at first dull green, the last joint
with a brownish tint, but later it becomes dull white and
brown, with the usual black tubercles and black cervical
spot. After the first moult the color is greenish brown,
with seven rows of large branching spines. All are
black, but they arise from light yellow tubercles, and are
yellow about half-way up; on joints 12 and 13 they are
almost wholly yellow. Head bilobed, black. After the
second moult the color is at first yellow, but in twelve
hours changes to brown with white cross-lines. After the
third moult it is glossy black from joints 3 to 11, crossed
on the posterior half of most of the joints by three white
lines, with white or gray oblique stripes on the ridges on
which the spines stand from joints 5 to 11.
_ The mature larva is from 1 to 1.2 inches long, of a
buff color, the cross-stripes on the posterior parts of the
joints black and pale buff. In front of each dorsal
spine is a V-shaped reddish bar with the spine within
the angle, and an oblique bar of the same color in front
of each of the laterals, from its base, directed forward
and downward. ‘The second laterals stand on a straight
or slightly-arched bar of the same color. The spines on
joints 5, 4, and 5 are the largest. The dorsals are whi.«,
EE i
192 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
yellow at the bottom,—the yellow being reddish or honey -
yellow,—and arise from yellow tubercles. The first laterals
are white from joints 5 to 11, but those on joints 8, 4,
and 12 are black, with buff branches. The second laterals
are black, with yellow bases and tubercles. The spines
on joint 2 are yellow. Head subcordate, on each vertex
a large compound spinous process, the body black, the
branches partly black and partly yellow.
The chrysalis is similar to that of the other species,
and is .7 of an inch long, with several rows of tubercles
on the abdomen. Colors dull green, brown, and pinkish
white. There is much variation in color of both larvee
and pupee.
The food-plants are gooseberries and currants, and
there are two broods in a season, the last brood of
butterflies hibernating. }
Northern and Western States.
60. Grapra J ALBum, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings 2.75 inches.
Upper surface dull yellowish, dusky at base, washed
more or less with rusty brown, especially on the basal
half. Outer border of fore wings dull black, with a
double crenate line, and two more or less obscured large
costal bars,—one at the end of the cell, and the other
between the cell and a white subapical patch; a black
spot in the cell, with three black spots below the cell, the
one nearest the base of the wing quite large.
The hind wings have a black and brown border a
little within the margin, the yellow outside sprinkled
with brown atoms; a large black space below the costa,
beyond which is a whitish patch.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 193
Under side grayish brown, the usual darker band
across the middle, which on the hind wings is but little
darker than the base ; beyond this greenish white, the
whole surface finely reticulated with brown lines. There
are the usual three elongate patches edged with dark
brown in the cell of the fore wings, the submarginal
row of ashy-blue lunules edged with dark, and the row
of points between these and the median band. The
lunules do not reach the apex of the fore wings.
The mature larva is two inches long, head with black
markings on the sides, thickly set with little points
and with short spines; somewhat cordate, the vertices
surmounted by two shining black, thick spines, verticel-
lated near the tip. The dorsal and subdorsal rows of
spines shining black except at the base, which is reddish,
with long branches, those of the anterior joints more
thickly branched than the others. The super- and sub-
stigmatal rows reddish tipped with black.
The chrysalis is one inch long, of a beautiful green
color, delicately reticulated, with six golden spots on the
back. The spines and projections are similar to those
in G. Comma.
The food-plant is not known, but Professor Fernald’s
surmise is that it may be willow. The butterfly hiber-
nates, the new brood appearing about the middle of
August. :
Northern States to Wisconsin.
61. VANESSA ANTIOPA, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3.5 inches.
Upper surface rich dark maroon-brown, the border
yellow sprinkled with brown, and preceded by a black
I n 17
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194 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
band containing a row of blue spots. The costa is
mottled with yellow and contains two yellow patches.
Under surface traversed by numerous fine black ab-
breviated lines, the outer margin pale buff sprinkled
with brown, and preceded by a series of confluent gray,
blue-black-edged lunules.
Aberrant form, Lintnerit, Fitch.—This form differs
from the one usually seen in having the outer pale bor-
der twice as wide as in the typical Antiopa, occupying
one-third the length of the wing, and in being wholly
destitute of the blue spots. The general color is more
reddish ; the costal margin is black, with small whitish
transverse streaks, but destitute of the two patches.
Another form has “the broad outer border of a tar-
nished pale ochre-yellow hue, speckled with black the
same as Antiopa, and becomes quite narrow at the anal
angle. The wings beneath are similar to those of Antiopa,
but are darker and without any sprinkling of ash-gray
scales or any whitish crescent in the middle of
the hind pair, and the border is sprinkled with
gray whitish in wavy streaks, without forming
the distinct band which is seen in Antiopa.”
This is Mr. Bunker’s description, stripped of
a few superfluous words, of a specimen taken
near Rochester, New York.
The female deposits the eggs in a cluster
round the twigs of willow, elm, or poplar
Cluster of near the petiole of a young leaf, upon which
eggs of V,
Antiopa, the young larvee may feed. ‘The mature larve
Ze. are two inches long, black, minutely dotted
with white, which gives them a grayish look; with a
dorsal row of brick-red spots. Head black, roughened
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 195
with small black tubercles. The spines on the body are
black, rather long, slightly branching. There are four
on joints 2 and 3, six on joints 4 and 5, and seven each
on joints 6 to 12. The last joint has two pairs of short
spines, one behind the other.
The chrysalis is dark brown or gray, with two rows
of spines along the back of the abdomen, two on the head
in front, three on the edge of the wing-covers on each side,
and a thin prominence on the middle of the thorax.
This species hibernates in the butterfly state, and the
first brood of caterpillars may be seen in June. The
second brood of caterpillars appears in August.
North America generally.
62. VANESSA MILBERTI, Godt.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 2.25 inches.
Upper surface brownish black, with a broad fulvous
band between the middle and the outer margin, paler on
its inner edge. One example from Colorado has fully half
the band pale buff. On the fore wings the pale band
contains a black patch on the costa, with a white spot on
one or both sides. There are two fulvous spots in the
cell. The border is composed of two parts, the inner
black, the outer a black-brown crenate line, on each side
of which it is a little paler. The black on the hind wings
supports a row of violet lunules.
Under side dark brown, with the usual wavy lines and
spots ; the outer half yellowish brown, differing in shade
on different specimens, with a submarginal row of gray-
blue lunules which are black-edged.
The mature larva is a little more than an inch long,
with a black head sprinkled with minute whitish dots,
196 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
from which spring pale hairs. The body is nearly black
above, with small white dots and pale hairs, which give
it a grayish color. The spines are arranged as in J.
Antiopa, and are black and branching. It has a greenish-
yellow lateral line, above which is a broken line of
brighter orange-yellow shade.
The chrysalis is .8 of an inch long, slightly angular ;
the frontal beaks short, conical; thoracic projection
forming nearly a right angle; dorsal spines but little
elevated,—the superior one exceeding very little the
others in size; wing-cases as in V. Antiopa; terminal
spine short, flattened, curved.
The lurve are to be found on the wild nettle, and there
are two broods in a season.
Northern States to Montana, Colorado, Arizona,
Pacific States.
63. PyRAMEIS ATALANTA, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 3 inches.
Upper surface black, a little brownish over the basal
half. Hach wing is crossed by a reddish fulvous band,
the one on the fore wing extending in a curved line
from the costa at one-third the distance from the base
of the wing almost to the posterior angle; the one
on the hind wing a terminal border not reaching the
apex nor the anal angle, and containing a row of black
lunules. The fore wings have an oblique white costal
bar half-way from the fulvous band to the apex, anda
submarginal row of five round white spots from the costa
to near the fulvous band, the fourth the largest. Near
the anal angle is a blue bar in a black space.
Under side of fore wings black, gray at the apex, the
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 197
tulvous and white repeated, blue along the costa, in the
cell, and beyond the fulvous band. The hind wings are
marbled with brown, olive, olive-brown, gray, and pale
violet, a series of five partially distinct submarginal
ocelli imperfectly pupilled. 7
The eggs are green, barrel-shaped, with Eee Dat
nine vertical ribs which are highest at the top,
the ribs grooved on each side perpendicularly
to the surface of the egg.
The young larva is greenish brown, semi-
translucent, and furnished with ten rows of
F : P P. Atalanta,
yack, Curve 1alVrs. J OLNUS ane )» Nave egy 2(),
black, lea Joints 2 and 13 | ae
black dorsal patches.
After the first moult it is wholly black-brown, armed
with seven rows of short, slender, branching black spines.
Head bilobed, the vertices rounded. After the third
moult the body is more black, each segment creased, on
the creases many minute whitish tubercles ; a macular
greenish-yellow stigmatal band; head brown. In reach-
ing maturity it passes four moults.
The mature larva is 1.3 inches long, cylindrical, en-
larged in the middle, and of a velvet-black color thickly
sprinkled with fine yellow points, with a stigmatal line of
greenish-yellow patches. It has seven rows of moder-
ately long, slender, branching spines, which are usually
black; but in some specimens they are pale yellow-
white, more or Jess reddish at base. Head rounded,
bilobed, the vertices rounded, thickly covered with black,
simple spines.
The chrysalis is from .85 to .95 of an inch long,
cylindrical, the abdomen stout, the dorsal tubercles
gilded, the lateral in two rows and black. Color vari-
ifs
198 TH BUTTERFLIES OF TITE
ous, usually reddish gray, more or less reticulated with
black.
The food-plants are nettle and hop.
United States generally.
64. PyramEIs Hunrera, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.25 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, a little tawny at base, the
apical portion of fore wings black, this continued as a
border to the posterior angle. The apical black contains
an oblique fulvous bar beyond the cell, and the submar-
ginal white dots of P. Atalanta, the first two blended,
and one farther down in the fulvous. Besides this there
are five triangular black marks, two of which are in the
cell. The border of both wings consists of three more
or less distinct lines, the inner on the hind wings in the
form of a shade. The apical portion of the border
on the fore wings is washed with lilac; and there is a
eray-blue bar at the anal angle. Hind wings have a
submarginal row of five black spots, the second and
fifth pupilled with blue. Costa black.
The under side of fore wings is red, except the apical
portion, which is marked as above. Hind wings marbled
with brownish black and white, with two large ocelli.
The outer border is four black lines, with violet between
the two inner.
The mature larva is 1.25 inches long, the body velvety
black, between the joints four transverse lines of pale
yellow alternating with narrow black lines. On each
joint there are seven dark brown tubercles, from which
arise short, branching, black spines. On joints 6 to 12
in the subdorsal region are large shining white spots.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 199
Joint 2 is short, has but little black, and lacks the
tubercles and spines. Head bilobed, black, sparsely
clothed with gray hairs. Between joints 12 and 13 isa
large whitish patch crossed by a fine black line. Below
the stigmata are two yellow lines, the lower interrupted,
both spotted with black.
The chrysalis is yellowish, moderately angular ; head-
ease bifid, slightly projecting, and edged with brown
above; thoracic projection forming an obtuse angle ;
dorsal spines minute, of nearly uniform size, brown-
tipped ; segments with rows of brown dots, and also of
brownish markings.
The food-plants are Gnaphaliwm polycephalum, Arte-
misia Ludoviciana, and probably other allied species.
United States generally.
65. Pyramers Carpul, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 1.75 to 2.5 inches.
Upper surface reddish fulvous, the fore wings marked
as in P. Humtera, except that the bar in the apical black
portion of the fore wings is white instead of fulvous, and
the white submarginal dot in the fulvous is absent, as
is also the violet apical shade. The hind wings have the
submarginal black spots, with a very little blue in the
fourth and fifth, and the border is broken.
The under side is much as it is in P. Huntera, but
there are five ocelli on the hind wings instead of two,
and they are smaller.
The mature larva is 1.5 inches long, cylindrical, rather
robust. The general color of the substigmatal region, as
well as that of the middle part of each joint, and the greater
part of the thoracic joints, is a delicate lilac. Between the
200 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
joints are two lines of bright yellow, the posterior slightly
double, the space between the yellow lines occupied by
two narrow black lines and one white line, all the light
lines between the thoracic joints being white. There are
seven rows of tubercles, from which arise branching spines,
the dorsal and lowest lateral tubercles white, the rest red-
| dish brown. ‘The spines are whitish yellow, the tips of
| the branches black. Joints 3 and 4 have only four spines
each. The dorsum has a double, broken yellow line, the
dashes of which it is composed extending from the an-
terior transverse yellow line to the tubercle on the centre
of the joint. There is also a yellow dash in front of
each of the brown tubercles ; all the yellow being rather
dark. Below the stigmata, between the lower tubercles,
is a ight lemon-yellow line. Stigmata black, with some
black spots over the body. Head black.
This butterfly is distributed over the United States
generally, and is known by the common name of Thistle
Butterfly. Jt is double-brooded, and hibernates in the
butterfly state. The larvee feed on thistle, burdock,
sunflower, and hollyhock.
66. JUNONIA CaentA, Hiib.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.5 inches.
Upper surface dark olive-brown, each wing with two
eye-spots, a large and a small one, the large ones the
posterior of the fore wings and the anterior of the hind
wings, the small ones on the fore wings sometimes ‘ob-
scure. There is an oblique whitish band beyond the
cell of the fore wings, the lower part expanding so as
more or less to enclose the eye-spot. There are two
fulvous bars in the cell, and there is a little fulvous
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 201
outside the large eye-spot, and a subterminal fulvous
border to the hind wings not reaching either margin.
The border to both wings consists of three somewhat
erenate black lines, the ground color between a little
pale. Sometimes the fore wings have a little subapical
white, and a subterminal fulvous bar outside the small
ocellus.
Under side variable, ranging from reddish brown and
brownish fawn to brownish buff; these colors being found
on the hind wings and the apex of the fore wings, with
Fia. 56.
Junonia Coenia (natural size).
brown wavy lines of varying shade. The eye-spots of the
fore wings are as above, but both of those on the hind
wings are small, with two points between them and one
near the costa. The fore wings have the white band and
three fulvous bars in the cell.
The mature larva is black, the dorsum sprinkled with
fine white specks, with two somewhat broken lines of
creamy white on each side, the lower side of the joints
back of jomt 4 and a ring back of the head dull ochre.
f
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202 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
On each joint there is a transverse row of tubercles tipped
with spines, the two stigmatal on each side dull ochre,
the rest black.
The chrysalis is like that of P. Cardui and P. Hun-
tera, but blackish varied with whitish, without metallic
spots.
The larve feed on species of Gerardia, plantain, and
snapdragon, and are to be found in the Middle and
Southern States to the Pacific; occasionally in Massa-
chusetts and Maine.
67. ANARTIA JATROPH®A, Linn.
Expanse of wings 2 inches.
Color gray, with a livid tint, two round black spots
to each wing, those on the hind wings in the position of
the eye-spots of J. Conia, but lacking the apical one on
the fore wings, slightly pupilled. Outer border consists
of three dull-brownish crenate lines, the outer on the
edge of the wing. Wings crossed by several wavy lines
the same color as the border, five of these being bars in
the cell of the fore wings and at its end, with several
shades along the costal region.
Under side paler, the spots and transverse marks as
above, the outer margin washed with brown. Antenna
black, the club ferruginous.
This species is found only in Florida and Texas.
68. EKuntica Monia, Cram.
Expanse of wings 1.6 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, with a decided purple re-
flection. Across the apical portion of the fore wings are
two oblique rows of whitish spots, the one across the end
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 203
of the cell consisting of three spots, the outer or sub-
upical of two. Fringes fuscous gray.
Under side brownish drab, the white spots repeated,
and the space about these blackish brown. The hind
wings are crossed by three brown, tortuous lines, Be-
tween the middle and the outer are six obscure brownish
eye-spots, some black in the centre, some white, in two
sets of three each.
Florida and Texas.
69. TimeTES PeTreEus, Cram.
Expanse of wings 3 inches.
Upper surface bright fulvous red, costal edge of fore
wings black, more prominent towards the apex. Both
wings are crossed by three black lines, which are nearly
parallel to the outer margin. On the hind wings thie
outer line is double, expanded on the costa, where the
included space is white. The hind wings have a black
border which sends a shade on the posterior angle of the
fore wings and is shaded inward with brownish black
about the anal angle. On the inner edge of the border
is an ocellus at the end of the outer transverse black
line, another elongate one at the anal angle, and a trace
of a third farther towards the apex. Hind wings ending
in a tail .6 of an inch long, and the anal angle prolonged
into another .2 of an inch, the latter with some gray-blue
and purple scales. Apex of fore wings produced, the
angle below the apex prominent.
Under side brown, with a violet reflection, the lines
darker brown, ashy at the anal angle. Body fulvous
above, white beneath.
Indian River, Florida.
IOA THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
70. VICTORINA STENELES, Linn.
Expanse of wings 3.3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dull black, marked by grass-
green spots or markings. These consist of a row or
band extending obliquely across the middle of the fore
wings and the base of the hind wings, and a subterminal
row common to both wings. The first row occupies about
Fia. 57.
Victorina Steneles, male (natural size).
the middle third of the fore wing and is broken up into
oblong spots, but on the hind wing it 1s continuous, there
being but little black between this and the base. Tig.
57 shows how this band is broken up into spots, con-
sisting of two beyond the cell; then an interspace with-
out a spot; the third in the upper median space, con-
tinued into the cell by a blunt conical spot, the vein
separating them, and both rounded inwardly ; the fourth
4
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 205
occupies the lower two-thirds of the lower median inter-
space, somewhat boot-shaped, the foot extending into the
cell; the band is continued to the hind margin by a
single nearly quadrate patch, with the brownish subme-
dian vein crossing it. This band continues across the
hind wing to the inner margin, crossed by the brownish
veins. The outer row consists of small spots between
the veins, nearly round, the first four on the fore wings
and the last two on the hind wings inconspicuous, the
others varying in diameter from one-third to nearly the
whole distance between the veins. Besides these bands
or rows of spots there are two small patches along the
costa, somewhat paler than the others. The black be-
tween the rows has a shade of drab across it, more prom-
inent on the hind wings, it being orange-tinted near the
anal angle.
Under side with the green repeated but much enlarged,
so as to cover most of the under surface ; the inner band
bordered on each side on the hind wings and partially on
the fore wings with orange, the outer band tinted on the
inside with orange and brown. Ground color of the
outer part yellowish drab, of the basal part almost white,
the two shading into each other.
Fore wings considerably falcate, the apex slightly pro-
duced, the outer margin dentate; the hind wings more
strongly dentate, with a tail near the middle .2 of an inch
long ; the excavation in margins of both wings white.
Female.—This resembles the male closely, but differs
in the third spot of the median band not being accom-
panied by a spot in the cell, and in the under side having
more orange.
Florida, Cuba, Mexico, Central America to Brazil.
18
206 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
71. DrapEMA Misrippus, Linn.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Male.—Wings dark chocolate color, almost black,
but when held against the light in a certain direction dis-
play a bluish-purple tint. The fore wings have a large
white oval spot in the middle, and another smaller ob-
long white spot at the tips. The hind wings havea
white spot larger than in the fore wings: on the edges
of all these spots the purple color is very conspicuous.
Female.—Upper surface fulvous ; fore wings with the
costal and outer borders black, the latter contaming two
rows of pale blue spots, not very distinct, near posterior
angle; a white patch near apex, and a blackish shade
cloud obliquely across the wing at the end of the cell;
veins in outer portion of wing black. Hind wings with
the border the same as on the fore wings, the costal in-
terrupted near the apex. Fringes black, white in the
intervenular depressions.
The food-plant is purslane.
Indian River, Florida.
72. Limenrris Ursuna, Fab.
Expanse of wings 3 inches.
Upper surface black tinged with bluish or greenish,
and a little with fulvous at the apex of the fore wings.
Along the outer margin are two rows of blue or green
spots, the outer in the form of crescents, the inner
lunules.
Under side brownish black, the outer border repeated,
preceded by a row of black and a row of fulvous spots,
some of the latter obsolete near the posterior angle.
EASTERN UNITED STATES.
There are two fulvous spots in the cell of the fore wings,
three near the base of the hind wings, and some on the
costa of both wings near the base.
The larva, according to Harris, is like that of L. Di-
sippus in form, of a brownish color, more or less varie-
gated with white on the sides, and with green above, and,
Fia. 58.
Limenitis Ursula (natural size).
like that of Disippus, has two long barbed brown horns
on the second (third?) segment.
The chrysalis is not to be distinguished from that of
Disippus in form and color, and the butterfly emerges
from it in eleven days after the insect has entered this
state.
The food-plants are willow, wild gooseberry, wild
cherry, apple, plum, hawthorn, oak, Vaccinium stami-
neum, and Carpinus Americana.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Kansas.
208 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
73. LIMENITIS ARTHEMIS, Drury.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Upper surface black, a white band crossing both wings,
that on the fore wings curving from the middle of the
costa to near the posterior angle, from which place it is
continued across the hind wings to above the anal angle.
The fore wings have a white subapical spot and two
marginal rows of faint green lunules. The hind wings
have the lunules more distinct, and inside them a row of
fulvous spots.
The under side is fulvous brown, marked as in L. Ur-
sula, except that in this the white band of the upper
surface is repeated.
This is a dimorphic species, the two forms at first
supposed to be distinct species, but Mr. Edwards has
reared both forms from eggs deposited by the same
female, which proves them to be only forms of the same
species. The above description applies to the one known
as dimorphic form Lamina, Fab. The other, dimorphic
form PRosERPINA, Edw., may be known by the white
band of the fore wings being obsolete on its anterior
half, or by there being at most only a whitish stripe oc-
cupying some part of the position of the band on the
other form.
The egg is grayish green, dome-shaped, with the whole
surface covered with six-sided reticulations, from each
angle of which arises a short, tapering, white spine.
The young larva hatches from this in from seven to
nine days. It is yellowish brown, covered with fine
tubercles, each supporting a fine club-shaped hair. The
young larva is said to eat away the leaf on both sides of
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 209
the midrib, and when at rest is to be found on this
stripped portion.
After the first moult the color is blackish brown, with
a light brown patch on joint 8, covering the dorsum and
part of the sides. On all the joints back of the second
there is a broad ridge, in most cases followed by two
narrow ones; the broad one on joint 3 elevated and
bearing two tawny conical processes, crowned by a clus-
ter of little fleshy knobs. Besides these there are other
lower processes along the back. After the second moult
the dorsal patch becomes pale buff; and extends partly
over joints 7 and 9.
Five days after this moult each larva begins to make
its hibernaculum, or case in which to hibernate, and three
days later they close themselves in these cases, where they
remain till the following spring. After they emerge from
the hibernaculi they feed about two days and moult the
third time, when they are red-brown speckled and mottled
with black, with the processes ferruginous. Joints 2 to 4
are yellowish inclining to buff. After the fourth moult
the color remains about the same.
The mature larva is 1.2 inches long; the red color
two days after the fourth moult begins to change to
green, olive, and partly a light and deep green; the
dorsal patch to sordid buff, dull red buff, or whitish ; the
anterior segments to gray or whitish. The head changes
from red to blue, and becomes dark drab.
The chrysalis is .9 of an inch long, subcylindrical,
the abdomen somewhat compressed laterally and termi-
nating rather abruptly; the general shape much like
that of L. Disippus. The color of the wing-cases and
anterior parts silvery gray, the former tinged with brown
° e*
210 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
or pale black along their hind margins; the wing-cases
varying somewhat in shade. Dorsal side of abdomen
yellow-white, gray towards extremity ; ventral side al-
most wholly gray and brown; dorsal appendage dark
smoky brown, with silvery corrugations before and after
it. The butterfly emerges from the chrysalis from June
to July. 3
The food-plants are willow, aspen, basswood, and
probably thorn.
Northern United States.
74, LImMENITIS Disippus, Godt.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Upper surface fulvous, the lines black ; on the fore
wings a black triangular patch, containing three white
Fia. 59.
Limenitis Disippus,—right wings the under side (natural size).
spots on the costa beyond the cell, continued to the pos-
terior angle in a narrow line. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
broader than high, with a slight angular depression at the
summit ; at each vertex a straight, round, divergent horn,
thick at base, pointed at top. Color of head and horns
blackish brown. It moults the first time in from six te
nine days, when it is a little thicker in the middle, the
tails more slender and brown-tipped. Each joint is
several times creased, and on the summit of each ridge
is a row of white tubercles with white hairs. Color
dark green, banded and striped longitudinally with white.
Head higher, brown, green-tinted in front.
Moults the second time in from five to ten days, when
it is .84 of an inch long; shaped and striped as before.
Moulting again in from five to eight days, the length
is .59 of an inch. The color is reddish buff, the summer
and fall larvee with a dorsal band of dark brown; the
subdorsal stripe reduced to a broken dark brown line,
distinct only at the extreme hinder end of each segment
from 3 to 10; in the middle of each side a dark
brown stripe, at the base a rounded ridge, buff-colored,
and below this a brown line. Head green in front, with
brown stripes, back part and horns gray-brown. The
spring larvee after the third moult are bright yellow-
green striped with dark green, tails pink-tipped. They
remain in this stage from five to six days.
The chrysalis is .52 of an inch long, cylindrical,
thickest through joints 6 and 7, shaped much as in the
preceding species. The color of the dorsum and entire
abdomen of the summer and fall broods is sordid yellow-
buff, the wing-, antennee-, and palpi-cases more yellow,
the surface finely streaked with brown. In the spring
brood the color is blue-green, the dorsum streaked ir-
regularly with whitish green.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 237 "i
There are three broods of the larvee in a season, each
moulting only three times in coming to maturity.
West Virginia to Gulf of Mexico, Southern [linois.
84. NEONYMPHA AREOLATUS, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface wood-brown, somewhat grayish, the
border-lines faint, and without eye-spots.
Under side scarcely paler than above, but sprinkled
with buff scales. Fore wings with three small dark
brown spots narrowly circled with yellow and containing
a few silvery scales. Hind wings with five various-
shaped elongate spots, the long diameter with the length
of the wing, each with bluish metallic scales, sometimes
in a bunch, sometimes a buff centre with metallic points
around it; each spot circled with buff. There is a
common, dull, dark yellow line a little in front of the
middle of the wings, another just touches the end of the
cell, and a third is submarginal, the last two nearly meet-
ing at their ends on each wing, forming a broad band
without change of ground color, in which the ocelli are
placed; the margin of the wing of the same color. On
the fore wings these lines are not so distinct as on the
hind wings.
The eggs are nearly globular, smooth, but under s
high magnifying power are seen to be thickly covered
with shallow depressions. Color pale green.
The young larva, which hatches in six days, is eylindri-
cal, the last joint bluntly forked. Color delicate green.
Over the body are many white hairs, and among these
are black clubbed hairs in longitudinal rows. Head
about twice as wide as any joint, a little depressed at the
238 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
top, upon each vertex a short semiovoid appendage
tipped with two divergent black hairs; color black.
Moults after eight days.
After the first moult the body is a little arched ; tails
longer, faintly red. Color of body green, surface thickly
covered with fine yellowish tubercular points; the back
of the head and triangle over the mandibles green, the
rest red-brown. It is now .22 of an inch long. It moults
again in nine days, with a length of .3 of an inch, but
the color does not change. It moults three times in
coming to maturity.
The mature larva is from 1.1 to 1.3 inches long,
joints 3 and 4 creased and divided into five ridges, the
rest into six ; surface thickly covered with small sharp
tubercles ; tails reddish, slender. Head reddish, on each
vertex a little conical process.
The chrysalis is from .48 to .54 of an inch long. The
color is green, the edges of the carina, wing-cases, and
top of head-case cream color; some points and patches
of whitish. The butterfly emerges from this in about
ten days.
The food-plants are grasses, mostly of the coarser
kinds. (See Addenda.)
Gulf States; occasional in New Jersey.
85. NEONYMPHA EuryrTris, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.75 inches.
Upper surface brownish black or wood-brown ; neai
the outer margin of each wing two eye-spots circled with
yellow, the small pupils often double. The anterior
ocellus of the hind wings is often obsolete, and the pos-
terior is often supplemented by a small one at the anal
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 239
angle. There are three dark lines forming the outer
border,—one on the edge and two a little within the
edge ; and in some specimens the ocelli are in a band
a little paler than the ground color.
The under side is drab-gray, both wings crossed by two
rusty lines ; the ocelli more prominent than above, each
of the ocelli of the hind wings repeated, with the smaller
one at the end of the series, and silver traces of two more
between ; the triple terminal lines as above.
The egg is of a yellowish-green color, nearly round,
covered with fine irregularly hexagonal reticulations.
The young larva hatches from this in eight days. It
is .08 of an inch long, cylindrical, tapering each way
from the middle, the last joint ending in two short tails,
with fine white hairs on the body. Color pinkish white,
marked longitudinally by seven crimson lines. Head
subglobose, nearly twice as broad as any other segment,
depressed slightly at the top, with a small conical process
from each vertex ; color dark brown.
In seven days it passes the first moult, when it is .16 of
an inch long, and changes to drab, of either a green or a
red tint, with five dull red stripes, the whole surface finely
but roughly tuberculated, each tubercle emitting a short
hair. Color of head yellowish finely mottled with red. In
six days it moults the second time, when it is .24 of an
inch long, shaped as before, with a fleshy ridge at the »
feet. Color dull ochrey yellow, striped with seven brown
stripes ; head yellow marked with brown. It feeds four-
teen days before moulting the third time, when it is .44
of an inch long. The color is the same marked with
reddish, the stripes subobsolete. It is thirty days before
it moults the fourth and last time.
240 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
The mature larva is 1 inch long, flat at base, the
dorsum rounded, the last joint forked. Color of dorsum
yellow-brown, the sides darker; a dorsal brown band,
and on each side of this, from joint 4 to joint 11, is a
series of dark brown patches. The subdorsal area is sep-
arated from the dorsal by two wavy parallel lines, the
upper dark, the lower yellowish, and on the side of
cach joint from 5 to 11 there is an oblique dark stripe.
Basal ridge yellowish, the tails tipped with red. Head
yellow-brown, with a small conical process on each ver-
tex. The whole surface of the body is covered with
sharp tubercles of irregular size, each emitting a short
brown hair.
The chrysalis is .5 of an inch long, shaped as Sosybius ;
cylindrical ; the abdomen stout, and larger than the an-
terior portion. Color pale yellow-brown, the wing-cases
and anterior parts streaked with fine, abbreviated brown
lines ; brown spots on the wing-cases, the abdomen with
two brown stripes and two rows of brown dots. The
butterfly emerges in eleven days.
There are probably two broods in a season, the last
brood of larve passing the winter in a torpid state.
They feed upon grass, the eggs being deposited singly
upon the blades. They are very sluggish at all times,
and frequently pass days without eating.
' Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Nebraska.
86. NEONYMPHA SosyBius, Fab.
Expanse of wings 1.35 inches.
Upper surface wood-brown, somewhat grayish, the
border-lines faint, and both wings without ocelli.
Under side a little paler than the upper, two brown lines
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 241
crossing the wings, between which is a brown dash at the
end of the cell of each wing; border-lines three, the
inner crenate. Near the outer end of the fore wings,
below the costa, is a black eye-spot annulate with yellow
and pupilled with pale blue; there is also a small one be-
tween this and the costa, and there are traces of three more
towards the hind margin. The hind wings have two
distinct ocelli, with a small one before the first, another
after the second, and traces of two more, with silver,
between the two.
The egg is semiovoid, the base flattened, and the
sides at base rounded; the surface under a low power
appears smooth, but under a high magnifying power it
is seen to be covered with shallow thimble-like depres-
sions. Color greenish white.
In four days a larva .09 of an inch long hatches
from this. The shape is cylindrical, marked by five
or six longitudinal tuberculated ridges, each tubercle
emitting a clubbed white hair. Color white. Head
much larger than the second joint, bilobed, the vertices
without processes, black.
After six days it moults the first time and is .2 of
an inch long, cylindrical, tapering both ways from the
middle, the last joint forked. The color is light green,
the tubercles white, with three green stripes; legs and
under side green. After seven days it moults the second
time, the color being blue-green, the head yellow-green.
Tn six days it moults the third time, being then .42 of
an inch long, stout; color pale green, with the tubercles
white, head emerald-green. It moults four times in
coming to maturity.
The mature larva is .76 of an inch long, cylindrical,
L q 21
249 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
thickest in the middle, the last joint ending in divergent
tails. The color is emerald-green, much covered with fine
yellow tubercles placed on ridges, caused by the creasing
of the segments, and with larger tubercles placed in
longitudinal rows, each emitting a white hair. Head
round, broader than high, bilobed, covered with yellow,
conical, fine points.
The chrysalis is like that of NV. Hurytris. The color
is green, on the abdomen yellow-green; on each side
of dorsum of abdomen is a small ridge, and on each
side of this are three black dots placed in pairs. On
each side below the wing-cases is a brown stripe; keel of
mesonotum brown, with brown mottlings on the wing-
cases. ‘The imago emerges in thirteen days.
The eggs are deposited on grass, and there are two
broods in a season. ‘The butterfly is found with Gemma
and Hurytris within the edge of the forest, or, if in the
open country, always near timber.
Middle and Southern States, Mississippi Valley.
87. Satyrus PEGALA, Fab.
Expanse of wings 2.5 inches.
Upper surface blackish brown, a broad buff band on
the outer part of the fore wings, not reaching either
margin, and containing a single pupilled ocellus on its
anterior end. In some female specimens another ocellus
is found on the posterior end of the band, but more often
the second ocellus is represented in both sexes by a black
dot or a small round spot. Near the anal angle of the
hind wings is a single black ocellus.
Under side brownish gray, both wings crossed by
many abbreviated brown lines. The buff band and
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 243
ocelli of the fore wings repeated, the hind wings with six
ocelli in two sets of three each.
The food-plant is coarse wild grass.
Gulf States; occasional in New Jersey on the coast ;
Mount Holly, N. J.
88. Saryrus ALOPE, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.75 to 2.5 inches.
There are two dimorphic forms and five varieties and
sub-varieties of this species, being mostly local instead of
seasonal. It occurs from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico,
and from the Atlantic to the Pacific: in different parts
of this region the different forms breed true to their
type, but on the border-land between these different local-
ities there are numerous intergrades connecting them
all. The principal form found in the Atlantic States
from North Carolina to New York is Alope; the form
Nephele in its typical markings occurs in Canada, with
intergrades in New England and other bordering territory;
Maritima occurs on Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket
Islands ; Texana is found in Texas; the one found from
Illinois to the Rocky Mountains is Olympus; and the
Pacific slope is represented by Bodpis and Incana. The
following descriptions of such forms as occur in the
Eastern United States, as well as of the preparatory
stages, are abbreviated from Edwards’s “‘ Butterflies of
North America.”
Dimorphic form, ALOPE, Fab.—Male.—Upper sur-
face blackish brown, darkest over the basal area; outer
margin consisting of two fine parallel lines, a little
within which is a black stripe. The fore wings have
DA4 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
a transverse yellow band beyond the cell, sometimes
a little ochraceous, and often more or less encroached
upon by the brown ground. On this area are two ocelli,
round, black, of variable size, and with or without a
central point, which is white with blue scales. Be-
hind the cell is a blackish indistinct sexuai dash in the
males. The hind wings have a small ccellus in a yellow
ring near the anal angle (often wanting).
Under side yellow-brown ; the band enlarged and of
a paler color ; the ocelli repeated, enlarged ; the marginal
lines distinct ; the brown area covered with abbreviated
darker streaks, which over the base and disks form some-
what concentric broken rings, limited without by a
common dark stripe. On the fore wings this stripe
borders on the yellow band; on the hind wings it is
irregularly sinuous from margin to margin, throwing
out a rounded prominence against the cell, followed by
a rounded sinus on the median interspace. Across the
middle of the cell, and below it, a dark stripe; the extra
discal area less streaked. The ocelli vary from none to
six, the full number being most often present, disposed
in two groups of three, the middle one of each group
the largest; all black, rounded, in narrow yellow
rings, and with white dots in the centre edged by blue
scales.
Female.—This differs from the male in the band being
generally broader, clearer, and well defined on beth edges,
the ocelli well developed, with occasionally additiona!
black points on the hind wings corresponding to the ocelli
on the under side. A larger percentage than of the
males have no ocelli on the under side of the hind wings.
New York to North Carolina.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 245
Var. Maririma, Edw.--This form is of small size,
dark color, and the band on the fore wings reddish
yellow.
Martha’s Vineyard, Long Island, Eastern New Jersey.
Dimorphic form, NEPHELE, Kirby.—Male.—Upper
surface blackish brown, the marginal lines and stripe
as in Alope, but often obsolete. The fore wings have
two small black ocelli, placed as in Alope, without ring
or band, but in some examples a faint yellowish shade
represents the ring ; sometimes a white dot in each ocellus,
but usually the lower one is blind. Hind wings with
or without ocellus, but if present it is blind and without
ring.
Under side dark yellow-brown, faintly streaked as in
Alope, but with less distinctness, and in many examples
the discal stripe is nearly or quite obsolete, especially on
the hind wings. The ocelli of the fore wings are en-
larged, the rings distinct but not clear yellow, being
dusky, or more or less obscured. The hind wings have
small ocelli in fine russet rings, with central white dots
and a few bluish scales ; the number varies from none to
six, but the largest proportion have six, and very few
have less than three.
Female.—This has the upper side hghter and more
brown ; the area which in Alope is occupied by the band
is of a slightly paler shade than the rest of the wing.
The ocelli are large, with white centres and blue scales,
and either without rings or imperfectly ringed with
dusky yellow, the hind wings either with or without an
ocellus. The under side is paler, the area of the band a
little lighter than elsewhere, the rings sometimes quite
21*
DAG THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
bright, but oftener dull or obscure yellow. The ocelli
of the hind wings rarely six, more often less than three,
sometimes none.
New England, New York.
Var. OLympus, Edw.—This equals in size the typical
form. The males are almost black. The ocelli are very
small and without rings, but in some examples there is
a faint russet or yellowish tint about them, and perhaps
on the space between them. On the under side the rings
-are russet or ochraceous on both wings, and there is
a perceptible bronzy reflection on the under side of the
hind wings, especially in the males.
Illinois to the Rocky Mountains.
The egg is conoidal, rounded at base and somewhat
flattened, truncated, the sides slightly convex; marked
by about eighteen vertical ridges, crossed by numerous
fine low ridges; summit rounded, covered with shallow
cells. Color lemon-yellow. It hatches in from fourteen
to twenty-eight days.
The young larva is .1 of an inch long, the head
considerably larger than the other segments. ‘The body
is carnation, with seven crimson longitudinal lines, the
head light lemon-yellow specked with brown ; sparsely
hairy. On the body there are six rows of long white
bristles, a part of which point forward and a part back-
ward.
The larvee become lethargic soon after leaving the eggs,
and thus hibernate. As soonas they begin to feed in the
spring the color changes to pale green with the lines red,
but later the ground color becomes deep green and the
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 247
stripes darker green. After the first moult the larva is
.16 of an inch long, cylindrical, the anterior part the
thickest, the body ending in two conical tails covered
with tubercles and bristles. Each joint is creased, the
ridges bearing many tubercles with long white hairs.
Color pale green, with seven green stripes, basal ridge
pale yellow, tails reddish. After twenty-three days it
moults the second time, when it is much as before.
Length .3 of an inch, the color yellowish green, with the
basal side yellow, and the stripes dark green. In four-
teen days it passes the third moult, the length being
then .44 of an inch. It moults four times before reach-
ing maturity.
The mature larva is 1.265 inches long, cylindrical,
robust, thickest in the middle, with two sharp, conical,
divergent tails. Each joint is crossed by five or six
creases, the ridges covered with fine white papille, each
supporting a long or short white hair, if long appressed
to the surface. Color yellow-green, varying, on some
the dorsum more yellow; a dorsal green stripe and a
basal yellow one, with sometimes a faint yellow lateral
ine. Head vivid green. It takes fourteen days to pass
from the third to the fourth moult, and
twenty-eight days more to the time when
the larva ceases feeding and pupates.
The chrysalis is a little more than half an
inch long, cylindrical, the abdomen conical,
Inve VAls
the wing-cases slightly raised at the mar- a
gins; head-case short, roundly excavated at
the sides, the top narrow. The male is one
shade of either yellow-green or deep green, covered with
smooth specks and patches of lighter color, with several
S. Alope, pupa.
248 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
rs)
cream-colored lines. The female has three longitudinal
yellowish bands. The butterfly emerges in fourteen
days.
The larva feeds on meadow-grass, and the butterfly is
found mostly in the open fields, differing in both par-
ticulars from Pegala.
89. CH1onoBus JuTra, Hib.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.25 inches.
Male.—Upper surface wood-brown or grayish brown ,
the fore wings with an oblique shade below the cell, and
with a subterminal row of six yellowish spots, the first,
third, and sixth small, with or without black central
points, the others with each a round black spot. Hind
wings with four yellowish patches more or less shading
into the ground color, the anal one with a small black
spot, and traces of one in the patch next to this.
Under side of the fore wings much as in C. Semidea.
Color about as above, crossed by a great number of ab-
breviated dark brown lines, obscure on the fore wings,
except along the costa and near the apex, where the
brown is more distinct and alternate with gray. About
five of the yellowish patches are visible, only two of
them distinct, and these have round black spots pupilled
with white. The hind wings are much darker than the
fore wings, and the dark marks are not distinctly defined ;
sprinkled with white scales over the basal third, and an
irregular band of these beyond the cell and along the
outer margin; a submarginal row of intervenular white
points.
Female.—Upper surface of fore wings as in the male,
only the yellowish patches are expanded and somewhat
EASTERN UNITED STATES. I49
blended. On the hind wings, instead of the subter-
minal row there is a broad terminal suffusion of yellow-
ish and brown, with mere traces of an anal spot.
Under surface as in the males, except that the hind
wings are lighter, the dark brown lines more clearly de-
fined and alternating with grayish and yellowish brown,
the bands and points of white as in the male.
This species occurs in the northern parts of both
Europe and America, but Orono, Maine, is the only
place where it has been found in the United States.
The larva is unknown, but it is probable that it feeds
on Carex.
90. CHIONOBUS SEMIDEA, Say.
Expanse of wings 1.9 inches.
Upper surface clear wood-brown, the darker mark-
ings of the under side showing through a little; costa
spotted with white, dark brown,
and pale gray-brown. Fringes
pale whitish towards the apex,
widely cut with brown at the
ends of the veins.
Under side about the same
color as above, the fore wings
traversed by a great many ab-
breviated lines, which are obscure
dark brown, except on the costa
and apical portion, where the
marks are dark umber-brown Chionobus Semidea, under side,
alternating with white. The
marks are somewhat gathered into bands just beyond
the cell. Hind wings much as the fore wings, only that
250 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the dark lines are all clear dark brown, inclined to be
gathered into bands through the cell and beyond it; the
alternating light spots before the first and beyond the
last are white or whitish, making two irregular whitish
bands, with more sprinkling of white along the veins
beyond the outer whitish band. Antenne annulate with
brown and white, the knob fulvous.
The larva is said to feed on Carex rigida.
White Mountains, N.H.
SUBFAMILY LIBYTHEIN &.
The insects of the one genus belonging to this sub-
family are readily known by their long, beak-lke, por-
rect palpi, and by the males having four feet adapted for
walking, while the females have six.
91. LisyrHeA BACHMANNTI, Kiril.
Expanse of wings 1.8 inches.
This species is readily known by the beak-like palpi,
which are about three times as long as the head, and the
quadrate apex to the fore wings. The upper surface is
brownish black on the fore wings ; the lower half of the
cell, and the space below that, about twice as large, are
fulvous, with a patch of the same at the end of the cell
of the hind wings. The fore wings have a white ante-
apical patch, at the end of the cell an oblique white bar,
with a quadrate white spot beyond its posterior end.
The under side is brown, the fulvous area enlarged,
the hind wings and tips of the fore wings lilac-tinted,
the white spots repeated. The under side of the male is
clouded with eretaceous.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 951
The egg is of a pale green color, in shape an oblate
spheroid, somewhat pointed at the base, and a little
truncated and depressed at the summit, marked by eigh-
teen or twenty longitudinal ribs, crossed by corrugations.
This hatches in about four days.
The young larva is .04 of an inch in length, cylin-
drical, each joint with four transverse creases; covered
with fine short down. Color green, semi-translucent.
Head twice as broad as joint 2; obovoid ; color yellow-
brown.
After the first moult, which takes place in two days,
the length is .08 or .09 of an inch. In two days more
it passes the second moult, and the length is .12 of an
inch. Upper side dark green, a faint shade of yellow
over and along the basal ridge, rather macular. In two
days more it passes the third moult, when the length is
from .26 to .28 of an inch. The color is dull green,
yellowish along and over the basal ridge, specked with
white or yellow-white as before this moult. In two
days more it passes to the fourth moult.
The mature larva is from .7 to .9 of an inch long,
eylindrical, thickened at joints 3 and 4, the dorsum
of the last segment abruptly curved down to the end.
Color dark green, the lower side, and also the feet and
legs, pale green. It is creased as in the preceding stages,
and on the ridges are pale or whitish yellow points.
Along the sides is a supra-stigmatal stripe, above which
the color is yellowish for a little way, also a narrow
dorsal line, sometimes a subdorsal one. Head ovoid,
smooth, green.
The chrysalis is half an inch long, compressed ; head-
ease square, mesonotal process rounded. Color blue-
252 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
green, a faint yellow dorsal line from the last joint t
the middle, where it forks, sending a branch over each
wing-cover to the tip of the head-case, where they meet ;
a lateral abdominal yellow line. The abdomen marked
with many white tubercles.
This butterfly differs from most others in that the
males have only four feet developed for walking, while
the females have all six fully developed. The eggs are
deposited in the developing ends of twigs of Celtis
occidentalis on the partially-developed leaves, only one
to a leaf. The time for reaching maturity after the
fourth moult is four days, and the pupal period is from
five to seven days.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Texas, Arizona.
FAMILY ERYCINID.
This family is represented by small or medium-sized
butterflies, with the same arrangement of feet as the last
subfamily of the Nymphalide, or the males with four
feet and the females with six; but they may readily be
known from the Libytheinse by the palpi, which are
short or only of moderate length. Little is known of the
preparatory stages, but, according to Mr. H. W. Bates,
“the metamorphoses are variable, some genera resem-
bling the Nymphalide, in the chrysalis being suspended
by the tail, and others the Lyceenide, in being recumbent
and girt with a silken thread. ‘Too little is known of
the caterpillars to enable us to say whether they offer
any peculiarity.” The preparatory stages offer good
bases of classification, often showing the relation one
group bears to another even when the imagines do not
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 253
show this so clearly. The feet indicate that this family
should follow Nymphalide, while the preparatory stages
of Lemonias Nais show that they should come next to
the Lycznidz on the other side. Nearly all the species
are found in America, mostly in the tropics.
SUBFAMILY ERYCININ A.
92. CALEPHELIS Cantus, Linn.
Expanse of wings .8 of an inch.
Upper surface ferruginous, the wings crossed by four
or five more or less sinuous blackish lines, almost separa-
ble into spots. Beyond these are two lines of shining
black-lead color, the inner sinuous; a row of black
points between them.
Under side yellow fulvous, the lines and spots more
distinct. Fringes blackish.
Southern States.
93. CALEPHELIS BorEALIS, Gr.—Rob.
Expanse of wings from 1 to 1.2 inches.
Upper surface umber-brown, shaded a little with red-
dish, both wings with four transverse sinuous lines of
dark brown, the space along the outer row darker-shaded ,
near the outer margin two metallic lead-colored lines,
with a row of dots between, the inner line sinuous.
Outer margin reddish.
Under side yellowish orange, with the rows and spots
of the upper surface repeated, but with less distinctness,
except the metallic lead lines.
This species has been found in New York, New Jersey,
West Virginia, Michigan, and Illinois.
22
t |
: | 5 it
254 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
94. HKumentaA ATALA, Poey.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.8 inches.
Male.—Upper surface black, the fore wings washed
with green three-fourths the distance from the base to
the apex. Hind wings with a little green on each side
of the median vein, and with a broad border of inter-
venular blue-green lunules.
Under side black ; the fore wings without marks; the
hind wings with three rows of small blue-green spots,
the outer two parallel with the outer margin, the inner
sinuous, just beyond the cell. On the inner margin is
a large, somewhat oblong, reddish-orange patch, dentate
towards the base, extending from the middle of the
margin. to near the base. Fringes black.
Body black; abdomen, except a portion of the base
above, orange.
Female.—This differs from the male in haying the
green scales sprinkled throughout the discal cell of the
fore wings and sometimes below this; the border lunules
of the hind wings slightly yellowish green; the spots
on the under side yellowish green ; and the apex above
and below bluish ; fringe white.
Florida. (See Addenda.)
FAMILY LYCANIDZE.
These are mostly small butterflies, having six feet
xdapted for walking. The larvee are more or less oblong-
oval or oval, with the head retractile into the second
segment, and a dorsal tuberculous ridge. The chrysalis
is short, attached by the anal extremity, with the tip of
the abdomen bent forward and the body girt about with
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 955
a silken thread much as in the Papilionide, but closer to
the object to which it is attached. The number of feet
and the manner of attaching the chrysalides would imply
close relationship with the Papilionide, and some authors
place them next to that family; but the head of the
adult closely appressed against the body, the larvee, by
their shape, retractile heads, short feet, and manner of
moving over a surface, suggesting the Limacodes group
of the Bombycide, and the shape of the eggs somewhat
like those of the Hesperidze, all seem to indicate that
they should be placed below the Nymphalide and the
Krycinide. There are two subfamilies, Theclinz and
Lyceenine.
SUBFAMILY THECLIN A.
These generally have a rather stout body, the palpi
very short, and the antenne reaching to the middle of
the fore wings; often the anal angle more or less pro-
duced, with one or two slender tails projecting from the
outer margin near the anal angle.
95. ‘TaEecLA Harxsus, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.6 inches.
Male.—Upper surface bright glossy blue, the outer
fourth black, except towards the anal angle of the hind
wings, where the border becomes narrow ; a border of
about the same width on the inner margin; a black
sex-mark in the cell of the fore wings. Hind wings
with two black tails, before the larger of which is a blue
lunule, with a smaller one each side; the anal angle
produced.
Under side brown-black, with a red spot at the base of
|
tit
wi
256 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the fore wings, and two more at the base of the hind
wings, the fore wings with a dash of blue along the
median vein. The hind wings have the blue lunules
repeated, with three others standing before these, yellow-
green in a black ground.
Body blue-black above, black beneath, with the under
side of abdomen orange.
Female.—Larger than the male, about half of each
wing dull black, and the hind wings have two tails. The
under side lacks the blue on the fore wings.
According to Morris, the larva is green, slightly pubes-
cent, the head testaceous. On the back there is a small
ray, and on the sides are nine oblique bands of obscure
green. At the base of the feet is a marginal ray of yel-
lowish green. The chrysalis is russety painted with
brown. Food-plant, oak.
Gulf States, Illinois, Nevada, California, Arizona.
96. THEcLA M Auspum, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings 1.3 inches.
Upper surface rich glossy violet-blue, a broad outer
border and costal margin of black. The hind wings
have two tails, and a fulvous spot preceded by white at
the anal angle.
Under side brownish gray, the fore wings with a single
white line beyond the middle, bent inward on the second
median venule, and then outward again below. ‘This is
continued across the hind wings, making a rude W before
the tails, from this extending inward to the inner margin.
Between this and the margin is a second line, the anterior
half consisting of a series of shallow crescents, the whole
edged outwardly with black, broken before the first tail
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 257
by an orange patch which extends inward to the first line.
Outer margin of wing white, with a large pale blue patch
before second tail, separated from the anal angle by a
black spot, a white spot in the subcostal area of the
hind wings towards the base. Tails black, white-tipped.
Lower part of knob of antennee and costa fulvous. The
female has the black border on the upper side broader
than the male.
The larva is slightly pubescent, pale green, a little
yellowish, with a dorsal stripe and seven oblique streaks
of dark green. Head black, a marginal ray of yellow,
slightly shaded with obscure green on its upper side.
Food-plant, oak. |
The chrysalis is brownish gray, with the anterior part
and the wing-cases pale greenish gray.
Gulf States, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio.
97. THEcLA FAVoNIus, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings from 1 to 1.3 inches.
Upper surface brownish black, the male a little the
brighter. Males with a blackish sex-mark in the cell
of the fore wings, and a fulvous patch beyond the middle
of the hind wings, and a smaller spot at the anal angle.
The females have a similar patch, more or less distinct,
on the fore wings; and both sexes have the anal portion
of the outer margin with a white line just within the
edge, continuous as a dull streak to the apex.
The under side is brownish gray, crossed by two white
broken Imes common to both wings, the inner forming
a W on the hind wings similar to that on the under side
of JM Album, the two converging from before back, the
outer touching the points of the W, from which the two
Y 99%
258 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
run parallel to the inner margin. The inner line is
edged with black within, and the outer black on the out-
side, A broad fulvous band extends on the outside of
the second line from the outer point of the W to near the
apex, where it tapers to a point, with more or less black
between this and the outer edge. In front of the tails
pale blue, sprinkled with black, with black at the anal
angle. Subcostal patch as in AZ Album.
The larva is said to be yellowish green, with a dorsal
line and eight oblique streaks of dark green. Marginal
line green, yellow below.
Chrysalis ash-gray, with two rows of blackish points
on each side of the abdominal rings.
Gulf States, South Carolina.
98. THECLA AuToLycus, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.05 to 1.1 inches.
Upper surface brown, the fore wings with a large
patch of clear ochraceous in the outer half, in some
examples almost a broad band nearly from margin to
margin, or it may be subtriangular, with a blackish
sex-mark in the cell. Hind wings with a patch of the
same before the tails, and a little fulvous at the anal
angle. Tails two; between their bases there is usually
a black spot.
Under side brownish gray or fawn color, with two
white, more or less broken lines; the two on the fore
wings, and the inner one on the hind wings, edged with
brown, the other with a black border, the position of the
edging as in Favonius. The inner line of the hind wings
makes a shallow W, the outer line sending out three den-
tations, one opposite each tail and one opposite the anal
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 959
angle. The outer line has a series of fulvous crescents
outside the black, and beyond this a black spot at the
anal angle, one between the bases of the tails, and between
these there is a pale blue patch.
Texas, Missouri.
99. THEcLA Humount, Harr.
Expanse of wings from 1.05 to 1.2 inches.
Upper surface blackish, with a slight blue-gray tint,
the males with a blackish patch at the end of the cell of
the fore wings. Along the outer margin of the hind
wings is a series of more or less distinct pale blue spots,
interrupted by a large orange crescent enclosing a black
spot, the blue spot towards the anal angle with a similar
black spot; an orange spot at the anal angle. Margin
of hind wing black, with a white line within ; two slender
tails, tipped with white.
Under side gray, two blackish-brown lines crossing
both wings, the inner edged externally, and very slightly
internally, with white, and the outer on the hind wings
faintly edged on the inside with white; these two lines
converging a little posteriorly, the inner, on the hind
wings, forming a very shallow W. The orange and
black spots of the upper surface are repeated, but the
orange is enlarged to a patch; the anal angle is black,
with an orange spot before it. Both wings have black
outer margins, supplemented with white on the hind
wings.
The iarvee are “ green, downy caterpillars,” feeding on
the cominon hop-vine. The butterfly is to be seen in
May.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Montana.
260 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
100. THEcLaA AcApica, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Upper surface dark grayish brown, costal edge ef both
wings red or reddish, the males with the usual subcostal
sex-mark. Hind wings with one tail, a very slight angle
in place of the second. The anal portion of the hind
wings edged with white, and before this a distinct fulvous
band.
Under side gray, varying from brownish gray to gray-
white. At the end of each cell a short bar edged with
white. Beyond this a bent row of black spots surrounded
with white, those on the hind wings not reaching the
inner margin. Beyond these is a row of black crescent-
like spots, bordered within with white and without by
fulvous, the latter fading out towards the apex of the
fore wings; the last and the third from the last on the
hind wings large, with the usual blue patch between
them, these two with a black outer edging.
Of the preparatory stages of this species Mr. Wm.
Saunders gives substantially the following. Found feed-
ing on willow four succeeding years. Length .63 of an
inch, onisciform. Head very small, pale brown and
shining, drawn within joint 2 when at rest. Body above
green, of a moderately dark shade, thickly covered with
very short whitish hairs, scarcely visible without a lens.
From joint 3 to 10 a dorsal line of darker green than
the ground color. Dorsal region flat; rather wide ; bor-
der, a raised whitish-yellow line, beginning at joint 3 and
fading out on joints 12 and 13. Sides of body inclired
at an almost acute angle and faintly striped with oblique
greenish-yellow lines. A whitish-yellow line borders
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 261
the under surface, beginning on joint 2 and extending
round the hind end of the body. This line is raised the
same as that bordering the dorsal ridge.
The chrysalis is .82 of an inch long, thickly covered
with minute hairs. Color pale brown, with many dots
and patches of darker shade, a dark ventral stripe from
joint 7 to the end of the body. Sides with four or five
short lines of dark brown.
Northern States, Montana, Nevada, Arizona.
101. THecia Epwarpsit, Saund.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Upper surface pale wood-brown, the male with the
usual subcostal sex-mark, hind wings with one short tail
and an angle in place of the second tail; two faint black-
ish spots on the hind wings, one between the tail and the
angle, and the other towards the anal angle, faint orange
crescents before each.
Under side paler than the upper, two rows of spots
across each wing as in the lines of the preceding species,
but here they are shorter, with spaces between. The spots
of the inner row, except the last two on the hind wings,
are oblong and oval, each surrounded with white, the last
two longer than the others. The outer row is a series
of blackish crescents, edged on the inner side with white,
on the outside with orange, fading out towards the apex
of the fore wings, more prominent at the anal portion
of the hind wings; the usual blue patch between the
next to the last and the margin, and the two black spots
of the other species. At the end of the discal cell a spot
similar to the spots of the inner row.
Maine to Nebraska, Colorado.
2962 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
102. THEcLA WiTTFELDH, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.7 inches.
Male.—Upper surface black-brown ; fore wings have
a large oval stigma; hind wings have the edge of the
hind or outer margin on posterior half pure metallic
blue; a large fulvous spot in second median interspace
over a black spot on the margin; two tails, the posterior
one very long, measuring .24 of an inch on the anterior
side, the other .1 of an inch; black tipped with white.
Fringes of fore wings fuscous, of hind wings the same
to the upper median venule, then white, and next anal
angle long, brown, with a whitish line running through
them.
Under side dark brown, the outer margins narrowly
edged with white; the costal edge of the fore wings
next the base red. Both wings are crossed by two
macular white lines, the outer one submarginal, nearly
parallel to the margin, and quite regular, broken at the
venules, crenated on posterior half of hind wings, and
ending in an oblique streak up the inner margin ; each
spot edged with black on outer side, and on fore wings,
in the median interspaces, there is more or less fulvous
outside the black. On the hind wings is a large spot
on the margin below the lower median venule,* made
by blue-white scales on the brown ground; in the next
interspace are three deep red fulvous spots, diminishing
gradually in size, the outer one sometimes obsolete, the
largest with a black patch on its marginal side. Anal
angle black, overlaid on inner margin by white and a red
streak, The inner of the two lines is extra-discal, some-
what irregular, especially on the hind wings, and joins
EASTERN UNITED :$ STATES. 263
the other at the lower median venule of the hind wings,
then makes an angle in submedian interspace, and ends
in a streak up the inner margin. In the cell of each
wing are two parallel abbreviated white streaks or bars.
Female.—Upper side as in the male except the. stigma.
The tails measure .26 and .12 of an inch respectively.
Under side as in the male.
This species differs from Calanus in the longer tails,
in the larger size, and in the inner of the two lines on
the under side being single, whereas in Calanus it is
double or chain-like.
Indian River, Florida.
103. THEcLA CaLANus, Hib.
Fixpanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Upper surface dark wood-brown, with slight brassy
green reflection, the males with the usual sex-mark ; hind
wings with two tails, both
rather short; a fine, white
marginal line from the anal
angle to the longest tail, with
a black mark between the
tails.
Under side grayish brown;
both - wings crossed by two
Thecla Calanus, male, the under side
darker, broken lines, on the at the loft.
hind wings both lines white,
edged on both sides, but more distinctly so on the out-
side of the inner line and on the inside of the outer line.
These parts of the lines on the fore wings are distinctly
white, but only now and then a few white scales on the
other side of these lines. On the hind wings the outer
264 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
line shows the open W mark, but the inner is broken at
the second median venule, both extending some distance
up the inner margin. The black spot between the tails
is repeated, another at the anal angle, the space between
these spots, the line and the edge of the wing, being filled
with blue and black scales. Next to the outer line are
three orange crescents, one before each black spot, and
one in the first median interspace. At the end of the
cell on both wings is a short double bar edged on both
sides with white.
Var. Lorata, Gr.—-Rob.—This is a form in which
the under side has an extra basal streak common to
both wings, composed of powdery dark blue scales.
This is slightly irregular, and is lost inferiorly among
the longer scales which clothe the inner margin of the
hind wings.
The larva, according to Mr. Wm. Saunders, has the
head small, pale greenish yellow, with a minute black
dot on each side. Body yellowish green, streaked above
with yellowish white, and thickly covered with fine,
short, white hairs; second joint of a darker shade of
green than the rest of the body. A dark green dorsal
stripe on joints 3 to 5, the full width of the dorsal crest ;
narrow on the four terminal joints, almost obsolete on
those intermediate. A faint whitish dorsal line runs
through the entire stripe. Dorsal crest edged with yel-
lowish white, most apparent where it borders the darker
portions of the dorsal stripe. Sides of the body with a
few faint oblique lines of yellowish white. Body mar-
gined on each side with the same color close to the under
surface, extending round the posterior joint.
After the last moult the body becomes more whitish
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 265
green, with the dorsal stripe greenish brown. On joint
5 a streak of dark brown crosses the end of the dorsal
stripe, extending down the sides; with several brown
dots along the sides. Joints 10 and 11 with an oblique
brown streak cn each side. The sides of the body with
five or six oblique white lines.
Before pupating the larva assumes a delicate pink
color.
The chrysalis is .4 of an inch long, pale brown,
sprinkled with many dots of a darker shade, is thickly
covered with short yellow hairs, and has a ventral line
of dark brown.
The larvee feed on oak.
Atlantic and Western States, Texas, Colorado, New
Mexico. Var. Lorata is found in West Virginia.
104. THEcLA OnTARIO, Edw.
Kixpanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Upper surface dark grayish brown, fore wings of male
with an oval sex-mark near the costal margin; and one
tail, and an angle in place of the second. From the base
of tail to the anal angle a fine white marginal line, with
a few fulvous scales at the anal angle. Between the first
and second median venules is an indistinct marginal
dark spot, in front of which is a small fulvous crescent.
Under side uniform light brown, with two transverse
lines, common to both wings, much as in 7. Humuli.
The inner line of the fore wings is edged without with
white, as is also the corresponding one on the hind wings.
The outer line on the fore wings is indistinct at the ex-
tremities, and shows a very little external white edging
through the middle; but on the hind wings this line is
Mu 23
ii
iH |
266 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
distinctly white-edged internally. On the hind wings
the inner line forms a shallow W, the outer line being
dentate in this part of its course, both extending part
way wp the inner margin. The black spot of the upper
side is repeated, with another at the anal angle... The
outer line has along its course from in front of the black
spot bes to the inner margin a fulvous stripe, with a
large light blue patch between the black spots.
The body above is fuscous; beneath, abdomen ashy
brown, thorax blue-gray ; palpi white tipped with black;
antennse annulated white and black; club black tipped
with ferruginous.
New England States.
105. Taiowa STRicosA, Harr.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.2 inches.
Upper side dark brown, the males without spots ; but
the females sometimes have a fulvous spot near the anal
angle, and they are paler in color.
Under side pale reddish brown.
The outer part of both wings is
crossed by four irregular, rather
wavy, white lines, varying a little
in different specimens, but the
two inner ones on the fore wings
approach each other on the hind
margin. The third is_ shorter
than the second, and the fourth
reaches only to the middle of the
Thecia Gtrigoss, the lower wing.’ ‘The inner line on the hima
showing undex side.
wings extends nearly across, then,
bending, runs pert way up the inner margin, preceded in
Bia. 72.
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 267
the last part of its course by another line nearly parallel
to it. Above the termination of these two is a circlet
of white on the margin. The outer line is short, and
limited to the middle of the wing. The fore wings have
a submaryinal row of indistinct brown lunules, edged on
the inside with white; the hind wings have a similar
series, which are bright red towards the anal angle, and
edged on the inner side with black followed by white,
and enclosing, next to the anal angle, a large black space
which is nearly covered with blue scales. Beyond this
is a small black spot; and there is another at the angle,
surmounted by a red stripe, edged like the lunules, and
extending up the inner margin. The lunules next the
apex usually exhibit a few scales of red. The margins
of both wings are edged with a fine whitish line.
The body is fuscous, beneath grayish white; palpi
white, the upper joint black tipped with white ; antenneze
annulated black and white: club fuscous tipped with
white.
According to Mr. Wm. Saunders, the larva feeds on
a species of thorn (Crategus). The following is his
description of it:
Length half an inch. Head greenish brown. Body
flattened, sloping abruptly at the sides. Color velvet-
green, with a darker-colored dorsal stripe. The anterior
edge of second segment yellowish brown, with a few
darker dots ; the middle segment is laterally striped with
two or three faint yellow oblique lines, the last two seg-
ments have each a lateral yellow patch, and there is a
faint yellow basal line from the fifth to the terminal
segment. Under surface bluish green.
The chrysalis is .37 of an ich long, nearly oval; the
268 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
head-case rounded. The body is dark reddish brown,
with black markings, and thickly covered with fine
hairs. The anterior segments have many black patches
on them, and there is a dark ventral line from joint
6 to joint 12.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Montana, Colo-
rado.
106. THrEcLA Smimacis, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
The upper surface dark brown; the middle area of
both wings, except a broad costal border, ochraceous
between the veins. Hind wings with two slender tails,
black tipped with white.
Under side yellowish green, sprinkled with brown
scales, the end of the cell and along hind margin of fore
wings, and the middle portion of the outer fourth of hind
wings, washed with brown having a violet tinge. On
the hind wings a curving white bar at the end of the cell,
and a straight subcostal bar shaded outside with ferru-
ginous brown. Beyond the cell a prominent white line,
sinuous on the hind wings, heavily shaded internally
with ferruginous brown. Edge of wings white; on the
hind wings between this and the white line, from the
inner margin towards the apex, is a series of five brown-
black spots shghtly edged internally with white, the first
and third supplemented by two others nearer the margin.
Between these spots and the edge the space is covered
with a mixture of white, black, and brown scales. End
of veins black.
It is said that the larva of this species is green, with
the head and feet blackish. It has four rows of red spots,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 269 ii
of which the two dorsal are formed of smaller spots, and
the one on each side is composed of spots which are some-
what larger.
The chrysalis is grayish brown, with the abdomen i\|
more clear and reddish. i
The larva feeds on Smilax.
Atlantic and Western States, Northwest Texas.
107. THecia Acts, Drury.
Expanse of wings about 1 inch.
Upper side of fore wings entirely dark brown, with-
out any marks or spots. Hind wings the same color ;
each wing with two tails, the one near the anal angle
much longer than the other. Close above this tail is a
bright red spot, edged outwardly with black, and another
at the anal angle. Fringes white.
Under side of both wings lead color. A very narrow
black and white line crosses the fore wings, parallel to
the outer margin; and an indented, irregular line crosses
the hind wings, beginning near the middle of the anterior
edge, and meeting just below the extremity of the body.
Two long reddish spots are visible on this side, below
which are four black ones.
The above is substantially Drury’s description. A
female from Florida Keys differed a little, as the follow-
ing will show.
Color of the upper side brown, with the inner half
of the hind margin of the fore wings and the inner half
of the hind wings bright blue. Only the anal red spot
is visible.
On the under side the common black and white line is
prominent on both wings ; outside this on the hind wings
23*
970 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
is a trace of another from the apex, meeting the inner
line before the shorter tail, but renewed again before the
inner or longer tail, from which it goes to the inner
margin. Before the space between the base of the two
tails and the inner line is a patch of orange shading
into yellow outwardly, with a little yellow outside the
outer line near the inner margin. Between the orange
patch and the outer margin is a spot of red and black at
the anal angle, with a patch of blue and black between.
Between the orange patch and the apex the outer line is
bordered externally by a black shading, and outside of
this some pale gray scales.
Basal third of costa orange. Antenne black annu-
late with white; knob black tipped with orange.
Key West, Florida.
108. THrEcLA PorEas, Hib.
Expanse of wings from .9 inch to 1.1 inches.
Upper surface blackish brown, in some specimens
entirely so, in others a few blue scales along the inner
margin of the hind wings, in still others nearly all the
hind margin blue, with the same color extending over the
base of the fore wings. In such blue-washed specimens
there is a series of marginal black lunules along the
outer margin of the hind wings. The hind wings have
two unequal tails, black tipped with white. The costa
of the fore wings .red-edged, more distinctly seen on the
under side.
Under side brownish or russety gray, with two lines
beyond the middle, common to both wings, as in allied
species. The inner is clear white, edged on the inside with
narrow black, and farther in heavily shaded with reddish
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 271
orange; the line making an open W near the anal angle
of the hind wings. Outer line black, more or less ob-
solete on the fore wings, on the hind wings shaded more
or less with white on both sides; the usual black spot
between the base of the tails and at the anal angle, with
the blue patch between. In some examples the black
extends as a shade along the margin towards the apex ;
in one specimen the black spot between the tails 1s pre-
ceeded by a reddish-orange crescent. Both wings have
traces of discal bars.
Southern States, West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana.
109. THEcLA CoLUMELLA, Fab.
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Male.—Upper surface grayish brown, a large, quad-
rate, blackish stigma in the end of the cell of the fore
wings. The hind wings have one tail, and about two
black spots near the anal angle.
Under side gray, with a distinct lilac reflection. The
fore wings have a dark bar across the end of the cell,
somewhat obscure; beyond the cell is a shghtly-bent row
of black spots, not reaching the hind margin, each convex
outwardly and bordered with white. Outside this are
two rows, parallel with the outer margin, of faint white
lunules, with a dusky shade between the rows and out-
side the outer row.
The hind wings have the bar across the end of the cell,
a dot in the cell and one above near the edge, the curved
row of black and white spots continuous with the fore
wings; all having a slight sprinkling of orange scales
on the black. Outside the line of spots are also the two
rows of white lunules and dusky shades, a little more
22. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
distinct than on the fore wings. In the outer row, be-
tween the second and third median venules, is an orange
patch with a black spot outside, the two colors blending
on their edges ; a black spot at the anal angle sprinkled
a little with orange, and a blue patch between them.
Fringe whitish, tail black.
Female.
Of the same color above as the male, ex-
cept that the inner half of the hind wings is washed
with pale blue, and the outer margin of the hind wings
has about five black spots. The stigma of the fore wings
absent.
The under side is the same as the male, but the spots
and marks are more distinct. Body bluish gray above,
whitish beneath.
Florida, Texas ; occasional in New York.
110. THEcLA AuGustus, Kirby.
Expanse of wings from .9 to 1 inch.
Upper surface dark brown, tinted with rusty brown
on the outer part of the hind wings, on some examples a
slight greenish reflection.
Under side of the fore wings lighter than above and
more distinct brown, with a faint transverse line marking
the outer fourth, beyond which is a row of small dots
continued across the hind wings. The basal half of the
hind wings is quite dark brown, but the outer half is
about the shade of the fore wings, the whole sprinkled
with light purplish scales. There are no tails.
In Maine this butterfly is on the wing from the middle
of May to the middle of June. The early stages and
food-plant are unknown.
Eastern States.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Qe
111. THecia IRus, Godt.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.25 inches.
Three forms have until recently been included in this
species, two of which are still retained as varieties, while
the third is set apart as the next species.
Var. ARsACE, Bd.—Lec.—This has the upper side
of the wings dark brown, with greenish reflections. The
stivma on the fore wings of the males is three times as
long as wide.
Under side of the wings blackish brown on the basal
half, and lighter beyond. The outer part of the fore
wing is overlaid more or less with white scales. The
tooth of the hind wing next outside the anal angle
curves outward, and there is a more or less prominent
black spot within the margin between the base of the
tooth mentioned and the one next outside. In the hoary
outer space of both wings is a transverse row of brown
points, clouded somewhat on the hind wings.
This variety is found in the Atlantic and Western
States.
Var. Mass, H. Edw.—This form has been found
only on Vancouver Island.
Morris says the larva of this species feeds on Vac-
cinium, and is yellowish green, with two dorsal inter-
rupted lines; one lateral line and eight oblique streaks
pale green.
112. THrcta HEnricr, Gr.—Rob.
Expanse of wings from .85 inch to 1.1 inches,
This species closely resembles var. Arsace of the pre-
ceding species in form and color as well as in markings,
8
WTA THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
but’ differs in having the outer part of the hind wings
somewhat rust-colored, the teeth shorter, and the first one
beyond the anal angle not curving outward, and in want-
ing the black spots on the under side of the hind wings
between the bases of the first two teeth. The stigma on
the fore wings of the males is shorter and wider, being
only twice as long as wide. It averages smaller than
var. Arsace.
According to Mr. Edwards, the eggs are deposited on
wild plums at the base of the flower-stalks. When
the young larve hatch from the eggs they ascend the
flower-stalks and eat the newly-forming fruit. A hole
is eaten into the fruit large enough for the head to
enter, and thenceforward the caterpillar spends most of
his time with his head in the cavity, growing with the
growth of the plum, until the whole interior is eaten
out.
The eggs are shaped like those of Lycena Violacea,
flattened and depressed: about this depression the ridges
are reduced, and the surface is finely reticulated, but
elsewhere there is a white frosting of peaks and ridges.
Color whitish green. ‘The lace-work seems to be sepa-
rable: in one case where the egg had been rubbed by
a leaf, apparently, a film was turned up, and the real
surface was seen to be delicate green.
In from five to six days the larva hatches. Length
04 of an inch, oval, broadest anteriorly, the base
flattened ; dorsum high, sloping posteriorly ; summit a
little flattened, with two rows of long, recurved white
hairs on each side. Color brownish yellow.
Five days afterwards it moults the first time, when it is
.08 of an inch long, with a red-brown dorsal stripe stop-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. LES)
r=)
ping at joint 12; on each side of this dull yellow-green,
with a macular brown subdorsal line. Sides sloping, a
little incurved, red-brown, with a broken yellowish line ;
a similar but continuous line along the basal ridge. Body
much covered with short, stiff, brown hairs. Head cor-
date, smooth, yellow-green.
Tt moults again in three or four days, when it is .12 of
an inch long, shaped much as before, with a tuberculous
ridge across each segment from 4 to 11. Color red-brown
and dull yellow-green. Dorsal band red, tapering pos-
teriorly to a point, with a central green line; outside
this band a green one, with a red-brown speck on each
segment. Sides red-brown, with green central line ; basal
ridge green.
In five days it moults the third time, and measures .3
of an inch; but seven days later, when ready to pupate,
it is .66 of an inch long. The summit of the dorsum is
flattened, a little concave, covered by a broad band cut
by a paler line; the remainder of the elevated ridges
yellow-green. Sides red-brown, with an indistinct green
line. Basal ridge green, head yellow-green. One day
after moult the color changes to port-wine red; the sub-
dorsal area remains yellow-green, but is red-tinted on
the posterior part of each segment; the sides the same
red; a pale red line along the basal ridge; about the
spiracles a little green.
Chrysalis .3 of an inch long ; black or blackish brown,
with obscure red band, and on each side a narrow black
stripe in the middle of the abdomen. In this stage the
species hibernates.
West Virginia, Maine.
276 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
113. THEcLA NrpHon, Hib.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.15 inches.
Upper side dark blackish brown, with a large rusty
brown space in the middle of each wing of the female,
but only near the anal angle of the male; the males with
a small, oval, subcostal sex-mark.
Under side hght brown, sprinkled with white scales
so as to be hoary, especially in a band beyond the common
white line. Fore wings with a brown bar at the end of
the cell, edged outside with white; a brown spot farther
towards the base. Beyond the cell a somewhat zigzag
white line, not reaching the hind margin, bordered within
by a broader brown line. Beyond this a submarginal
row of dark brown lunate spots, shaded outside with
white, and in some examples sending white rays to the
white spots in the fringe. The hind wings with the
basal third quite hoary, defined externally by dark brown.
Cutting the outer third is a tortuous white line shaded
within with dark brown, the middle third of wing but
little hoary. The submarginal row of lunules continuous,
shaded a little with white externally, the space between
this and the white line quite hoary; a little washing of
white along the outer margin. There are no tails, but
about three prominent tecth or angles to each hind wing.
The larva is green and pubescent, longitudinal stripes
on the back, the middle one pale yellow, the other two
white. Near the feet there is usually a small marginal
white line. Head brown.
The chrysalis is grayish, with four rows of small spots,
of which the two middle ones are blackish and indistinct,
the others ferruginous.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. OG
Food-plant, pine.
Atlantic and Western States, Colorado.
114. THecia Lara, Edw.
Expanse of wings from .9 inch to 1.1 inches.
Male.—Upper side black, near the base of ile fore
wings a few scales of deep metallic blue; next the anal
angle a band of the same color, which extends half-way
along the outer margin, sprinkled with black. Beyond
this a fine line of blue scales follows the margin to the
outer angle. Anal angle edged with red; fringe gray.
Under side of hind wings and apex and costal margin
of fore wings slate-blue, with a green reflection ; costal
edge of fore wings red; disk of same wings smoke-color.
Beyond the cell, on the costal margin, a transverse, ab-
breviated series of five small red spots, edged outwardly
with white, the last two obscured by the smoky hue of
the disk.
The hind wings have two series of red spots parallel
to the outer margin, those of the exterior small, and
towards the outer angle minute, each more or less sur-
rounded by a delicate white border, in which are a few
black scales; the inner series crosses the middle of the
wing, is sinuous, the spots large, brighter red and cres-
cent-shaped, bordered outwardly with white in which
are a few black scales. Edge of wing at anal angle and
at the intersection of the adjoining venules red. Body
black above, beneath white. Antenne annulate white
and black ; club black, red at tip; palpi white.
Female.—Upper side black, the base of fore wings
and hind margin for two-thirds its length, and all of
hind wings except the costa, dark metallic blue. Under
24
278 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
side greenish gray, losing the green tinge on the hind
margin of fore wings. In addition to the five spots on
disk of male there are two blackish, rather indistinct
spots, below the others, nearer the base.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Maine to West Virginia; Atlantic City, N.J.; Ari-
“Ona.
115. Tuecia Titus, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface dark wood-brown, the hind wings with
a marginal row of seven orange spots from the anal angle
towards the apex or outer angle. On some specimens
these are partially or wholly wanting.
Under side grayish brown, with lilac reflections. The
fore wings with two transverse rows of black spots, the
inner edged on the outside with white ; the outer smaller,
touched without with vermilion, and slightly with white
on the inside. Hind wings with two similar rows, but
the outer one more distinct and with prominent ver-
milion spots on the outside, the two anal spots blended,
each vermilion spot with a few black scales next the
margin, and some white at the anal angle. Cell with
two dashes at the end, placed end to end.
According to Mr. Saunders, this species is to be found
on wild cherry and plum. When full grown it is .7 of
an inch long, elliptical. Head very small, bilobed, black,
and shining, with a streak of dull white across the front
above the mandibles. Body above dull green, with a yel-
lowish tint, especially on the anterior joints, and thickly
covered with very short brown hairs. ‘These arise from
small pale yellow dots, which are slightly raised. A dark
LASTERN UNITED STATES. 279
green dorsal line from joint 2 to joint 4; a patch of dull
pink or rose color on anterior joints, faint on joint 2,
covering but a small portion of its upper surface, nearly
covering the dorsal crest on joint 3, and reduced again
to a small faint patch on joint 4. On the posterior joints
isa much larger rosy patch, extending from the posterior
of joint 9 to the end of the body ; joint 9 merely tinged,
enlarged on joint 10 to a considerable-sized patch widen-
ing posteriorly ; behind this the body covered with rosy
red. The side of joint 10 close to the under surface
has a streak of the same color, and there is a faint con-
tinuation of this on joint 9. There is a wide dorsal
crest from joint 3 to joint 9. Posterior part of body
suddenly flattened, sides acutely sloped.
The chrysalis is .45 of an inch long, glossy pale brown,
with many small! dark brown or blackish dots, and thickly
covered with very short brown hairs, too fine to be seen |
without a lens.
New England to Arizona.
SUBFAMILY LYCANIN A.
In this the palpi project in front more than the length
of the head, and the antenne do not reach to the middle
of the fore wings. The anal angle is rounded, with or
without one or two slender tails on the outer margin of
the hind wings.
116. Fentseca TaRQuinivus, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.25 to 1.4 inches,
Upper surface yellow, somewhat orange-tinted. The
fore wings have a dark brown border, irregular on the
280 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
inside, and narrow on the hind margin; it sends au
angle inward near the apex, a bar is at the end of the
cell, and there is a separate spot below, and a black basal
dash. The hind wings have the anterior half dark
brown, the lower edge crenate, with a few small spots
along the outer margin.
Under side of fore wings pale yellow ; the costal and
terminal margins and the whole of the hind wings red-
dish yellow washed with white, with numerous white
circles whose enclosed spaces lack the white. The spots
in the pale yellow part are dark brown.
The larva feeds on Aphides, on thorn, alder, wild cur-
rant, Viburnum, and other plants: it is green with three
dorsal white stripes, and one at the base of the feet.
Chrysalis grayish ; back darker, marked with promi-
nent tubercles.
There seem to be two broods of this species in a
season, as the butterflies have been taken in the same
locality in June and again in August.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley.
117. CHRysopHANus DIONE, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.8 inches.
Upper surface brownish gray, with slight coppery
refiections. Hind wings without tails, but angled, the
anal angle a little produced. Hind wings of female
with five black lunules along the margin from the anal
angle, preceded by continuous orange crescents, the
orange extending to the posterior angle of the fore
wings. Some of the heavy marks of the under side
show through. The males have the black lunules, but
with very little orange.
BASTERN UNITED STATES. 28)
Under side grayish white, both wings with a double
marginal row of dark spots, the outer obscure on the fore
wings and the apical portion of the hind wings. Be-
tween the two on the anal half of the hind wings, and a
little at the posterior angle of the fore wings, the space 1s
filled with orange, more prominent in the female. The
fore wings have a sinuous row of elongate, bright black
spots across the disk, with two similar spots in the cell,
a bar at the end, and a spot below. ‘The hind wings
have spots in the same position, with two subcostal and
one near the inner margin.
Towa to Kansas, Nebraska.
118, CurysopHANus THOE, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface of the male coppery brown, with violet
reflections, a narrow terminal blackish border. The hind
wings have an orange fulvous terminal border, crenate
within, and containing five black lunules on the black
edge. The female has the fore wings fulvous, with a
broad blackish border, and the black spots of the under
side, except the terminal double row; hind wings as in
the male, but more blackish.
Under side of fore wings fulvous, the terminal border
of hind wings orange fulvous; under side of hind wings
and terminal border of fore wings grayish white, the
latter growing narrow from the apex back. The posi-
tion of the black marks is the same as in C. Dione, but
they are heavier.
According to Mr. Saunders, the eggs are nearly round,
a little flattened at the apex, flattened also at the base.
Color greenish white, thickly indented; at the apex
24*
282. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
is a considerable depression, around which the indentea-
tions are small, increasing in size as they approach the
base.
The food-plant is dock, Rumex crispus, and there are
two broods in a season.
Maine to Nebraska, Ohio, Kansas, Colorado.
119. CHRYSOPHANUS EptxANTHE, Bd.—Lee.
Expanse of wings from .85 to 1 inch.
Upper surface of the male brown, with a strong violet
reflection, the female more grayish brown, with little of
the violet reflection. The spots of the under side, except
the subterminal row, show through somewhat ; and there
is a sinuous orange fulvous line from the anal angle of
the hind wings along the margin, fading out about the
middle.
Under side yellowish gray, the hind wings of the male
but little yellow-tinted. The orange fulvous line is re-
peated, only more distinetly, with scarcely a trace of a
subterminal row of black spots on the hind wings. On
the fore wings are three large spots of this row from the
posterior angle towards the apex. The discal row of spots
on the fore wings is distinct, as are also the two spots
| and bar of the cell, and the one below the cell. On the
hind wings the spots are all small, with the bar across
the cell absent, as also one subcostal spot.
According to Mr. Saunders, the eggs are nearly round,
slightly flattened at the apex, flattened also at the base.
Color milk-white, thickly indented ; a deep depression
at the apex, and around this a number of indentations,
which are nearly uniform in size all the way to the
base,—in this respect differing from the eggs of Thoe.
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 283
Hood-plant unknown, but probably dock. The butter-
fly flies through the last of June and early part of July.
Maine, New England, Kansas.
120. CorysopHANUS HypopPHLeEas, Bad.
Expanse of wings from .9 to 1 inch.
Upper surface of fore wings shining fulvous, with a
blackish brown border, narrow on the costa and hind
margin. Beyond the cell is a row of prominent black
spots, the first three and the other four in sets nearly
confluent; a spot and bar in the cell. Hind wings
blackish brown, with a terminal fulvous band, not reach-
ing the apex, containing four black spots on the edge; at
the end of the cell a black bar.
Under side of fore wings fulvous, paler than above,
the apex and the whole of hind wing gray, the gray of
fore wings narrowing backward to the posterior angle.
The spots of the upper surface are repeated, with some of
the terminal border of the fore wings. The hind wings
have two subcostal black spots, two spots in the cell and
a narrow bar at the end, and a spot below the cell, be-
sides the usual curved and sinuous discal row, the spots
of this row white outside. Along the outer margin is a
crenate orange-red line, shaded within with faint reddish,
the whole between two faint rows of blackish spots.
Aberr. var. Fasorata, Strecker, has the transverse
row of spots on the fore wings much enlarged,
and blended together so as to make an irreg-
ular band.
like that of the other species, as shown in the °%& x1
figure. It is pale green, overlaid with a white net-work
284 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
According to Mr. Saunders, the larva is elliptical,
flattened on the under side, dull rosy red, with a diffused
| yellowish tint on the sides,
Fria. 76. most distinct along the mid-
% dle joints. The dorsal line
is a deeper shade of red.
The body is downy with
minute yellowish _ hairs.
This description was taken
from a larva not fully grown.
Mr. 8. H. Scudder says that
the larve are provided with
long hairs sweeping back-
ward behind their bodies,
©. Hypophleas, larva. most of them arranged in
longitudinal series.
The chrysalis is attached by the end of the abdomen,
Fra. 77. and is closely girt to the object to which it
Gey, is attached, as in Fig. 77.
Northern, Middle, and Western States ;
C. Hypophleas, : °
aula California.
121. Lycmna Lyepamus, Doubl.
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Upper surface silver-blue; the males with only the
edge of the wings black; the females with a rather
broad black terminal border, a little expanded on the
apex, and extending round on the costa. fringes long,
fuscous.
Under side uniform gray-brown. The fore wings
have a small round black spot in the cell, a bent bar
at its extremity, edged with white. Across the disk is a
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 285
curved row of large round black spots, the two lower
ones connected, all annulate with white. The hind wings
have a small black spot in the cell, another on the costal
margin, a narrow stripe at the end of the cell, and a sinu-
ous row of spots within the margin similar to those of
the fore wings; all edged with white. The under side
of the female is a little paler than that of the male.
The larva and food-plant are unknown. ‘The butter-
flies appear in April. (See Addenda.)
Michigan, Wisconsin to Georgia, West Virginia.
122. Lycmna ScuppDErt1, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
The male, in size, form, and color, resembles Agon of
Europe. Upper side dark violet-blue, outer margin of
both wings and costal margin of hind wings edged with
black, costal margin of fore wings with a fine black
horder. Fringe white.
Under side dark gray. The fore wings have an oval
black discal spot, and a transverse, tortuous series of six
black spots, all edged with white, the one next the
posterior angle double, the fifth twice as large as the
others; on the outer margin a double series of faint
spots.
Hind wings with four black spots near the base, one
being very minute and close to the inner margin; a bar
at the end of the cell, and a series of eight spots in a
double unequal curve ; all of which, as well as the basal
spots, are edged with white. There is a marginal series
of six or seven metallic spots, each surmounted with a
spot of fulvous bordered inwardly by a dark crescent.
These metallic spots are edged outwardly, and sometimes
ib}
Hi
286 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
replaced, by black. Ends of venules expanded into
small black spots.
A more common form of the female has the base of
both wings violet-blue, and the black marginal spots of
the hind wings distinct, the two or three next the anal
angle surmounted with fulvous. Under side as in the
male.
A variety of the female has the upper side brown,
with a black discal spot on the fore wings. Hind wings
with a marginal row of obsolete spots surmounted by
grayish crescents.
Under side pale buff, fore wings as in the male, except
that the discal spot is preceded by a small double spot,
and all the spots are larger. On the hind wings the spots
are less distinct, and some of them are wanting. The
transverse series is set in a band of white; marginal
spots without the metallic gloss.
New York, Michigan, Wisconsin.
| 123. Lycmna PsEuDARGIOLUS, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from .9 inch to 1.4 inches.
This spectes is subject to great variation. According
| to the recent observations of Mr. W. H. Edwards, pub-
lished in his “ Butterflies of North America,” it may be
known under the following polymorphic forms, most of
which have heretofore been regarded as distinct species :
Winter form 1, Lucta, Kirby.
Winter form 2, Mararnata, Edw.
Winter form 3, VioLAcEA, Edw.
Dimorphic,.male, Niagra, Edw.
Var. CINEREA, Edw.
Spring form, PsEUDARGIOLUS, Bd.—Lee.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 287
Var. ARIZONIENSIS, Edw.
Summer form, NEGLEcTA, Edw.
Pacific form, Prasus, Bd.
Var. Ecuo, Edw.
The first of these, Lucia, coming from hibernated
chrysalides, is to be found in spring in Alaska, British
America to Quebec, Anticosti, New England, New York,
and Colorado.
Marginata has a similar range, except that it does not
occur quite so far north, being found in Ontario, Quebec
to Long Island, and Colorado.
Violacea has a more extended range, being found in
Alaska, vicinity of Lake Winnipeg, British America,
Ontario, Quebec, Anticosti, New England to West
Virginia, aud Colorado. In the southern part of this
territory a black male Nigra has been found.
Var. Cinerea appears to be the winter form in Arizona ;
under side ash-gray, with the markings obscure.
Pseudargiolus is a spring form ranging from Racine,
Wisconsin, south to Tennessee, and on the east extending
from Pennsylvania to Georgia.
Var. Arizoniensis is a small form of this, found in
Arizona.
Neglecta is a summer form when there is more than
one generation during a season, ranging from Canada
through New England to West Virginia and Georgia ;
occurring also in Montana and Nevada.
Piasus and its variety Echo are Pacific slope forms,
found in California and Arizona.
In general terms, the upper side of the wings of the
male is a deep azure-blue, with a delicate terminal black
line. Fringes black on the apical part of the fore wings,
288 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
but white barred with black on the rest of the fore wings
and on the hind wings.
The fore wings of the female have a broad blackish
outer border, in some examples extending along the
costa. The hind wings have a blackish costa, and a row
of dark spots along the outer margin. The ground
color is usually a lighter blue on the females than on
the males.
The under side is a very pale silvery gray, with a
silky lustre, and there are the following pale brown
markings: a row of spots along the
outer margin, each preceded by a cres-
cent; a curved row of elongate spots
across the disk of the fore wings; and
several small spots on the basal part
of the hind wings.
oe The form Jwucia has the terminal
ous, form Lucia, un- Spots of the under side so enlarged and
dere run together as to form a terminal band,
and the spots on the basal part of the hind wings are
enlarged and run together so as to form a more or less
complete triangular discal patch, as shown
in Fig. 78. This and Marginata are the
smaller forms.
Form Marginata has the terminal band
of the under side as in Jwea, but the
spots on the basal part of the hind wings
do not coalesce.
Lycena Pseudar- fe P
giolus, form Viola- Form Violacea has the dark points
and crescents on the under side of the
wings quite prominent, but they do not coalesce, either
in the outer border or in the basal portion. The black
cea, under side.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 289
male Nigra has the under surface the same as in the
blue Violacea, but the upper surface is black.
Form Pseudargiolus is the largest of the series, ex-
panding 1.4 inches. The upper surface
of the male usually has a terminal border
to the hind wings of the same shade of
blue as the fore wings, the middle area
of the hind wings a little paler than this
border or the fore wings. The spots on
the under side are much smaller than on —_—Pyeena Pseudar
: giolus, form Pseu-
any of the preceding forms. fone, — GaGa
Form Neglecta resembles Pseudargio- se.
lus, but is smaller, not expanding more than 1.1 inches;
spots on the under side small, as on Pseudargiolus.
The Pacific form Piasus is of a deeper blue, the under
side bluish, with the border spots subobsolete.
The winter forms of these butterflies deposit their
eggs in the clusters of flower-buds of dogwood (Cornus),
the young larvee obtaining their first food by boring into
the buds, but later eating their way into the ovaries. The
next brood of eggs are deposited on the flower-stems of
rattleweed (Cimicifuga racemosa), while the fall brood
are to be found on Actinomeris squarrosa, and probably
on A. helianthoides. In confinement they have been
known to eat several other plants; and it is probable
that where rattleweed does not grow, the second brood
of larvee feed upon something else.
The eggs are .02 of an inch in diameter, round, flat
at base, the top flattened and depressed ; the surface
covered with a white lace-work, the meshes of which are
mostly lozenge-shaped, with a short rounded process at
each angle. Ground color delicate green.
N t 25
290 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
In from four.to eight days a larva .04 of an inch long
hatches from the egg. This has the under side flat, legs
retractile, upper side rounded, highest at joint 4, from
which the dorsum and sides slope gradually to joint 13.
Surface pubescent. On each side of the dorsal line is a
row of white clubbed hairs, with similar hairs at the
base and in front of joint 2, making a fringe round the
body. Color greenish white or brownish yellow. Head
minute, obovoid, retractile, black.
After the first moult, which occurs in from three
to five days, the length is from .07 to .08 of an inch;
the color of the spring and fall broods is brownish yel-
low, that of the summer brood the same, and also green-
ish white and reddish,
The second moult occurs in from three to five days
more, the length being from .12 to .16 of an inch. The
shape is as before, but the dorsum is covered from joint
3 to joint 10 by a low, broad, continuous, tuberculous
ridge, cleft to the body at the juncture of the segments,
the anterior edge of each joint depressed, the sides in-
curved. Joint 2 is more flattened than before, and the
outer border is thickened into a rounded rim, leaving
within the curve a flattened, depressed space. Color in
spring pale green, the dorsum whitish, usually a reddish
dorsal line from joint 3 to jomt 10. In summer vari-
able, buff or pale green without spots, joint 2 brown;
in some the dorsum and sides are mottled with dark
green and brown ; occasionally one is wine-red, or red
with a white basal stripe, and white along the tuber-
culation. In fall dull green, more or less marked with
brewn.
The third moult takes place in three or four days
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 291
more, but there is little change from the former period.
The fourth or last moult occurs three or four days after-
wards, and in five or six days from this the larva is ready
to pupate.
The mature larva is .4 of an inch long in the:spring
and fall broods, and from .5 to .55 in the summer brood ;
the shape as in the preceding stages. ‘The color is
variable. In spring, usually the ridge is whitish, often
stained red, or it is brown, light or dark; the upper
part of the side olive-green, with a darker green or
sometimes a dull red patch along the posterior edge of
each joint. Below this area it is pale green, and along
the base more or less brown. Joints 11 to 13 are
mottled in shades of green, often with brown, and joint
2 is either green or brown; if the latter, then with a
brown patch in the depression. Color in summer, some-
times white or delicate green, joint 2 being brown ; or the
ridge is light green and the sides dark, often with brown
patches over all; or light green, with a dorsal macular
deep green band, and a similar one along the base ; or
the whole surface may be wine-red or even chocolate-
brown. Color in fall, green, with more or less brown
in irregular patches. Uead dark brown.
The chrysalis is dark brown or yellow-brown, varying,
the wing-cases dark, and sometimes green-tinted. On
the abdomen are two subdorsal rows of blackish dots,
sometimes a dark dorsal line.
In addition to the food-plants already given, Apios
tuberosa, Erythrina herbacea, Spirca salicifolia, Ceano-
thus Americanus, Cornus, and Ilex may be specified.
292 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
124. Lycmna Comyntas, Godt.
Expanse of wings from .7 to 1 inch.
Hind wings with one thread-like tail. The males are
dark violet-blue above, with a narrow blackish outer
border. Along the outer margin of
the hind wings are several black
spots, and usually one or two orange
crescents. The females are blackish
brown, some specimens with bluish
at the base, the black spots of the
hind wings often obscure.
Under side whitish gray; both
wings with a double row of spots along the outer margin,
the inner row crescents ; between this and the cells a row
of black spots circled with white, the row on the hind
wings broken twice. There is also a bar at the end of
each cell, and on the hind wings a spot in the cell, and
one above. Near the anal angle are two or three orange
crescents, enclosing each a black spot with a circle of
silver scales.
According to Mr. Edwards, the eggs of this species
are deposited on red clover and Desmodium Marilandicum.
They are round, flattened, depressed at top, covered with
a frust-work of interlaced points. Color delicate green.
The young larve are .05 of an inch long, cylindrical,
of a yellowish color, except two rows of white points
along the back, and one near the base on each side. A
long, curved, white hair has its origin in each of these
points. Head black and shining, retractile, nearly as
large as joint 2.
After the first moult they are .08 of an inch long,
Fra. 81.
Lycena Comyntas, left
wings, under side,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 293
a
onisciform, flattened, the dorsum flat at the top and
sloping towards the base. Color greenish, the whole
surface irregularly dotted with black; and from most,
but not all, of the dots come white hairs, those on the
dorsum curyed back, those nearer the base curved partly
downward and partly back. Head obovate, long, and
narrow, smaller in proportion to the second segment
than at the last stage, and partly concealed, even when
active, in joint 2. Color black.
After the second moult they are .12 of an inch long,
broader and flatter than before. On each side of the
narrow dorcel ridge is a slightly-raised ridge, caused by
the tubercles; at the base of the body a fold, and the
hairs from this and the ridge are longer than elsewhere.
Color green, but with a rusty tint, caused by the numer-
ous reddish points. Above the fold these take the form
of a line or slight stripe.
Moulting again, the length is .2 of an inch, and the
color clear apple-green ; the crests of the dorsal ridge,
and also the folds at the base, are whitish; part of the
way a reddish line on each side of the fold ; also a double
oblique line of pale green on each side of each segment.
After the fourth moult they are .36 of an inch long,
and the width is about one-fourth the length. They
are of the same general form as before, but highest in
front, and sloping backward. Color greenish, with darker
green lines, and oblique vinous lines on the sides. Head
black.
The chrysalis is .26 of an inch long, shaped much
like the mature larva ; of a greenish, brownish, or sordid
white color, with three rows of black dots, and sparingly
clothed with whitish hairs.
25*
204 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
The above description was taken from larvee fed on
Desmodium. Those that fed on clover differed in color-
ation, as follows: color russet, varying towards vinous,
interspersed with green ; at third moult some were’ pale
green dorsally, the white being caused by the tubercles,
the sides vinous, the dorsal stripe and oblique lines
vinous ; others had the back as well as the sides vinous,
and this variation and character persisted to maturity.
The chrysalides of these larvee were sordid white on the
upper surface and lower side of the abdomen, the former
specked with brown; dorsal stripe brown, as were also
the dots; under side of thorax and of head-cave, and the
whole of the wing-cases, apple-green. (See Addenda.)
Atlantic States to the Rocky Mountains, Colorado,
125. Lycamna Finenus, Poey.
Expanse of wings from .75 to .95 of an inch.
Upper side of the male blue, with a slight black
border ; fringes white. In both sexes there is a small
round black spot near the outer edge of the hind wings.
The female is blackish brown, with the middle area of
the basal half of both wings washed with blue.
Under side ash-gray, usually paler in the male than
in the female, with a discoidal crescent on the middle of
each wing, bordered on each side with white ; and three
sinuous common bands, formed of small black spots
circled with white, of which the outer are a little less
distinct and somewhat sagittate. The space which sepa-
rates the inner band from the median is usually whiter
than the rest of the surface, and forms a band of small
white quadrangular spots. ‘The base of the hind wings
has a transverse row of three very black points annulate
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 295
with white, of which the external, out of line with the
others, is the largest. The hind wings have on the
outer edge and near the anal angle a black eye-spot,
more or less annulate with yellow, sprinkled behind
with golden-green atoms. ,
Gulf States, Ariz.; N. Mex.; So. Cal.
126. Lyocana IsopHTHALMA, Herr.-Schaeff.
Kixpanse of wings .75 of an inch.
Upper surface brown, slightly grayish at the base and
along the costal margin, a row of five blackish spots
along the outer margin of the hind wings, the three next
the anal angle the most distinct, the other two sometimes
almost obliterated.
Under side of nearly the same color as the upper,
slightly hoary at the base, the wings crossed by about
seven rows of elongate white spots and an inner row of
white circles. ‘There is a submarginal row of six con-
spicuous black spots on the hind wings. The spot near-
est the anal angle is almost entirely covered with metallic
green, and the rest of the spots present detached scales
of this color, generally on the side nearest the margin.
Palpi dark brown above, white beneath, with a few
black hairs; antennze annulate black and white; club
reddish brown, red at the tip.
Florida, Georgia.
127. Lycana Extiuis, Bd.
Expanse of wings from .6 to .7 of an inch.
Male.—Upper side brown, sometimes reddish brown,
bluish at base of both wings, and slightly fusecous along
the hind margins; hind wings bordered by a series of
296 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
round fuscous spots; fringes long, pure white, except at
the outer angle of the fore wings and against the lower
median interspace, where they are fuscous.
Under side of fore wings dark gray at base, without
markings, fulvous on disk, crossed by interrupted white
streaks ; the margin gray, presenting a series of obsolete
lunules, in front of each of which is a white border,
forming a broken line like those on the disk. Hind
wings dark gray at base, paler gray over part of the
disk, then brown, followed by a broad white submarginal
space; the base marked by three fuscous points placed
transversely, and the brown disk crossed by white
streaks as on the fore wings; outer margin bordered
by a row of black spots, of which the first, next the anal
angle, is duplex and covered with metallic green scales ;
the next four are large, dead-black, and metallic only at
their base; the next two wholly covered with metallic
scales.
Female.—Same size, paler-colored above, marked like
the male.
This description is of specimens taken in Texas.
Boisduval’s description of those taken in California is
as follows:
Upper side clear brown; hind wings paler, with a
blackish border.
Under side of fore wings very clear brown, with white
interrupted transverse strize, more or less Cistinct.
Under side of hind wings white, with brown stris,
and a marginal row of seven black ocelli powdered with
golden atoms.
California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Texas,
Florida.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 297
128. Lyc#na Ammon, Lue.
Expanse of wings 1.05 inches,
Male.—Upper surface clear violet-blue, the edge of
the wings black, and a small black spot near the anal
angle. Fringes white, cut with black at the ends of the
veins, Peedi so on the fore wings.
Under side dark gray. The fore wings have a eray
bar at the end of the cell, with a white a on each side ;
beyond the cell a curved row of intervenular gray spots,
each with its inner and outer border of white. Along the
outer fourth of the wing is a broad white band, dentate
without, and a subterminal row of white lunules en-
closing gray spots, the anterior half of lunules somewhat
dusky. Edge of wings black, with a white inner border.
Hind wings with the same markings, the white band
broader; in addition, the basal half has three round
black spots annulate with white-——one in the cell, two
near the costal margin,—and a gray spot near the inner
margin. Near the anal angle are two round black spots,
with a more or less complete annulus of metallic blue
scales, the outer spot having before it an orange lunule.
Female.— Upper surface the same as in the male, outer
part of hind wings a little paler, with costal and outer
border of black; the latter on the fore wings a little
mottled with blue, and on the hind wings containing ¢
series of blue lunules and two bright black spots, the
outer, or one farthest from the anal angle, with an orange
lunule before it. Under side the same as in the male.
Food-plant and larva unknown. ‘The species is a
native of Cuba, but has been found at Indian River
and in Southern Florida.
298 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
129. Lycmna THEoNUus, Lue.
Expanse of wings from .9 to .95 of an inch.
Male.—Upper surface violet-blue, rather pale, except
at the terminal border. The marks of the under side
can be seen through the blue.
Under side white, crossed by seven or eight brown-
gray stripes, appearing along the costa as though this
were the color, and as if there were eight more or less
wavy white transverse lines arranged in pairs enclosing
a space of the ground color a little darker. Along the
outer margin two rows of spots, the outer roundish or
oval, the inner lunate. On the fore wings the second,
fourth, fifth, and sixth lines do not reach more than half-
way across the wing, leaving a large white space. On
the hind wings near the anal angle are two round black
spots in place of two of the gray, each containing a circle
of metallic violet scales; the spots annulate with pale
yellow. The lines on the hind wings are more broken
up into spots than those on the fore wings.
Female.—Upper surface white, with a violet-blue tint,
more prominent on the basal half, with a broad outer
border extending round the costa to the base. On the
hind wings this border contains a series of white lunules,
the two next the anal angle enclosing a round black
spot. The markings of the under side show through
more plainly than in the males. Under side the same
as in the males.
Palpi black ; antenneze black and white; club black,
tipped with white; body black above, white beneath,
with a yellowish tinge.
Florida Keys.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 299
FAMILY HESPERID/.
This family may be known by their robust bodies and
their triangular fore wings, and by the knob of the an-
tenn usually ending in an attenuated portion,—that is,
mostly bent or hooked ; they have six feet adapted for
walking. In their robust bodies and coarse scales, which
are not closely appressed, these butterflies resemble some
of the higher moths. When in repose, the wings are
either spread or closed back to back and thrown back
so that the costal edge of the hind wings is next to the
costal edge of the fore wings.
The family is divided into two sections, which bear to
each other somewhat the relation of families.
SECTION I.
The butterflies in this division have the knob of the
antenne thick ovoid or elongate ovoid. The larvee are
more or less spindle-shaped. The pupe are somewhat
conical, like those of the moths, smooth, and found in
puparia composed of leaves fastened together, in which
the larvee seclude themselves.
130. CARTEROCEPHALUS MANDAN, Edw.
Iixpanse of wings 1.12 inches.
Upper side of wings dark brown, overlaid with a few
yellowish scales, and marked with dull ochraceous spots,
as follows: one row extends along the outer margin,
often nearly obliterated ; another across the disk, or be-
tween the margin and the end of the cell, two of which
are out of line and nearer the outer margin; the cell is
300 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
more or less filled with the yellow, mostly in the form
of two patches, and there is a small spot resting on the
lower side of the cell near the middle, and another below
the submedian vein, about one-fourth of the distance from
the base. The hind wings have a row of small spots
along the outer margin, a row of larger spots within
this, across the disk, and one near the base of the wing.
Under side of fore wings much paler than the upper,
the light markings much larger and coalescing. The
hind wings are of the same yellowish as the fore wings,
the spots of the upper side repeated, but larger and of
a white color, ringed with brownish, with an additional
spot above the basal. ‘The veins are all brownish.
White Mountains, N.H., and Maine, where it flies
about the middle of June.
131. CARTEROCEPHALUS OMAHA, Edw.
Eixpanse of wings 1 inch.
Upper side brown, much marked with bright fulvous,
which covers the central margin of the fore wings from
near the base to near the end of the cell and back to the
median vein, except a brown streak in the cell from the
base. A submarginal row of confluent spots extends
from the costa to the hind margin, broken opposite the
cell, two small spots ranging outside the line, with a
space between them and the costal spot. Edge of hind
margin also fulvous.
The hind wings have a similar row, or rather one
long spot or band, across the wing, and two spots on the
disk and on the costa. Fringes fulvous..
Under side pale brown washed with fulvous, which last
color prevails on the apical part of the fore wings and
ELASTERN UNITED STATES. 3801
on the anterior part of the hind wings. The spots of
the upper side reappear, enlarged, and two spots near the
apex of the fore wings are connected with the costal spots.
West Virginia, Colorado, California.
132. ANCYLOXYPHA NumirTor, Fab.
Expanse of wings from .8 to 1 inch.
Upper surface of fore wings blackish brown, washed
more or less with dull dark yellow; the cell dusky, but
in front of the cell nearly clear yellow, and more yellow
below the cell than in it. Hind wings dark yellow,
costa and outer margin blackish brown.
Under side of fore wings brown, the costa and outer
margin, to near the posterior angle, yellow. Hind
wings uniform yellow.
Harris states that the chrysalis is rather long, nearly
cylindrical, but tapering at the hinder extremity, and
with an obtusely-rounded head. It is reddish-ash-col-
ored, minutely sprinkled with brown dots.
Maine to Texas, Nebraska. (See Addenda.)
133. THyMELicus PowEsHIEk, Park.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, the costal margin to near
the apex dull yellow.
Under side of fore wings dark brown, the basal two
thirds of costal edge dull yellow, the apex washed with
yellowish white. Hind wings dark brown, the veins
white ; the whole surface, except between the submedian
vein and near the inner margin, sprinkled with white
scales. Fringes brown, basal half white all round.
Towa, Illinois, Montana, Colorado.
26
302 THE BUTTERILIES OF THE
134. PAmpuita Massasort, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface blackish brown, with a slight
violet reflection on the fore wings; three small, sub-
obsolete, yellow, intervenular dots in a row near the
costa beyond the cell, and occasionally a faint, small,
ycllowish spot or two on the middle of the hind wings.
Fringe shightly paler, yellowish round the anal angle.
Under side of fore wings about the same color as the
upper, the costal and outer margin tawny orange-yellow,
the spots of the upper side repeated with more distinct-
ness ; a few scales in two small patches near the middle.
Basal color of hind wings blackish brown, but so washed
with tawny orange as to be almost that color, paler than
the female. Across the wing, a little beyond the middle,
is a series of six pale yellow spots; the first indistinct ;
the second nearly square, with the outer end rounded ;
the third oblong, reaching from near the margin to the
middle of the cell, a faint brown bar at the end of the
cell ; the fourth and fifth oblong, one-third the length of
the third; the sixth, like the first, subobsolete. Body,
head, and antenne, above, the color of the upper surface ;
below, pale whitish yellow.
Female.—Above, the markings of the under side show
more plainly than in the males; the yellow of the under
side is darker, and the fourth and fifth spots on the under
side are pointed towards the base and somewhat blended
with the third.
Food-plant and larva unknown.
Eastern and Middle States, Nebraska, Colorado,
Texas. (See Addenda.) )
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 303
135. PAMPHILA ZABULON, Bd.—Lee.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Male.—Upper surface pale dull yellow, the fore wings
dusky at the base, the outer fourth blackish brown, den-
tate within; the same extending along the hind margin
to near the base, and very narrowly edging the costa.
There is an oblique bar at the end of the cell, and a patch
beyond, almost touching the apical portion of the border ;
beyond this patch the border is narrowed, with a narrow
line of yellow intervening. Hind wings bordered all
around with blackish brown.
Under side of fore wings pale yellow, the basal half,
except the costal margin, dark brown, the marks of the
outer end repeated with less distinctness. The hind
wings have a broad, pale yellow, slightly clouded band
across the wing beyond the middle; the basal third,
except a costal patch, reddish brown. The outer border
contains several irregular pale brown spots; and there
is a dark brown, yellow-washed streak below the sub-
median vein.
Var. Hozomoxk, Harr.—This form has the markings
of the male much as in the typical form, but the dark
spots are more pronounced, with often a subterminal
patch above the discal bar, and the yellow is bright
tawny. The hind wings have the yellow band of the
under side narrower, leaving a continuous outer border,
in width one-fourth the length of the wing, with some
lilac seales.
The female of this form has the yellow a little paler
than the ordinary male, the veins all brown, more dusky,
suffusing over the basal half of the wings, with the yellow
304 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
on the under side of the hind wings more contracted than
in the male.
Dimorphic form female PocaHontas, Scud.—This
form of female is similar to QUADRAQUINA, but duller
in color, traces of a spot in the cell of the fore wings, the
four posterior spots of the outer row not clearly defined.
Hind wings a little pale in the middle. The marks on
the under side are somewhat blurred, and the hind wings
have an indistinct subterminal band.
Var. female QuaADRAQUINA, Scud.—This has the
upper surface the same shade as the outer border of the
male, with a slight vinous reflection ; beyond the middle
of fore wings a broken row of pale yellow spots, three
near the costa, then two nearer the outer margin, which
are small and mostly oblong, then four to the hind
margin, trapezoid, and all but the third larger. Hind
wings without spots.
Under side blackish brown, the costal margin of
both wings washed with tawny ochre, the apex of the
fore wings whitish, the outer portion of the hind wings
washed with lilac. The spots of the upper surface are
repeated, the posterior four enlarged and more or less
confluent.
Body dark brown, with greenish hairs above, paler
beneath.
The eggs (Fig. 82) are pale green, nearly globular,
somewhat flattened, and under a strong lens
they appear reticulated over the surface with
fine six-sided markings. ‘These are deposited
P. Zabulon, on grass, upon which the larve feed.
ast The young larva, which hatches from the
eyo in about ten days, is .1 of an inch long, with a large,
Fig. 82.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 305
prominent, shining black head, and a creamy-white body,
with a yellowish tinge posteriorly.
The second segment is half circled INES teh
with a black line. ac ime
The larve station themselves on :
5 ¢ P. Zabulon, larva (natural
the inside of the leaves, near the size):
joints, and, by drawing portions of
the leaves together with silk, form a rude case, in which
they secrete themselves. (See Addenda.)
Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi Valley.
136. PAMPHILA Sassacus, Harr.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dull dark yellow, the outer
border of fuscous or dark grayish brown, not quite one-
third the length of the wing, crenate within, the base
dusky. On the fore wings is a black, oblique stigma, or
sex-mark, below the cell, with a little fuscous below it,
and at its end a fuscous patch, which is separated from the
border by a few fulvous spots in a broken line; veins
fuscous. The yellow of the hind wings is surrounded
by a fuscous border.
Under side brownish fulvous, the posterior half of
fore wings fuscous; the five subterminal spots of the
upper surface repeated, a spot at the end of the cell, a
large triangular patch, with dentate outline, all yellowish
white. The hind wings have a subterminal band of
six whitish spots across the anterior two thirds of the
wing, and a spot at the end of the cell. One specimen
having a slight greenish-yellow wash to the under surface
has these spots indistinct.
Female.—This differs from the male in having the
% 26*
306 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
hind wings washed in the centre with yellow, the yellow
area less than in the male and not clear yellow. Nearly
all of the fore wing is dark grayish brown or fuscous, the
basal half, or in some examples a little more, washed with
yellow, or only the anterior edge and a portion of the
base sprinkled with yellow scales. The fore wings have
a row of eight yellow spots, of which 4 and 5 are out
of line with the others, being nearer the margin; and
two elongate spots, more or less distinct, in the outer
part of the cell.
Under side grayish brown, a little pale, the hind
wings and the anterior and outer portion of the fore
wings well sprinkled with ochraceous scales; the spots
of the fore wings repeated, pale, the lower of the outer
row broadly expanded; the hind wings with a faint
row of three or four spots beyond the cell.
Body brown aboye, with grayish hairs, lighter beneath.
The larva is said to feed on grass, the butterfly ap-
pearing on the wing in the middle of June.
New England, New York to Nebraska, Georgia,
Florida, Colorado.
137. PampHita Metres, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.35 inches.
Female.—Upper surface dark brown tinged ochra-
ceous, especially on the hind wings. Fore wings with
the following white markings : two small spots at the ex-
tremity of the cell; three small spots, one above the other,
on the costal border, a little more than three-fourths the
distance from the base; below these, and half-way be-
tween them and the outer margin, one above the other,
two small spots; placed successively a little nearer the
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 307
base than the last, two more spots, somewhat larger,
between the branches of the median vein, and traces of
a small one on the submedian.
Hind wings uniform in tint, with a faint ochraceous
repetition of the markings beneath. The outer margin
of both wings is narrowly edged with black, the fringes
slightly paler than the upper surface.
Under side dark brown, on the hind wings ap-
proaching to black, with some grayish scales towards
the outer border. The fore wings have the markings
of the upper surface repeated with greater distinctness
than above, and a large pale brown spot at the posterior
angle.
Hind wings with a band formed of grayish-white
spots between the venules, starting at the costa at two-
thirds the distance from the base, nearly reaching the
outer margin in the space between the subcostal and
median veins, thence bent towards the inner margin at
a little less than a right angle, terminating at the sub-
median.
Male.—This form scarcely differs from the female on
the upper surface, except that the spots are a little more
distinct and pale yellow, especially the row on the hind
wings. Stigma, or sex-mark, oblique, narrow, black,
broken, the upper part longer than the lower.
Under side as in the female. Body black above,
with greenish hairs, below gray, with a few greenish
hairs on the thorax; palpi yellowish white, gray at the
tip.
Grass is the food-plant of this species.
Tt has been found in Connecticut, New York, Texas,
and Colorado.
308 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
138. PamMpHILA Uncas, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.35 to 1.6 inches. :
}emale.—Upper surface fuscous, the base and posterior
part of the fore wings, and a broad band through the
hind wings from the base out, washed with dusky fulvous.
The fore wings have a subterminal broken row of spots,
all whitish but the last, which is yellowish, also a small
spot at the end of the cell; the two between the branches
of the median vein with the outer angles much extended.
Hind wings with the subterminal spots of the under
side showing through a little.
Under side fuscous gray, sprinkled with pale yellow
scales. The spots on the upper surface of the fore wings
are repeated, white in color, those of the subterminal
row blended into three groups, the lower widened pos-
teriorly, so as to suffuse most of the posterior angle area.
The hind wings have two very much bent white bands,
the outer not reaching the inner margin.
Male.—Upper surface fuscous, the fore wings, with the
cell and a patch below the stigma, distinct yellow, in-
clining to fulvous, the hinder portion, from the end of
the cell to the posterior angle, washed with yellow, and
a row of five yellow spots in the outer fuscous field,
the two beyond the cell much out of line with the others.
The stigma very oblique, narrow, jet-black, contracted
in the middle,
Hind wings, with all but a costal edge and a very
narrow terminal border, heavily washed with yellow,
inclining to a fulvous shade in the central portion.
Fringes white, fuscous at base. Under side as in the
female. |
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 309
Larva and food-plant unknown, though the latter
may be grass.
Delaware to Ohio, Dakota to Arizona.
139. PAMPHILA SEMINOLE, Scud.
Expanse of wings 1.35 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, slightly tinged
with violet, the fore wings, with the basal half and costal
edge, sprinkled with fulvous yellow; a broken row of
dull yellow spots beyond the middle, consisting of three
below the costa in line, two beyond the cell farther to-
wards the margin, and three, larger than the others, be-
tween the branches of the median vein and above the
submedian, each of these three reaching from vein to
vein ; a yellow bar at the end of the cell. Stigma black,
narrow, broken near the middle, the parts slightly
curved, the ends overlapping each other a little.
Hind wings with brownish-yellow hairs, and a row
towards the outer margin of about five small yellow spots.
Under side scarcely paler than the upper, the hind
wings more tinged with reddish, sprinkled with yellow
scales which are pale on the hind wings, more distinct ful-
vous yellow along the costal edge of the fore wings and
near the anal angle of the hind wings. Spots of upper
side repeated, but paler, almost white, spot 7 of the fore
wings enlarged, and spot 8 shading out on each side.
Female.—Similar to the male, but scarcely sprinkled
with yellow ; lacking the stigma; the spots a little more
prominent. Under side as in the male.
The larva and food-plant are unknown.
It has been found in Florida, North Carolina, New
Jersey, and Iowa. (See Addenda.)
310 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
140, Pampyita LEONARDUS, Harr.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface blackish brown, more or less
overlaid with fulvous yellow scales from the base to the
outer third of the fore wings, with a broken subter-
minal row of clearer yellow spots; three of these below
the costa in line, two beyond the cell farther out, and
separated from the cell by a space without yellow, and
two or three below, in line with the first, continued
by an oblique shade to the hind margin; also a dis-
tinct spot at the end of the cell. Stigma black, oblique,
coneave below. The hind wings have a curved band
not reaching either margin; an obscure spot in the
cell, and greenish-yellow hairs over the inner half of
the wings.
Under side bright reddish brown, the fore wings
blackish from the cell to the hind margin, but not
reaching the outer margin except at the posterior angle.
The spots of the upper surface are repeated, but the
spots below the cell are blended and enlarged into a
subtriangular patch. The hind wings have a small
spot at the end of the cell, and beyond a curved row
of six or seven spots.
Female.—This form has the basal third of the fore
wings only moderately sprinkled with yellow scales, and
the stigma is absent. ‘The spots in the outer row are
larger than in the males. Under side like the male,
According to Mr. Scudder, this species feeds on grass
in the larval state.
New England to West Virginia; Indian River,
Florida; Kansas. (See Addenda.)
LASTERN UNITED STATES, 311
141. PaAmpuitaA Mesxker, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.5 to 1.6 inches.
Male.—Upper side dark brown, marked and spotted
with reddish fulvous ; three small spots in subcostal in-
terspaces of fore wings, two others opposite the cell and
towards the outer margin, and in line with these an
oblique row crossing the median interspaces, the lower
spots merged in the fulvous of disk or cell to base and
anteriorly to costa; the stigma in two sections, the ante-
rior one completely crossing the lower median inter-
space, a narrow, smooth, black, slightly bent ridge; the
lower one in submedian interspace parallel to the line
of the other, short, not reaching either venule; be-
hind the stigma is a narrow, blackish, rough patch.
The hind wings have the central part obscure fulvous,
with an imperfectly defined series of spots between the
cell and the outer margin. Fringes of the fore wings
fuscous next the margin, whitish outside; of the hind
wings, fuscous next the margin, then fulvous, and out-
side whitish.
Under side of hind wings bright ferruginous, of one
shade, and without spots; apex of fore wings bright
ferruginous, the outer margin a little obscured, the spots
indistinctly repeated, next the base and against the stigma
black.
Female.—Color dark brown; the fore wings have
spots placed as in the male, distinctly defined through-
out, the basal area being brown, instead of fulvous as in
the male. Hind wings as in the male, though the spots
may be more clearly defined.
Under side as in the male, but on the disk of the hind
319 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
wings is an indistinct bent row of small paler spots cor-
responding to the spots of the upper side.
Body above black, covered with fulvous hairs; thorax
below yellowish ; abdomen the same, with a fulvous tint ;
palpi hight yellow, with a fulvous tint; antenne black
above, yellowish below ; club black on both upper and
under surface, on the sides fulvous.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Texas ; Indian River, Florida.
142. PampHiLa Huron, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.5 inches.
Male.—Upper surface of fore wings dark yellow
tinged with fulvous, dusky at base, the veins fuscous,
and a fuscous outer border about one-fourth the length
of the wing, crenate within, narrowed opposite the cell,
before which there is a fuscous patch. Stigma some-
what quadrate, the upper outer angle produced, velvety
black above and below, with a nearly round blackish
patch beyond.
Hind wings with the central portion of the wing
yellow, but washed a little with dusky, a continuous
fuscous border round the wing.
Under side dull yellowish fulvous, the hind wings and
terminal portion of the fore wings tinged with grayish ;
the basal half of the fore wings from the cell to the hind
margin, and a border to the posterior angle, blackish.
The fore wings have a faint subterminal band, much as
on the under side of P. Leonardus. Base of hind wings
dusky, a faint subterminal band.
Female.—This has the upper surface blackish fuscous,
the fore wings washed with yellowish from the base to
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 313
the outer third along the costal and hind margins; a
black space in place of the stigma of the male; the usual
broken subterminal row of spots, the first three and the
last two translucent. Hind wings with yellowish scales,
and greenish hairs over the inner half, an indistinct spot
in the cell, and a band beyond not reaching either margin,
in width about one-fourth the length of the wing.
Under side like that of the male in color; the row
of spots of the fore wings repeated, the hind wings with
two much curved rows of white confluent spots.
Atlantic States to Florida, Mississippi Valley, Texas,
Arizona.
143, PamMpHiILA Puyiaus, Drury.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface yellow, dusky at base along the
veins, and on the costal and inner margin of the hind
wings. ore wings with an outer border of eight cunei-
form fuscous spots, the length being about one-fourth
the length of the wing, the third and fourth from the
apex about half as long as the others, and the eighth
half-wedge-shaped. Stigma slender, oblique, velvety
black, with a fuscous patch below; a bar at the end
of the cell, with two rays from it. Hind wings with a
border of five cuneiform spots, the second very short.
Under side paler than the upper, and the yellow not
so bright. Fore wings fuscous below the cell and along
the hind margin, the stigma and part of the terminal
spots showing, but not those at the apex. The hind
wings have two subobsolete rows of fuscous spots, the
inner across the middle of the wing.
Female.—Upper side dark brown, with a little vinous
) 27
314 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
reflection. The fore wings have the basal third washea
with dull yellow, the spots brighter dark yellow. There
is a spot at the end of the cell, and an oblique broken row
behind ; the first three in the subcostal interspaces are ob-
long, slightly narrowed at the base; the next two oppo-
site the cell, farther towards the margin, small and round
or quadrate ; number 6 like 2 and 3; number 7 quad-
rate; number 8 a mere point; number 9 triangular, and
extending as a shade along the hind margin to the base.
Hind wings overlaid on basal and inner portions with
dull yellow hairs, and with a subterminal row of spots
much as in the female of P. Huron.
Under side darker yellow than in the male, the fus-
cous covering more than the posterior half of the wing ;
the spots of the upper side repeated, whitish.
According to Dr. A. W. Chapman, the larva of this
species when full grown is .7 of an inch long, fusiform,
of a uniform dull green color, and thickly granulated
with pale points. The collar on joint 2 is dark brown.
Head small, dark brown.
The chrysalis is .5 of an inch long, nearly cylindrical,
pubescent. Color pale green; a black line, interrupted
on the posterior joints, extends from back of the head-
case to the last joint, with a lateral black streak on the
thorax, and a row of spots on the abdomen. More or
less punctured throughout.
Food-plant, grass.
Middle and Gulf States to the Pacific.
144, PAmpuiItA Brerrus, Bd.—Lee.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Male.—Upper surface yellow, with a fuscous terminal
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 315
border crenate within, covering about one-fourth the
length of the wing, receding somewhat opposite the cell
of the fore wings ; the base dusky ; the veins of the outer
half of the fore wings fuscous. The stigma has the cen-
tral streak dull black, with velvety black each side of
this, and a small blackish patch below. A fuscous streak
extends from the lower end of this to the base along the
submedian vein, and another irregular-shaped patch ex-
tends from the upper end of the stigma so as almost to
touch the terminal border opposite the cell.
Under side dark brown, overlaid with yellow ; costal
portion of fore wings yellow, basal portion fuscous. An
iregular subterminal yellow band crosses both wings.
The egg is white, smooth, hemispherical. It is de-
posited on grass (Paspalum setaceum).
The young larva is white, with a large black head,
and black collar. When full grown it is one inch long,
pale green, with a dark dorsal stripe, and an obscure line
on each side. Collar black, on each side a black dot sepa-
rated from the collar. Stigmata black. Head rounded,
projecting obliquely, granulated with black, the sides of
face and two streaks on upper part of face yellow-white.
Chrysalis .75 of an inch long. Color pale green, the
abdomen whitish ; wing-cases smooth, finely veined ; the
antennse-case extending in a filiform point to the end of
the abdomen. On each side of head-case a dark point,
and a row of dark points along the sides of the abdomen.
Gulf States, West Virginia.
145. PAMPHILA OTHO, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.25 inches,
Upper surface dark brown, with a little vinous re-
316 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
flection. ‘The fore wings have a series of yellow spots,
—the first three anteapical, the next two between the
branches of the median vein, and the sixth a small one
on the submedian. The hind wings. have the usual
ereenish-yellow hairs over the inner part, and two small,
faint, contiguous spots at the end of the cell. The male
differs from the female in having an oblique stigma, and
in having an overlaying of greenish-yellow scales on the
basal portion of the wings, though scarcely enough to
change the color.
Under side yellowish brown, the posterior half, or
more, of the fore wings blackish. The spots of the fore
wings are repeated, except the last one. The hind wings
have an indistinct yellowish band of five or six spots.
Var. EGEREMET, Scud.—This is similar to the other
form, but differs in wanting the marks on the upper side
of the hind wings, and the anterior and posterior spots
of the fore wings are lacking.
The under side is dark blackish brown, obscure at the
base, the hind wings, especially of the male, sprinkled
with olivaceous scales, the posterior part of the fore
wings more blackish, and the costal margin sprinkled
with yellow. ‘The spots of the fore wings are repeated,
and there is an indistinct row of spots across the hind
wings. ‘There is the same difference between the males
and the females on the upper surface as in the form Otho.
This is a variable species, the form Otho seeming to
be the Southern form, while Egeremet is the Northern,
with intergrades covering the intervening ground. One
of these forms, a female, named Ursa, Worth., differs
from the form Otho in having the posterior spect on the
fore wings lacking, and in there being traces of a band
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Sia
of elongate spots on the upper side of the hind wings,
seen fairly only in certain lights.
Body above dark brown, lighter beneath.
Atlantic States, Mississippi Valley, Texas.
146. PAmMpuina PecKius, Kirby.
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Female.—Upper surface dark blackish brown, the
markings dark yellow, slightly fulvous-tinted; there
is a slight sprinkling of yellow scales over the surface,
especially the basal portion. The mark-
ings of the fore wings are: a slight ray
in the upper part of the cell, and traces
of one in the lower part; and a broken
band of seven spots beyond the middle,
the two opposite the cell beyond the line
of the others. The first three of these — Pamphila Peckius,
spots are oblong in the subcostal inter- ay
spaces; the next four mostly quadrate ; sometimes the
fourth of the seven is wanting, and there are occasionally
a few scales on the submedian vein in line with the last
spots. Hind wings with a band of five spots, in width
about one-fourth the length of the wing; spots 3 and
4 the largest.
Under side fulvous brown, the basal half of the fore
wings fuscous ; the spots of the fore wings are repeated,
lighter yellow, there being eight of them instead of seven.
The hind wings have two broad pale yellow bands, a
little irregular in outline, the lower part of the inner
often united with the middle of the outer, as in Fig. 84.
Male.—Of the same color as the female, the basal two
thirds of the fore wings heavily washed with yellow ;
27*
318 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the outer two thirds of the cell, and the space in front
of that, nearly clear yellow ; below the cell an oblique,
sinuous, velvety-black sex-mark ; and below thisa nearly
round brownish-olive patch. The outer third is sprinkled
with yellow scales, and contains the outer row of spots
found on the wing of the female, the seventh spot partly
lost in the olive patch. The hind wings are similar to
those of the female, but are sprinkled with yellow.
Under side the same as in the female.
According to Professor Fernald, this species feeds on
grass. The eggs are pale greenish yellow, strongly con-
vex above, and flattened at the base, and the surface is
faintly reticulated. They hatch in fourteen days. The
young larva is .1 of an inch long, with a large shining
black head. The body is dull brownish yellow, dotted
with black, with a ring of brownish black on the second
seoment. Under side paler than the upper, and the whole
surface clothed with fine hairs. The butterfly is on ihe
wing from June to July.
New England to Wisconsin, Illinois, West Virginia,
Kansas.
147, Pampuita Mystic, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.2 inches.
Male.— Upper surface yellow, slightly brownish-
tinted; an outer border of dark blackish brown, about
one-fourth the length of the wing, not crenate on its inner
edge, but receding a little opposite the cell of the fore
wings and at the apex; base dusky. Stigma oblique,
black, slender, with a blackish patch below it, and an
irregular patch from the end of the cell outward, the
corners of which connect with the outer border, leaving
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 319
a small yellow spot enclosed. ‘This patch, the stigma,
and the dusky base form a continuous line.
The hind wings have the outer border narrower than
the border of the fore wings, but have broad inner and
sostal borders ; veins dark, with some shading at the end
of the cell.
Under side somewhat paler than the upper, the fore
wings blackish below the cell and along the hind margin,
a band of paler yellow beyond the middle, the posterior
spots expanded. Hind wings with a broad subregular
subterminal band, and a patch in the cell ; all indistinct.
Female.—The fore wings dark brown, the outer two
thirds of cell pale yellow, and some yellow suffusion in
front of this. There is the usual row of spots marking
the outer third: the first three oblong; the fourth ob-
scure ; the fifth triangular ; the sixth oblong ; the seventh
subquadrate, convex within, concave without ; the eighth
irregular. The hind wings have a patch at the end of
the cell, and a band of five spots beyond, the first a little
out of line with the others; the ground color the same
as that of the fore wings.
The under side is marked as in the male, but the sur-
face is more fuscous, except the anal portion of the hind
wings and the anterior basal portion of the fore wings,
which are but little darker than in the males.
Like many other species of Pamphila, this feeds on
grass in the larval state. The eggs are, according to Mr.
Scudder, of a pale yellowish-green color, strongly convex
above, and with the base flattened. The surface appears
smooth under a lens, but under a power of eighty diam-
eters is seen to be faintly reticulated. The egg period
lasts eight or ten days. The young larva is .1 of an
320 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
inch long, with a large shining black head, and a white
body tinged with yellowish brown, this tinge being more
apparent towards the posterior part.
The full-grown larva is of an oval outline; the head
not large in proportion to the size of the body, but
prominent and much larger than the second segment;
it is of a dull reddish-brown color, edged with black on
the hinder part, and clothed with minute whitish hairs.
The body is dull brownish green, with hairs similar to
those on the head ; a dorsal line and numerous dots over
the surface of the body are of a darker shade. Joint 2
is pale whitish, with a line of brownish black across the
top. The last joints are paler than the rest, and the
under side of the body is paler than the upper.
So far as known, there is only one brood in a season,
and the butterflies are on the wing in June and July.
New England to New York.
148, PAMPHILA CERNES, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.1 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark olivaceous brown, with a
little vinous reflection ; fore wings, with the cell, the cos-
tal area to half-way between the cell and the apex, and a
patch beyond the upper end of the stigma, clear yellow.
The whole area below the cell, except a dusky patch out-
side the stigma, washed with yellow. Stigma oblique,
velvety black, contracted a little in the middle. Hind
wings with olive hairs and sprinkled with yellow scales.
Under side blackish or fuscous, the posterior part of
the fore wings clear, the outer half of the anterior por-
tion of the fore wings and all of the hind wings overlaid
with yellow; the cell and costal margin before the cell
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 39]
of the fore wings clear yellow. The fore wings have
five spots marking the outer third, the three costal ob-
scure, the two between the median venules pale yellow,
the lower excavate externally.
Female.—Upper surface of the same ground color as
in the male, the fore wings with a ray of clear yellow in
the cell, and the basal half sprinkled with yellow scales,
more so on the costal and hind margins. ‘The five yel-
low spots that are on the under side of the fore wings of
the male are distinct on the upper surface of the female,
with some scales on the submedian vein in line with the
others. Hind wings as in the male, but not sprinkled
so heavily.
Under side as in the male, but not so heavily overlaid
with yellow.
Body dark brown above, with greenish hairs ; a little
lighter beneath.
The larva is unknown.
New England to Montana, Florida.
149. PAmpuina Myus, French.*
Expanse of wings .95 of an inch.
Male.—Upper surface dark olivaceous brown, with a
slight vinous reflection, about the same shade as P. Cer-
nes, which it much resembles. The fore wings have the
discal cell and the area in front of the cell like Cernes,
heavily washed with yellow of a little darker shade than
in that species, the same color extending beyond the cell
along the costal area three-fourths the distance from the
base to the outer margin ; below the cell the same shade
* Mr. KE. M. Aaron thinks this is P. Baracoa, Luc.
r)
Sys THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
of yellow extends along the median vein the same dis-
tance, the area below this to the hind margin rather
heavily sprinkled with yellow scales, except the space
beyond the lower half of the stigma, being in this much
like Cernes. In Cernes there is a quadrate sinus of the
terminal dark brown of the wing dipping into the yel-
low beyond the cell, coming up to the cross-vein. In
this species the sinus is of the same width, but extends
inward above the median vein, ending in a point half-
way to the base of the wing. The stigma is black, nar-
row, oblique, entire, though constricted below the middle,
shorter than in Cernes, does not reach the submedian
below, and the upper end reaches only the second branch
of the median, while in Cernes it passes beyond this
venule, the lower third bent a little towards the base,
not more than half as wide as in Cernes; below the
stigma an oblong patch of blackish scales which are
bronzy in certain lights. The hind wings are sprinkled
with yellow scales, the inner half with yellowish: hairs
which are less olivaceous than in Cernes.
One specimen has on the fore wings, marking what
is above described as the outer boundary of yellow, five
smal] yellow spots which are paler than the yellow along
the costa,—three in a line back from the costa, and two
in the median interspaces; the yellow washing does not
quite reach to these spots, there being less yellow also at
the base; varying in amount of yellow, as is sometimes
seen in different specimens of Cernes.
Under side of fore wings much as above, the yellow
orange-tinted, the row of slightly paler spots at the end
of the yellow showing more distinctly than above, the
apical half of the terminal space sprinkled with yellow,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 323
the posterior half of the wing blackish, the sinus beyond
the cell heavily sprinkled over.
Hind wings dark brown, with a vinous reflection,
sprinkled with pale yellow scales, a narrow discal band
of small confluent whitish spots marking the outer third,
much as in the species of Amblyscirtes, not very dis-
tinct.
Female.—This lacks the stigma of the male, is marked
above much as the female of Cernes, but is of a darker and
brighter yellow, the whole area in front of the cell and
to the anteapical spots nearly clear yellow, the rest of
the basal two thirds sprinkled with yellow, much as in
the male. On the under side the obscure band on the
hind wings is a little more distinct than in the male.
Body concolorous with the wings above, the thorax
with olivaceous hairs, the abdomen sprinkled with yel-
low; beneath yellowish white, about the shade of
Cernes.
Florida, specimens obtained during the summers of
1883 and 1884.
150. PAmMPHILA MANATAAQUA, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, with a brassy re-
flection. The fore wings have, about three-fourths the
distance from the base, two or three small yellow inter-
venular spots in a line back from the costa, and a series
of three more below these,—two between the branches of
the median vein and one above the submedian ; the first
of these nearly square, the second oblong, twice as broad
as long, the third small. The stigma is black, narrow,
oblique, extending from the forking of the median at
394 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the end of the cell to the submedian. Hind wings
without marks, the hairs on the inncr half brown and
olivaceous.
Under side tawny yellowish brown, the fore. wings
with the spots as above, but paler, the one above the
submedian shaded out considerably with white. Hind
wings with a transverse row of four subobsolete pale
yellow spots.
Female.—The same color as the male, the spots in
the discal row of fore wings larger and more distinct,
the one above the submedian somewhat hour-glass-
shaped ; base of fore wings sprinkled with yellow, the
cell washed with the same. ‘The stigma absent.
Under side as in the male, but the surface more
sprinkled with pale yellow, the washing of yellow on
the fore wings repeated, the spots the same as in the
male, but a little more distinct.
Body dark brown above, with olivaceous hairs, below
yellowish white.
United States generally.
151. PAMPHILA VERNA, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.25 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, with a slight pur-
plish reflection. The fore wings have the costal edge
slightly sprinkled with yellow; the small, yellowish,
translucent, intervenular spots in a line back from the
costa, nearly three-fourths the distance from the base to
the apex, and two larger spots between the branches of
the median vein, the second twice as large as the first ;
a few scales are seen above the submedian in line with
these, and there is a small spot in the lower part of the
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 325
cell near the end. Stigma black, oblique, narrow, some-
what constricted, but not broken. Hind wings without
spots, hairs yellowish green. Iringes yellowish gray.
Under side about the same color as above, all but
the posterior part of the fore wings and a stripe within
the inner margin of the hind wings tinged with yellow
bronze having a purplish reflection. Spots on the fore
wings repeated ; the spot on the submedian considerably
enlarged.
Hind wings with a faint discal row of five small
whitish spots.
Female.—This differs little from the male in mark-
ings and color; there is less sprinkling of yellow scales,
and the few scales above the submedian may be absent.
Under side as in the male. Stigma absent from the fore
wings above.
Body concolorous with the wings above, gray be-
neath.
The larva and food-plant are unknown.
New York, Maryland to Georgia, West Virginia,
Ohio, Indiana, Kansas.
152. PAMPHILA VESTRIS, Bd.
Expanse of wings 1.28 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark glossy brown, as in P.
Metacomet ; outer margin blackish brown ; fringes dark
brown. Fore wings with some dull yellowish scales on
the inner half of the costa, on the outer side of the stigma.
and within it, between the median and submedian veins,
Stigma velvety black, consisting of two acutely ellipsoidal
spots, which join on the lower median venule and have
their extremities resting on the submedian and second
28
|
326 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
branch of the median ; the inner spot with distinct black
scales near the submedian vein.
Under side brown, blackish over the stigma, with
obscure yellow shades exterior to it as the only mark-
ings. Abdomen above concolorous with the wings, with
yellowish scales laterally. Thorax beneath, and abdomen
contiguous, brown, with some longer clay-colored hairs.
Palpi clothed with bristling yellow scales, from which
the tip of the last joint barely projects.
Female.—Fore wings with dull yellow scales and
hairs, more numerous on the inner half of the hind
margin, and nearly absent from the outer margin ; two
yellow spots between the branches of the median vein,
the outer one scarcely more than a dot, the inner sub-
quadrangular ; no anteapical spots, but in their place some
clustering yellow scales.
Under side dark brown, the fore wings reddish brown
basally, and the hind wings of the same shade through-
out, except towards their inner margin. ‘The two spots
of the upper surface of the fore wings are reproduced
beneath somewhat more obscurely. Thorax and front
of head clothed with yellowish scales; palpi with black
scales above, and beneath with some clay-colored scales.
California, Colorado, Indian River, Florida. |
153. PAMPHILA METACOMET, Harr.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.8 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, slightly glossed
with greenish yellow above; the usual oblique velvety-
black stigma. The under side of the wings slightly paler,
the hind wings with a transverse row of four very faint
yellowish dots, which, however, are often wanting.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Sot
Female.—Of the same color as the male, lacking the
stigma, and having two yellowish dots between the
branches of the median vein, and two more anteapical
near the costa beyond the cell. The under side has the
spots of the upper surface reproduced ; hind wings as in
the male.
This butterfly is to be found in July, the larva feeding
on grass.
New England to Montana, Kansas, Nevada.
154. Pampraia Acorys, Sm.—Abb.
Iixpanse of wings !.4 inches.
-.Upper surface dark blackish brown, slightly olive-
tinted. Males with an oblique black stigma, with a white
dot at the upper end of it in the upper median interspace,
and three small white dots in the subcostal interspaces
beyond the cell. The females lack the stigma, but have
besides the anteapical spots an oblique row of three in
the median interspaces and above the submedian, the
middle spot the largest.
Under side dark reddish brown, the posterior part of
fore wings and inner part of hind wings blackish. The
following parts are suffused with hlac: the outer part of
the fore wings, narrowing from the middle to both mar-
gins ; a similar space on the hind wings, also a patch in
the middle. The white spots of the upper surface are
repeated.
Some specimens have a white spot at the end of the
cell of the fore wings besides those mentioned.
The mature larva is 1.23 inches long, slender, nearly
white, but under the lens mottled and dotted with darker
lines and points, the rings on the posterior half of each
398 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
joint more prominent and less dotted; collar black.
Head rather small, eblique, oval, flattened frontally ;
white, with a black band around the top and sides, a
black streak down the middle of the face, and a short
black streak on each side of this last, net reaching the
band at top.
The chrysalis is smooth, white, the head-case tapering
into a slender pointed beak.
The larva was found in August by Dr. A. W. Chap-
man awrepped in the leaves of a large grass (Hrianthus
alopecurcizes).
Guif States, North Carolina, Eastern Pennsylvania,
Southern [linois.
155. PaAmpnHitA LoAmnt, Whitn.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.5 inches.
Male.—Wings above dark glossy brown, darker ba-
sally. Fringes light brown, witb a blackish line at ex-
treme base. Tore wings with a subcostal transverse row
of quadrate whitish spots, situate one in each of the three
terminal subcostal interspaces near the base; the upper
one one-half its length nearer apex. A large subquad-
rate spot crossing second median interspace at one-third
the distance from its base. An obsolescent transverse
line in lower median interspace, equidistant between its
base and spot in second interspace. A narrow black
stigma broken by the lower branch of the median vein ;
upper portion straight, commencing at second branching
of median and crossing the interspace to first median
venule near its source. The lower portion of the bar
commences below the venule about its own width re-
moved outwardly, is strongly concave within, and reaches
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 329
the submedian vein about two-fifths its distance from the
base. Hind wings without spots.
Under side dark chestnut-brown. Apex of fore
wings and border of hind wings with a bloom of pearly
scales. Fore wings with the markings of the upper side
repeated, and two minute dots in subcosto-median inter-
spaces, resting one on each venule; one in first median
interspace and a transverse line in third. These five,
including one in second interspace repeated above, are
in line from apex to internal margin.
Hind wings with a curved sub-basal row of three
small irregular white spots. The first is in the costo-
subcostal interspace one-fourth the distance from its
base, the second in the cell, and the third on the sub-
median vein. A subterminal sinuate row; the first
double, situate in the costo-subcostal interspace midway
between its other spot and its extremity. A black streak
extends from this spot sharply outward to the next spot
below the subcostal vein, which is followed in the suc-
ceeding interspaces by five small transverse spots. All
the spots of the hind wings have a black border.
Female.—General coloration a little lighter than in
the male. Fore wings above with two spots at extrem-
ity of cell. An irregular transverse band commencing
with three subcostal spots, the upper one not removed
outwardly as in the male ; the fourth twice its own width
nearer the margin; the fifth in line with the first three ;
the sixth twice its width nearer the base; the seventh
largest, removed its width internally; the eighth double
or with upper half obsolete.
Under side of fore wings with upper markings re-
peated. Hind wings with basal row inconstant. First
28*
330 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
three spots of subterminal row running towards the outer
margin; the others running at a right angle from the
third, tuwards the inner margin. In one female example
the subterminal row of hind wings is indicated above by
a few lighter scales.
The larva and food-plant are unknown.
Taken in Florida and North Carolina.
156. PampoiLtaA Macunata, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.5 inches.
Female.—Upper surface uniform dark brown. The
fore wings have three small round spots in the subcostal
interspaces beyond the cell, extending from the costa
back ; two more, of larger size, in the median interspaces ;
and a third below these on the submedian vein, the latter
sometimes obsolete. The hind wings have a small spot
on the middle, in some examples obsolete. All these
spots are semi-transparent, yellowish.
Under side nearly as above, fore wings washed with
white near the posterior angle, spots of fore wings as
above. The hind wings have three spots in a trans-
verse row across the disk. Body black ; palpi yellowish.
The larva, when full grown, is one inch long, slender,
pale green, finely pubescent, the last two joints deeper
green, collar light brown. Head oval, oblique, densely
pubescent, slightly granulated, light brown.
The chrysalis is .8 of an inch long, cylindrical, dull
green ; pubescent, especially about the head. Head-case
blunt, wing-cases smooth. On joints 8, 9, and 10 are
two flat tubercles on the ventral side. Anal hook broad,
triangular.
Gulf States ; occasional in New York.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. ook
157. PAMPHILA PANOQUIN, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface brown, with a bronze lustre.
The fore wings have two of the usual three anteapical
spots, those present representing the second and third of
the usual number; subquadrate, the outer corners with
a tendency to extend outward in points. There are
usually one or two beyond the cell nearer the margin
than the anteapical spots; when both are present the
lower one is much the larger and a little nearer the
cell. Below these is an oblique row of three spots,—two
in the median interspaces and one in line on the subme-
dian vein, the second a little more than twice as large as
the upper, the one on the submedian often small ; also a
small spot in the lower side of the cell at the outer end.
All these spots are pale yellowish. Stigma small, oval,
parallel to the costa.
Under side of nearly the same color as the upper,
much powdered with bronze scales on the costal margin
of the fore wings, and at the base and along the veins
of the hind wings. The spots of the fore wings show
more distinctly pale yellow. On the outer part of the
hind wings there is a white stripe following one of the
discal venules, with a spot below and occasionally one
above. .
Female.—Without the stigma, colored and marked
like the male, but usually lacking the upper spot beyond
the cell.
The larva and food-plant are unknown.
Gulf States; Atlantic City, N.J. (See Addenda.)
|
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aa2 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
158. PAMPHILA Ocoua, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, slightly bronzy ;
the fore wings with one or two small spots in the sub-
costal interspaces, the first one of the usual three being
absent, often the second also, those present being mere
points. There are three other spots in a bent row,—two
in the median interspaces and one on the submedian
vein, the one on the submedian so far towards the margin
as to be out of line with the other two; the first or
upper about one-fourth as large as the second, the second
concave on the outside. All these spots are dull, dusky,
translucent yellowish.
Under side of about the same shade as the upper, the
spots of the fore wings repeated. The costal margin and
most of the outer margin of the fore wings, and the veins
of the hind wings, somewhat bronzy.
Female.—Color and markings the same as in the male,
the second of the three oblique spots more than three
times as large as the first. The bronze on the costal
margin of the under side of the fore wings is very
distinct.
Larva and food-plant not known.
Gulf States; Eastern Pennsylvania; Whitings, Ind.
159. PampHILA EruHutius, Cram.
Expanse of wings from 2 to 2.15 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark blackish brown, some yel-
low scales over the basal part of both wings. The fore
wings with seven whitish, translucent spots, as shown in
Fig. 85. There are two in the two lower subcostal in-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Bias
terspaces, the upper of the usual series absent; one in
the second interspace below these, beyond the cell, in
line with the first two; the fourth and fifth in the
median interspaces; the sixth on the submedian vein ;
the seventh on the lower side of the cell near the outer
end. The first of these is oblong, the second guadrate,
the third oblong (the long way transverse to the wing
instead of longitudinal), the first and third nearly twice
as large as the second. The fourth is a little less than
Fia. 85.
Pamphila Ethlius (natural size).
half as large as the fifth, both somewhat trapezoidal,
concave on the outer side; the sixth is about the size of
the fourth, concave on the inside, the outside rounded ;
the seventh is oblong, rounded outwardly and concave
inwardly. The hind wings have three marks similar to
the fourth on the fore wings, though not quite so large,
the first or anterior one often double. The fringes are
fuscous, darker at the base. The outer margin of the
hind wings is slightly excavate near the middle, below
which it is a little produced, somewhat like Hudamus
Tityrus, but broader and not so prominent.
Under side ochraceous brown over the hind wings,
and on the fore wings the costal margin and apical and
304 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
outer portion, ending in a point at the posterior angle
the rest of the fore wing blackish. The spots of the
upper surface are repeated.
Female.—Like the male, except that the first three
spots on the fore wings are more nearly of the same
sIZze.
Body concolorous with the wings above, with yellow-
ish hairs, gray beneath.
Lsrva and food-plant unknown.
Gul’ States; occasional in New York.
160. PAMpHiLtA BimacuLa, Gr.—Rob.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.6 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown, with a slight
purplish tinge; the basal half of the fore wings washed
with yellow inclining to fulvous, more apparent along
the basal third of the costa and on both sides of the
stigma, where it is nearly clear vellow. Stigma oblique,
velvety black, broken in the middle into two narrew ellip-
tical parts. There is a small pale spot in the first median
interspace, and a few pale scales beyond the upper part
of the cell in the place of the usual second and third —
anteapical subcostal spots. Hind wings without spots,
but the middle and basal areas with olivaceous yellow
hairs.
Under side grayish brown ; the basal half of the ante
rior part of the fore wings, and the anterior part of the
hind wings, heavily washed with yellow tinged with fer-
ruginous ; the rest of the hind wings, except the inner
margin, and the outer part of the fore wings, well
sprinkled with the same. The posterior part of the
outer margin of the fore wings lacks these scales, and
HASTERN UNITED STATES. Oe)
the basal half of the hind part is black. The fore wings
have two pale spots in the median interspaces, the upper
whitish and about one-third the size of the lower. Inner
margin of hind wings sprinkled with gray. Fringes
white, gray at the base. |
Female.—Upper surface of the same general color as
in the male, with very few of the yellow scales, and those
mostly along the costa of the fore wings. There are
two pale spots in the median interspaces ; the anteapicai
scales as in the males. The hind wings have fewer of the
olive-yellow hairs. Under side as in the males, with
less gray on the inner margin of the hind wings.
Body black, the hairs of the thorax of nearly the same
eolor as the yellow on the fore wings, those on the
abdomen olive-yellow. Under side of body and palpi
white.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
The butterfly is found in July from New England to
Nebraska ; Llinois.
161. Pampuita Pontiac, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.25 to 1.4 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark blackish brown or fuscous,
the basal two thirds of the fore wings so heavily washed
with rather dark yellow as to make it clear yellow, sepa-
rated by the brown veins in the cell, beyond the stigma
and in the subcostal interspaces; the base of the wing
and the bases of the subcostal interspaces having but
little of the yellow, as also the area below the subme-
dian vein, Stigma oblique, rather broad, velvety black,
broken by the lower median venule into two elliptical
parts which join by their oblique ends; the upper end
306 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
stopping at the second branching of the median, the
lower on the submedian about one-third the distance
from the base.
Hind wings with the central area yellow, consisting
of a broad band across the disk composed of four oblong
spots between the veins, the second wholly or partially
divided into two spots, and a small spot in the end of
the cell; the width of the band about one-third the length
of the wing. The inner third with yellowish olivaccous
hairs.
Under side dark brown, slightly ferruginous, the fore
wings, with the basal two thirds, fuscous, shading out-
wardly into the brown. The costal margin is over-
laid with yellow which extends into the cell. Mark-
ing the outer third is a band of dull yellow spots,—the
two anterior in the two lower subcostal interspaces, the
third in the second space below these, the next two in
the median interspaces, and the sixth below the fifth,
separated only by the vein; the last four forming a
continuous band but for the brown veins. The hind
wings, as well as the apical portion of the fore wings,
are sprinkled with ferruginous yellow, the band of the
upper surface repeated, but the spots somewhat con-
tracted.
Female.—Upper surface dark or fuscous brown, as in
the male, with slight vinous reflection, the base a little
sprinkled with yellowish olivaceous scales. ‘Two-thirds
the distance from the base is a band of eight more or less
distinct yellow spots, the sixth and seventh a little pale.
The first three of these spots are in the subcostal inter-
spaces, twice as long as broad; the next two beyond the
cell, subquadrate, the fifth with its outer side in line with
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Son
the first three, the fourth with its inner side in the same
line; the sixth and seventh in the median interspaces,
much larger than the others, the outer sides excavate ;
the eighth less distinct, and somewhat hour-glass-shaped.
The hind wings have a band through the middle,:as in
the males, but the spots are smaller and the spot in the
cell is absent.
Under side as in the male. Body concolorous with
the wings above, under side pale yellow.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Massachusetts to Nebraska ; New Jersey.
162. Pampuiuta Dion, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.6 inches,
Male.—Upper surface almost a copy of P. Pontiac,
but differs in the space above the cell of the fore wings
being more dusky, less washed with yellow, the base a
little more dusky, the cross-bar at the end of the cell
more distinct, the space beyond the cell as far as the yel-
low extends being nearly filled with clear yellow, while
in Pontiac the upper half is dusky and the stigma is
narrower, and there is more yellow below the submedian
vein. The stigma is oblique, velvety black, divided in
the middle into two elliptical portions, the upper slightly
the longer, of medium width, the two parts not touching
each other, there being a more distinct separation than in
Pontiac. ‘The area on both sides of the stigma is clear
yellow, of about the same shade as in Pontiac. The
hind wings have the yellow band or area broader than
in Pontiac, the first spot less prominent, the second
longer, reaching well into the cell, without any dividing
cross or longitudinal marks, the remaining three spots
es w 29
338 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
not very distinct, more obscured by the brownish-yellow
hairs than are those in Pontiac.
Under side ochraceous yellow, tinged with brown,
especially the costal and apical portions of the fore
wings and the greater part of the hind wings; the pos-
terior part of the fore wings blackish. The spots are
obscure in the brownish-ochre ground, but are distinct
in the blackish portion, pale yellow. They are two
subcostal, a few scales, beyond the cell, two in the me-
dian interspaces, and the largest one extending from the
lower median venule to the submedian; the cell well
washed with brownish ochre, but not containing pale
yellow rays as in Pontiac. ‘The hind wings contain no
bands or spots, but the area between the median vein
and its lower branch and the submedian is paler than
the ground color, and there is another pale ray from
the middle of the cell outward to near the outer
margin.
Female.—Of the same shade of brown as the male,
both having a slight vinous reflection. The fore wings
have a small yellow spot at the end of the cell, and the
usual outer row of spots. These consist of the three
anteapical in the subcostal interspaces, the first one only
a few scales, the others elongate ; the fourth and fifth at.
the end of the cell, the first only a few scales; the sixth
and seventh in the median interspaces, rounded inwardly,
concave externally ; the eighth in the medio-submedian
space, partially or wholly divided in the middle. The
hind wings are similar to those of the male, the stripe
from the middle of the cell to near the outer margin
quite prominent, but mere traces of three other elongate
spots. Under side as in the male.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 339
Body concolorous with the wings above, beneath pale
yellow.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Nebraska ; Whitings, Ind.
163. PampHiILA ARPA, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.8 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark olivaceous brown, the base
of the fore wings and along the costa with yellowish
‘scales. The cell of the fore wings, a patch before the
stigma, and a band outside the stigma, crossing three in-
tervenular spaces and a little less than half the distance
to the outer margin, are clear golden yellow. There
are also five or six yellow rays between the subcostal
venules. Stigma long, slender, somewhat constricted in
the middle, oblique, black. The hind wings are sprin-
kled a little with yellow scales in the middle, the inner
part with olivaceous hairs.
Under side dark golden-yellow, the posterior part of
the fore wings blackish. Across the outer portion of
the fore wings are about three pale spots, there being
scarcely a trace of one on the submedian vein. Hind
wings without spots.
Female.—The upper surface the same brown as the
male, with a little sprinkling of yellow scales at the
base. The fore wings have the rays between the sub-
costal venules, but not so distinct, except the lower
two; and there are three spots in an oblique row,—one
on the submedian vein and two between the branches of
the median. Under side as in the male.
The mature larva, according to Dr. Chapman, is nearly
two inches long; pale green striped with yellow, the
340 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
joints after the second thickly lined with fine streaks
of green and yellow. Spiracles black. Head high,
narrow, blackish, bordered round the top and sides by
white, and with two white incurved (concave to each
other) streaks on the upper third of the face; these
separated by velvety black.
Chrysalis—Length 1.2 inches, nearly cylindrical,
light brown, covered with white powder; the abdom-
inal joints pubescent; the wing-cases prolonged into
a short subulate point; the abdomen long, tapering
slightly, the end bluntly rounded.
The larva feeds on saw-palmetto, forming a tube of
the fan-like segments of the leaves, in which it lies con-
cealed until it changes.
Gulf States.
164. PAMPHILA PALATKA, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.45 to 1.5 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown; the outer third ot
the cell of the fore wings, and about the middle third of
the wing below the cell, except a narrow posterior bor-
der, clear yellow; the basal third of the wing washed
with yellow, blending into the clear yellow of the middle,
so that without a glass the whole of this appears yellow.
Beyond the cell there are about three yellow spots in
the subcostal interspaces, sometimes the first and second
obscure. Stigma oblique, narrow, broken in the middle,
dull black. There is also a bar across the end of the
cell. Hind wings yellow, with a broad terminal and
costal border.
Under side of hind wings and anterior part of fore
wings brown, heavily overlaid with russety scales, so as
EASTERN UNITEL STATES. 24]
to give these parts a russety brown appearance ; the pos-
terior part of the fore wings blackish. The yellow of
the fore wings is repeated, that part in the cell tinged
with orange and expanded basally. The hind wings are
without distinct spots, but have a ray through the cell a
little paler than the rest of the wing. |
Female.—Resembles the male, but lacks the sex-mark
above, and has the anteapical row of spots a little more
distinct. The under side has the costa of the fore wings
more suffused with orange.
Body dark brown above, sprinkled with yellow scales,
and with greenish-yellow hairs. Under side of thorax
pale yellowish ; abdomen buff, tinged with brown ; palpi
pale yellow, brownish at the ends. Antenne yellow
beneath, the tips fulvous; above annulate with brown
and yellow ; the knob brown.
The mature larva is two inches long, cylindrical, with
the collar a black line connecting two black lateral spots.
Anal plate semicircular, projecting. Body yellowish
green, thickly dotted with minute, dark, hair-tipped
tubercles ; spiracles black; under side bluish. Head
obliquely projecting, brownish, the upper part of the
face white and marked by three black stripes.
According to Dr. Chapman, the larva feeds on a
species of grass (Claudium effusum), drawing the faces
of the strongly-keeled leaves together, and in the tube
thus formed lying concealed when not feeding.
Gulf States, Nebraska. (See Addenda.)
165. PAMPHILA VITELLIUS, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Male.—Upper surface bright yellow ; fore wings with
29%
342 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
an outer border of dark bronzy brown, in width about
vne-fifth the length of the wing, and extending as a nar-
rower border along the hind margin, where it is sprinkled
with yellow scales. Costa narrowly black. Hind wings
with the margin bordered with brown, leaving the mid-
dle area yellow, suffused somewhat with brownish ; hairs
yellow. Fringes pale yellowish, dusky at apex of fore
wings.
Under side clear rich yellow, without spots, the pos-
terior part of the fore wings smoky black. Body covered
with dusky yellow hairs above, paler yellow beneath.
Female.—Outer fourth of the fore wing, and a border
along the hind margin of about the same width, the same
dark bronzy brown as the border of the male; the re-
maining area of the fore wings dull yellow sprinkled
with brown, also brown along the veins. Hind wings
the same brown as the border of the fore wings, with
the centre slightly washed with yellow. Under side as
in the male.
Body dark brown above, with yellow hairs ; under side
pale yellow, the palpi and the under side of the antennz
paler than the body.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Georgia, Southern Texas, Iowa, Nebraska.
166. PAamMpHILA DELAWARE, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Male.—Upper surface yellow, slightly fulvous-tinted ;
the veins, except the subcostal, brown; the fore wings
with a dark brown outer border, in width about one-
eighth the length of the wing, extending only a little
along the hind margin, its inner edge but slightly crenate.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 342
Hind wings with the outer border about the same
width, but the costal and inner margin a little broader.
Under side about the same color as the upper, without
spots; the basal half of the posterior part of the fore
wings smoky black, extending as a narrow posterior
border along the outer half.
Female.—Dark brown marked with pale yellow.
The basal two fifths of the fore wings brown; beyond
this a band of yellow extending half-way to outer mar-
gin, and not quite reaching either margin, separated into
spots by the veins and venules, making in all ten inter-
venular yellow spots, besides the one that fills the outer
third of the cell. Hind wings as in the males, but paler,
the veins dark.
Under side almost a lemon-yellow, the black on the
fore wings as in the males, with the addition of a border
from the posterior angle half-way to the apex, and most
of the outline of the cell black.
The larva, according to Dr. Chapman, feeds upon a
large species of grass (Hrianthus alopecuroides), rolling
itself in a leaf. When full grown it is one inch long,
fusiform, bluish white; collar black, ending in a dot on
each side; a lunate black band on joint 13 and anal
plate. ‘The surface is thickly dotted with minute black
tubercles. Head oval, oblique, white, smooth, slightly
bilobed ; a dark band about the top and sides, a black
vertical streak on the middle of the face, and a short
streak of the same color on each side of this.
The chrysalis is narrow, greenish white; the head-
ease blunt, black-tubercled, and bristly; the last joint
black, (See Addenda.)
Massachusetts to Florida, Illinois, Kansas, Montana.
B44 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
167. Pampnuinta Byssus, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.6 to 1.7 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark glossy brown ; basal half
of costa of fore wings ferruginous, as well as a little of
the cell below adjoining ; at the end of the cell an irregu-
lar yellow-fulvous bar within; across the disk a bent
yellow-fulvous band, starting on costal margin about
three-fifths the distance from base to apex, bending
round the cell, and continued to middle of submedian
vein, narrow at top, but below the cell widening rap-
idly, on the submedian being in width about one-third
the length of this part of the wing. The basal half
of hind margin washed with fulvous.
The hind wings have a fulvous patch in the middle,
consisting of a broad band beyond the cell, not reaching
either margin, and a small spot in the cell, sometimes
the spot obsolete. The hairs of basal area next the
inner margin fulvous. Fringes of fore wings dark gray-
brown, of hind wings lighter.
Under side wholly ferruginous (individuals varying
a little in shade), except that the posterior half of the
fore wings is blackish. The spots of the upper side are
repeated indistinctly ; on the hind wings, in most ex-
amples, the surface is without spots, in some there is
a faint paler color indicating the patch of the upper side.
The veins and branches are a shade more yellow than
the ground color.
Body above covered with fulvous hairs; beneath, the
thorax and ventral part of abdomen yellowish, sides of
abdomen and legs ferruginous.
Female.—Upper side of same brown as the male, and
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 345
marked with fulvous in a similar manner, but the band
is narrow and of nearly uniform width throughout,
except at the bend opposite the cell, where it is much
restricted. |
Under side as in the male, but in six cases out of seven
the band of the upper side of the hind wings is indicated
below with much distinctness.
In one male the fulvous band is diffused, and the
basal area is also fulvous, so that the whole of the wing
is of that color, except a stripe around the end of the cell,
and the outer margin. The males have no stigma.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Indian River, Florida; Texas.
168. PAMPHILA OsyKa, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Male.—Upper surface uniform brown, with a slight
green tinge, without spots. Stigma long, broadest at the
upper part, depressed in the middle. Under side brown.
Body gray beneath ; palpi greenish white.
Female.—Of the same size as the male, and the same
color above except the stigma. Under side clear gray,
except on hind margin of fore wings, which is brown.
On the costa of fore wings are three minute semi-trans-
parent spots in a line, and on the disk are two others at
an obtuse angle with the first. Palpi white.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Gulf States; Whitings, Ind.
169. PampuinA Eurana, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.2 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark olive-brown. The fore
346 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
wings have three small white semi-transparent spots be-
yond the cell in the subcostal interspaces, and two spots
below in the submedian interspaces, the first subquad-
rate, and the second oblong, about twice as large as the
first; both small. Besides these there are one or two
opaque white points at the end of the cell; wanting in
some examples. Hind wings without spots.
Under side a little paler than the upper, hind wings
and costal and apical portions of fore wings sprinkled
with gray. The spots of the fore wings are repeated.
Female.—Similar to the male, but on both surfaces
there is a slight violet tint, more apparent along the
veins.
Body black above, hairs dark olivaceous brown ;
under side, and palpi, whitish.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Florida, Texas.
170. PampuiLa Fusca, Gr.—Rob.
Expanse of wings 1.05 inches.
Male.—Upper surface glossy olivaceous blackish,
without spots, but with a faint and variable yellow-
ish-brown reflection equally distributed. Fringes pale,
without spots.
Under side of wings shaded with lustrous golden-
brown scales. Fore wings about the same shade as ~
above, with the golden-brown on the anterior and ter-
minal portions. Hind wings evenly covered with pale
golden-brown scales, except a space before the inner
margin, extending from the base to the outer margin.
Body above concolorous with the wings ; beneath pale
yellowish olive, palpi yellowish white.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 347
Female.—Similar to the male, but the palpi are paler,
as is also the under side of the abdomen.
Larva and food-plant not known.
Gulf States. (See Addenda.)
171. Pampuina H1Ianna, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.45 inches.
Male.—Upper surface dark brown; the fore wings
with three small white anteapical spots in the subcostal
interspaces, one larger in the first median interspace, and
a small one in the upper part of the outer end of the cell.
Hind wings without spots.
Under side about the same color as above, the basal
two thirds, except posterior part of fore wings, sprinkled
with brown, the outer part sprinkled with gray. The
spots of the upper side are reproduced with a little more
distinctness, and there is a dim curved line in the second
median interspace of the fore wings. Hind wings with
a small white point below the costa beyond the middle.
Female.—Differs from the male in having the spots
larger, two small ones opposite the cell of the fore wings,
out of line with the others, and a spot somewhat larger
than the others in the base of the second median inter-
space. On the under side the hind wings have a small
spot on the anterior part, near the base.
Body blackish above and below; palpi dark gray.
The larva and food-plant are not known.
Massachusetts to Nebraska.
172. PamMpPHILA Viator, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1.5 inches.
Male.—Upper side of fore wings dark brown, with a
248 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
reddish tint. There is a double yellow spot in the outer
end of the cell, and a discal row of spots across the wing.
The first three of these are in the subcostal interspaces,
the first subobsolete or obsolete; below these are three
more,—two in the median interspaces, and one irregular
one, somewhat hour-glass-shaped, with the lower part the
broadest, extends from the submedian to the lower branch
of the median. This may be divided in the middle into
two spots.
The hind wings have a broad brown margin, broader
along the costa and outer part than along the inner mar-
gin, the whole of the rest of the wing yellow, broken into
long spots by the brown veins.
Under side of fore wings smoky along the hind mar-
gin, reddish brown along the costa and apex ; the spots
of the upper side repeated indistinctly. The hind wings
pale brown, with the spots repeated indistinctly.
Some examples have two small spots beyond the cell
of the fore wings, and the other spots somewhat enlarged,
the spot on the submedian with the lower part shading
out towards the base. The two spots beyond the cell do
not show on the under side.
Female similar to the male, but a little larger.
Body above brown, below gray; palpi whitish; club
of antennz brown tipped with fulvous.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Gulf States, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois, Wis-
consin.
173. AMBLYSCIRTES VIALIS, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Upper surface dark blackish brown, with slight violet
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 349
reflection. . The fore wings have three small white ante-
apical dots in the subcostal interspaces, about three-fourths
the distance from the base to the apex, and traces of spots
in the median interspaces. Hind wings without spots.
Fringes gray, spotted with dark brown at the ends of
the veins. ;
Under side as above; the apical half of the fore wings,
and all of the hind wings except a ray before the anal
angle, washed with lilac scales, the anterior basal part of
the hind wings only sprinkled. There is a clustering of
the gray scales across the disk of the hind wings, con-
stituting a rather indistinct connected series of about
four spots forming a curve, made more apparent by there
being less gray just before these than on other portions
of the wing. ‘There is a white spot in the fringe at the
apex of each wing.
Body olivaceous brown above, lilac-gray below, in-
cluding the palpi.
In the larval state this species feeds on grasses, the
butterfly appearing from the first to the middle of
July.
Orono, Maine; Middle, Southern, and Western States.
174. AMBLYSCIRTES Eos, Edw.
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Upper surface grayish brown. The fore wings have
three white spots in line from the costa back, as in A.
Vialis, but no other spots. Fringes alternate white and
fuscous on the fore wings, but on the hind wings fuscous
only at the tips of three or four venules in the middle
of the margin.
Under side brown, with a whitish or chalky tint at
30
350 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the apex of the fore wings and along the outer margin,
and over most of the hind wings, quite dense on the outer
margin. The spots on the fore wings are repeated, a
little enlarged, and accompanied by a fourth below the
others and towards the outer margin. The hind wings
have a mesial row of whitish points, not reaching either
margin, irregular, rather forming a double row, with a
similar point in the cell and two in the interspace above
the cell.
Texas, Georgia, Florida.
175. AMBLYSCIRTES SAMOSET, Scud.
Expanse of wings 1.1 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, sprinkled with greenish
scales, which give a greenish shade to the wings. The
fore wings have a row of pale yellow spots beyond the
middle, consisting of three near the costa in the subcostal
interspaces, mere dots; the fourth, in line with these, in
the second interspace beyond the cell; the fifth and sixth
are in the median interspaces, the sixth much larger than
any of the others; the seventh some light scales above
the submedian vein, forming two indistinct spots. There
are traces of a small spot in the end of the cell. The
hind wings have a faint trace of a discal line.
Under side lighter than the upper, overlaid with green-
ish scales, with the exception of the posterior part of the
fore wings. The spots of the fore wings are repeated,
with two at the end of the cell. Hind wings with the
discal band distinct, but not reaching either margin, an
indistinct spot in the cell and two above it. The discal
band is composed of about five white spots which are
united. The fringes are white, marked with dark brown
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 351
at the ends of the veins on the fore wings and the middle
veins of the hind wings.
The larva is said to feed on a coarse grass (Andropo-
gon). ‘The butterfly is on the wing through the middle
of June. )
Northern and Middle States, Maine to Georgia, Wis-
eonsin, Iowa.
176. AMBLYSCIRTES TExToR, Hub.
Expanse of wings 1.15 inches.
Upper surface olive-brown, the fore wings with an
irregular row of six small angular white spots running
from the costa back to the middle of the wing, about
three-fourths the length of the wing from the base. The
first three of these are in the usual subcostal interspaces,
the next two in the interspaces beyond the cell, the sixth
in the first median interspace. There is a trace of the
seventh in the upper part of the second median inter-
space, farther back than the others. ‘The first is a mere
point, but there is a gradual increase in size up to the
third and fourth, this being out of line with the others,
the fourth, fifth, and sixth about the same size. The
hind wings are without spots, but there is a faint trace
of the discal band of the under side. Fringes long,
whitish, cut with brown at the ends of the veins.
Under side of fore wings as above, with the spots
more distinct, the seventh being an elongate spot reach-
ing from vein to vein, and a small spot above the sub-
median. In addition to these there are two minute dots
at the end of the cell. All these are yellowish white.
Hind wings brown, with a gray-violet tint, except
near the inner margin. Across the disk, beyond the
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I
.
aya THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
cell, is a tortuous connected row of irregular yellowish-
white spots extending from costa near apex to near inner
margin. This is somewhat dilated at the extremities,
and sends a short ray outward beyond the cell. Across
the end of the cell extends another somewhat broken
row, consisting of two or three spots in and below the
cell, the two being connected by the white veins, giving
the hind wings a somewhat reticulated appearance.
Food-plant not known.
North Carolina to Texas.
SECTION II.
In this division the knob of the antenne is spindle-
shaped. The larvee are more or less cylindrical, with the
head usually larger than the second segment. Habits
of larva and pupa mostly similar to those of Section I.
177. Pyraus TESSELLATA, Scud.
Expanse of wings 1.2 inches.
Male.—Upper surface black, the basal third and hind
margin of fore wings overlaid with white hairs, as also
the inner part of hind wings. The
Fra. 86. outer two thirds of fore wings con-
se— tain about thirty white spots ar-
ranged somewhat in four irregu-
lar transverse rows; and five more
aly) Ns on the costal edge, as shown in
Pyrgue Teseellata, male (nat- Fig, 86. The hind wings have
Senee about eighteen spots, arranged in
three rows, the spots of the inner row the largest, the
middle ones crescents, the outer ones points. Fringes
white, with black at the ends of the veins.
HASTERN UNITED STATES. 3003
Under side of fore wings yellowish white along the
costa and the outer margin, the spots of the upper
surface repeated, but more or less blended, the space
between the spots brownish black. Hind wings white,
faintly yellowish; a spot near the base, two irregular
transverse bands, and a marginal row of lunules are
brownish, these corresponding to the spaces between
the rows of white above.
Female.—Darker, owing to the spots being smaller,
the marginal row of points subobsolete. Under side
also darker.
Pennsylvania to the Gulf, Atlantic to the Pacific.
178. Pyreus CENTAURES, Ramb.
Expanse of wings 1.25 inches.
Upper surface black, tinged with brown, with white
scales over basal half. A bar of white in end of cell of
fore wings, a less distinct spot of same below the middle
of cell, and a subterminal row of white spots. There
are first three spots in the subcostal interspaces three-
fourths of the distance from base to apex ; two spots be-
yond the cell, the upper half-way from the third spot to
the margin; spot five in line with the first three ; and an
oblique row of four more,—two in the median interspaces
and the other two in the medio-submedian interspace, one
next to each vein. Besides this, the cross-vein at the end
of the cell has some white scales. In addition to these,
there are five white spots on the costal edge.
The hind wings have two obscure rows of white spots,
the first crossing the end of the cell, the spot on the cell
being the most distinct ; the second subterminal, consist-
z 30*
354 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
ing of a serics of intervenular, somewhat sagittate spots.
Fringes white, cut with black at the ends of the veins. —
Under side a little paler than the upper, sprinkled
over with white scales so as to be grayish brown. The
spots of the fore wings are repeated, but enlarged and
coalescing. The hind wings have three distinct bands
of white, one near the base which does not show on
the upper side, consisting of three patches united ; the
middle one enlarged and blended; the subterminal one
not much more prominent than on the upper surface.
30dy black above, with gray hairs, the scales and hairs
below white ; antennz annulate with black and white; tip
of club ferruginous.
New York, West Virginia, North Carolina, Colorado.
179. NisonrapvEs Brizo, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, the outer portion of the fore
wings sprinkled with gray. Near the outer margin of
the fore wings is a row of small gray spots, and between
these and the cell is a row of larger contiguous gray
spots, varying from oval to orbicular, bordered, except
where they come together, by a line of darker brown
than the ground color ; the spots of the upper end of the
row have the brown pointed outwardly. A similar row
crosses the wing about through the middle, but this has
no points on the outside; and there is a dark spot at
the base of the cell. The hind wings have two wavy
rows of ochre-yellow spots, which are dull and ob-
scure.
Under side a little paler than the upper, with two rows
of white spots parallel with the outer margin, common
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 355
to both wings; the hind margin of the fore wings dull
whitish.
Atlantic States to the Rocky Mountains, Colorado,
Ayrizona.
180. NisonrapEs IcE.us, Lintn.
Expanse of wings from 1.15 to 1.25 inches.
Upper surface blackish brown, sprinkled with pale
bluish scales, A band, somewhat lighter than the basal
part of the wing, crosses the fore wings so as to bring
the end of the cell in its middle. This band is heavily
overlaid with bluish scales, especially on the costal half.
Preceding this is a band of darker brown, subquadrate,
contiguous spots, with a slight sprinkling of bluish
scales. Beyond the band which crosses the end of the
cell is another band of ovate spots, the bases rounded,
the costal half with the spots narrower and more pointed,
the anterior four or five with whitish, imperfectly-defined
spots in their centres, and the rest overlaid with bluish
scales. Between this band and the outer margin is a
row of obscure brown spots without the pale scales. The
hind wings have two irregular rows of dull ochraceous
spots along the outer margin.
Under side paler than the upper side, the hind wings
with the two rows of spots repeated. The fore wings
have two rows of spots parallel with the outer margin,
both elongate, the outer on the edge and extending into
the fringe. Inside these, and corresponding with the
second band of the upper side, is a row of white spots,
the first six small, the seventh and eighth larger and
quadrate, the ninth and tenth obscure.
According to Mr. Lintner, the egg is of a pale green
306 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
color, in shape semi-ellipsoidal, its base flat, and its
apex depressed between the tips of the ribs, which termi-
nate exterior to the depression. It is distinctly ribbed
with from ten to twelve longitudinal ribs, and connecting
the ribs are from thirty to thirty-five transverse stri.
Diameter, .031 of an inch; height, .028 of an inch.
The larva was described by W. H. Edwards in 1885.
The butterfly may be seen in June.
New England to Michigan, Lllinois, Florida, Colo-
rado, Arizona, Washington Territory.
181. NIsoNIADES Somnus, Lintn.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.45 inches.
Male.—Dark brown in color, approaching N. Persius.
Fore wings without the anteapical white spots above,
and the large patch of bluish-white scales resting on the
discal cross-vein of N. Jcelus. The black transverse
bands have the position and character of those of N.
Icelus, but are almost lost in the ground color. Hind
wings nearly as dark as the fore wings, showing indis-
tinctly the two rows of pale brown spots.
Under side of wings bronze by reflection. The fore
wings have a short costo-apical white streak in cell 8, or
between the third and fourth subcostal venules, and a
minute white dot above this, or in cell 9 (N. Icelus
usually has a subquadrangular white spot in the upper
interspace beyond the cell and the two lower subcostal
interspaces, and occasionally the spots form a continuous
line nearly across the wing from the lower median inter-
space to next the lower subcostal interspace). There is
an intervenular series of pale streaks, and on the hind
wings the two rows of yellow-brown spots are indistinct.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. By
Female.—Paler brown than the male. The two trans-
verse bands of the fore wings are quite distinct, and
between them, on the discal cross-vein, is a conspicuous
patch of whitish scales ; no white anteapical spots. Upon
the margin is a row of rounded brown spots, separated
from the contiguous band by whitish scales. The bands
are broader than in N. Jcelus, and are almost drawn
together on the second submedian vein; the connected
series of spots composing each are shaped much as in
N. Icelus, are heavily bordered with black, and bear
bluish seales. The hind wings contain a geminate discal
mark, a submarginal row of yellowish spots much bent
inwardly opposite the cell, and a marginal row of small
linear whitish spots.
Under side bronze like the male. The hind wings
have the two rows of spots repeated; the fore wings
have a marginal row of linear whitish spots, a regularly
curved submarginal row of eight oblong yellowish spots,
and a single white anteapical spot.
The palpi are shorter than in N. Icelus, shaggy, some
of the hairs of the second joint extending to the tip of
the third. The tibiz of the posterior pair of legs are
without the pencil of hairs characteristic of N. Icelus.
Indian River, Florida.
182. NisonrapEs Luciiius, Lintn.
Expanse of wings from 1.1 to 1.25 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, with a red lustrous reflec-
tion. Like NW. Icelus, there is a paler band at the end
of the cell of the fore wings, and this is preceded and
followed by a darker band, the inner not well defined,
and interrupted. In the female, and sometimes in the
258 THE BUTTERFLIES Ol THE
inale, there is a white hyaline spot resting on the outer
end of the two cellular teeth formed by this band, some-
times obsolete. The submarginal band consists of in-
terspaceal, sagittate, fuscous spots, which are somewhat
squarely truncated anteriorly and have umber-colored
scales centrally. Its course is direct from the submedian
vein to the subcostal venule, whence it is broadly reflected
anteriorly to the costal margin, embracing in this portion
four interspaceal minute white hyaline spots, of which
the first, third, and fourth are nearly in line, the second
and largest lying behind. Between the median venules
are two hyaline spots, of which the inner one is some-
times obsolete in the male or wholly absent. Between
these two bands the ground color is umber-brown, with
a few bluish-gray scales towards the submarginal band,
and a large number between the subcostal venules. The
sagittate spots of the submarginal band are bordered
externally with gray, followed by a series of round um-
ber spots having a few gray scales resting on obscure
yellowish spots between them and the brown marginal
line. Fringes umber, with a very few basal gray scales.
Hind wings of a more uniform brown than the fore
wings, and more shaded with red, with two rows of ob-
secure yellowish-brown marginal spots; the discal spots
at the end of the cell barely seen. :
Under side reddish brown, the fore wings conspicu-
ously so at the apex. The four subapical hyaline spots
are constant, and there is usually a small white spot in
the cell. The median spots are larger than the subapical,
and are subquadrangular in form. Hind wings without
discal spots. Both wings with two rows of spots along
the outer margin.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 359
The eggs are .03 of an inch in diameter, marked with
fourteen ribs and twenty-five transverse strie.
The larva at maturity is .8 of an inch long, yellowish
green in color, with a bluish-green dorsal line. The legs
are tipped with fuscous. On joint 8 is an oblong yellow
spot on each side of the dorsal line, a similar mark on
joint 2, and a brown spot on the head.
The chrysalis is cylindrical, conical, not angulated,
thorax slightly elevated. _ Head-case rounded in front,
depressed below a line drawn from the anal spine across
the base of the wings to the humeral tubercle. Towards
the close of this period the eye-cases are purple, the wing-
eases whitish, the abdomen green, except at the tip, where
it 1s brown.
Food-plant Aguilegia Canadensis. There are two
broods in a season, possibly three, the butterflies appear-
ing in May and about the last of August or in the fore
part of September.
New York, Middle and Western States.
183. NisonrApDEs PERstrus, Scud.
Expanse of wings from 1.2 to 1.4 inches.
Upper surface blackish brown, the outer part of the
fore wings sprinkled with pale bluish scales in the males,
but in the females a little at the base also. Like the
other species, this has a mesial band crossing the discal
cell, and a submarginal band, the first more obscure
than the second, except below the median vein and in
the cell; the upper point in the cell containing a dis-
tinct hyaline spot in the females, but more obscure in
the males. In the outer band spots 1 and 4 and 7 and
8 contain each a distinct white hyaline spot, the second
360 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
larger and a little out of line; spots 9 and 10 are united
into an hour-glass-shaped spot. Spots 1 to 5 are nar-
rowly ellipsoidal, 6 to 8 are somewhat truncated inter-
nally, all the others are strongly pointed internally. Be-
tween these two bands the space in the end of the cell
and between the median and submedian veins is lighter
and more reddish brown than the rest of the wing. Be-
tween the submarginal band and the margin is a series
of roundish brown spots, each tipped externally with a
gray crescentic spot resting on a terminal brown line.
Hind wings more of a reddish brown than the fore
wings, with two rows of indistinct ochraceous spots near
the outer margin, and a spot at the end of the cell. The
males are darker brown than the females, and for that
reason the bands are more obscure.
Under side of the female grayish brown, the apical
portion of the fore wings gray ; the white hyaline spots
‘are repeated, and both wings have two marginal rows
of whitish spots. The males, as above, are darker than
the females.
According to Mr. 8. H. Scudder, the larva feeds on
willow, poplar, and Lespedeza capitata. The butterflies
are to be seen in June.
New England to Montana, Washington Territory,
Colorado, New Mexico.
184, NisonrApDEs Avusontus, Lintn.
Expanse of wings 1.06 inches.
Fore wings above pale umber-brown, with grayish
scales sprinkled over most of the surface (more diffused
than in the other species), except on the fuscous bands,
showing especially beyond the submarginal band. There
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 26]
are two brown basilar spots resting on the subcostal and
median veins, not so dark as those of the disk. The
discal band, usually continuous in this genus, here con-
sists of three elongate fuscous dashes (appearing to the
unaided eye as a single spot) resting on the subcostal
near the discal cross-vein, extending nearly half-way to
the median, the intervening space having merely an
indication of the spot, which appears distinctly in most
of the species as the inner cellular tooth of the discal
band ; following this is an obscure fuscous spot at the
fork of the first-and second median venules, and, beyond,
the usual hour-glass-shaped spot, extending from the
second median venule to the submedian, with its con-
striction on the interspaceal fold. The discal cross-vein
is conspicuously marked in brown. The submarginal
band of fuscous spots is doubly curved, being convex
towards the outer margin from the costa to the third
median venule, thence concave to its termination at the
submedian. It consists of four acutely ellipsoidal fus-
cous spots between the subcostal venules, which are
wholly destitute of the usual hyaline spots, followed by
three others of similar form but of greater breadth, the
next subacute externally, and the last similar in outline
to the corresponding one of the discal band. There is a
marginal row of interspaceal brown spots, the first four
of which are surrounded by gray scales and lie near the
margin, and the remaining four more remote than in UN.
Martials ; also a row of obscure brown spots resting on
the tips of the venules and extending on the fringe.
Hind wings of a darker ground than the fore wings,
sprinkled with blackish scales, darker basally, and with
pale yellow-brown spots. Discal spot and marginal row
Q 3]
362 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
obsolete, submarginal crescentic in form. On each side of
the submarginal row of spots is a range of oval fuscous
spots, subconnected.
Under side reddish brown, with the terminal margin
gray. The fore wings have the fuscous spots of the sub-
marginal band and marginal row as on the upper surface ;
of the discal band the spots in the cell are alone obscurely
visible ; the basal ones are lost in the general color. The
marginal brown spots below the subcostal venules rest
centrally on elliptical gray patches, while those of the
hind wings approach a semioval form, and are preceded
by gray crescents, which nearly enclose them by uniting
with some marginal gray scales; at the tips of these
crescents a submarginal row of fuscous spots is obscurely
seen. Discal spot obsolete.
Middle States, West Virginia.
185. NisonrADES Martiauis, Scud.
Expanse of wings 1.5 inches.
Upper surface of female blackish towards the tip of the
fore wings, the rest slightly grayish. Near the base of
the cell a dark blackish-brown spot, and beyond this the
mesial and submarginal bands of spots of the same color,
the first obscure on the costa and broken on the median
vein, the last spot being placed farther towards the base,
so as to be out of line with the others. On the upper
outer point in the cell is a somewhat elongate white hya-
line spot, expanded externally and posteriorly, and on
the lower point traces of a second spot. Submarginal
row as in NV. Persius, but the hyaline spots much larger,
the one in spot 8 being twice as long as broad, and the
hour-glass spots above the submedian vein have pale
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 363
brown centres. The marginal row of brown spots lacks
the gray crescents, there being only mere traces of them,
and are not set in a grayish field, there being some bluish
scales inside this row over most of the wing, but none
outside ; and there is not so much difference between the
color of the end of the cell and the rest of the wing as
in N. Persius. Hind wing with only traces of spots in
the usual places.
Under side a little paler brown than the upper, all the
hyaline spots distinct. The marginal and submarginal
bands of the fore wings are dimly outlined, the outer set
in a paler ground. The usual double row of spots on
the hind wings is dim.
The male differs from the female in having the bands
and hyaline spots less distinct, and the ground color a
little darker.
Atlantic States to Florida, Mississippi Valley, Kansas,
Colorado.
186. NISONIADES JUVENALIS, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.3 to 1.6 inches.
Upper surface dark smoky brown, so dark that the
usual bands are a little obscure. These are the mesial
and submarginal bands of spots on the fore wings, and
an obscure spot at the base of the cell. The mesial band
would be obscure were it not for the few gray scales that
border the spots. ‘The upper point in the cell contains
a small hyaline spot. The submarginal band contains
five or six hyaline spots, the first four situated in spots
1 to 4 of the band, and the fifth in spot 7. The spots
of this band are shorter and less pointed than in JN.
Persius and N. Martialis, the last two scarcely united :
364 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
a few gray scales each side of the band. Outside this
band is a series of blackish-brown roundish spots, with
a few whitish scales between each spot and the obscure
marginal line.
Hind wings dark smoky brown, with a mere trace of
the usual double row of marginal spots.
Under side nearly as dark as the upper, with purple re-
flections, especially on the hind wings. The hind wings
show mere traces of the usual two rows of spots; the
fore wings have the hyaline spots distinct, and the mar-
ginal and submarginal bands are to be seen, but the field
on which they rest is not so pale as in N. Martialis.
Fringes concolorous with the wings.
According to Harris, the larva of this species feeds
on species of Apios and Lathyrus, and perhaps other
Leguminosee. It is green, with pale stripes, and has a
heart-shaped brown head.
The chrysalis is rather long and tapering, pale yellow-
ish brown, with a few minute hairs on the body, and
with the tongue-case prominent and projecting beyond
the middle of the breast. There are two broods of these
insects, the last hibernating in the chrysalis state. Prob-
ably there are more than two broods in the Southern States.
Atlantic States to Florida, Mississippi Valley, Colo-
rado, Arizona.
187. NIsONIADES PETRONIUvS, Lintn.
Expanse of wings from 1.9 to 2 inches.
Upper surface dark blackish brown, the submarginal
band of subsagittate spots oblique, black, being more
drawn out inwardly towards the base as it approaches
the hind margin. The black markings of the wings are
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 365
more strongly contrasted with the dark brown ground
than in NV. Nevius, but less so than in N. Juvenalis,—
about equal to NV. Persius. ‘The white hyaline spots of
the fore wings are of medium size, smaller than in the
average NV. Juvenalis ; the spot in the discal cell is small ;
that in the upper median interspace on the transverse
band of sagittate spots is crescentic, concave towards the
base ; below this, in the second median interspace, is a
smaller white spot, wanting in some examples. The
four anteapical spots in the same band are not quite
in a line, as they are in N. Juvenalis, the third stand-
ing a little farther towards the base than the others;
the second and third being oblong, instead of quadrate
asin LV. Juvenalis.
There are fewer white scales on the fore wings than
in NV. Juvenalis, there being scarcely any on the basal
side of the submarginal band, and only a few on the
outer side. The pale on the outside of the marginal
band is very dim. The usual two submarginal rows on
the hind wings are very obscure.
Under side reddish brown, especially the hind wings,
which show two rows of pale brown submarginal spots,
which become obsolete before reaching the front margin
of the wing, and wholly want the white spots in cells 6
and 7 which characterize NV. Juvenalis. The white spots
of the fore wings are larger than above.
Head: above the eyes and just behind the “ locklet”
are a few white scales ; behind and beneath the eyes are
some pale yellow-brown scales, and similar-colored hairs
compose most of the palpal covering, in strong contrast
with the dark brown color of the legs, thorax, and
abdomen.
3l*
366 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
This is the largest species of the genus, and is sepa-
rable from Juvenalis and Propertius by its darker color,
less distinct ornamentation, less rounded wings, and the
absence of white spots of the hind wings in cells 6 and
7; from Neevius by its larger size, more distinct mark-
ings, and the contrasting lighter shade of the palpi.
Indian River, Florida.
188. NIsONIADES Navius, Lintn.
Expanse of wings from 1.45 to 1.65 inches:
Upper surface fuscous, almost black, with a purple
reflection. The fore wings have four minute, subquad-
rangular, costo-apical, hyaline spots, of which the fourth
may be obsolete, resting on the first four spots of the
submarginal band, and a similar spot on spot 7 of this
band, but none on spot 8 nor at the end of the discal
cell. An irregular umber-brown spot centres on the
discal cross-vein, and between the median and submedian
veins is another, showing more distinctly in the female.
The terminal row of obscure, rounded, intervenular fus-
cous spots rest on a dark umber-brown ground. All the
markings are nearly lost in the dark ground ; those best
defined are two confluent trapezoidal spots above the
submedian vein, forming the posterior termination of
the transverse row of spots, and defined without and
within by a W in umber-brown. The spots of the trans-
verse row are not of the ordinary sagittate form. The
hind wings dark brown, showing faintly the two rows
of intervenular paler brown spots, more distinctly in the
female. Fringes dark brown, lighter upon their outer
half in some males, and pale, approaching whitish, in the
female. |
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 367
Under side paler brown, and showing more or less
distinctly the two ordinary rows of pale brown spots
towards the outer margin, and in one male a white spot
in the cell, not seen on the upper surface. Head and
palpi concolorous with the thorax, abdomen, and legs.
Indian River, Florida.
189. PHOLISORA CATULLUS, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.1 inches.
Upper surface deep brownish black. The fore wings
have a submarginal row of eight white hyaline spots,
3, 4, and 5 curving outward beyond the cell, 6 and 7
in the two median interspaces, 8 above the submedian.
The first three are subquadrate, the rest mere dots.
There is also a small spot at the end of the cell. Hind
wings without marks. I'ringes concolorous with the
wings.
Under side more of a brownish black, the spots on the
fore wings repeated. The body and head are black above,
the head with three longitudinal white stripes,
the ends of the palpal hairs the same color ;
the palpi and head white beneath, the body
black.
Fig. 87 represents the egg of this species. catuntus,x
The larva feeds on Monarda punctata, Che-
nopodium album, Ambrosia, and perhaps some related
plants. It is found in the United States generally.
190. PHonisora HAaynurstu, Edw.
Expanse of wings from 1 inch to 1.1 inches.
Upper surface blackish brown, both wings crossed by
two deeper brown bands, more distinct in the female ;
a ee
368 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the mesial one crossing the fore wings before the end of
the cell, the other submarginal, just beyond the end of
the cell. In the submarginal band the fore wings have
two small white spots near the costa, and a white point
in the second median interspace. Hind wings dentate
on the outer margin, the fringe of the points concolorous
with the wing, that of the hollows paler. The bands
snow more plainly on the female than on the male, on
account of the ground color being a little paler, and there
is a trace of a third anteapical spot.
Under side a little paler than the upper, a little sprin-
kled with ochraceous scales, the spots of the upper side of
the wings repeated.
Body above concolorous with the wings, below gray-
ish ; head and palpi above with a few brownish-yellow
scales, below white.
West Virginia to Kansas, Florida, Texas, New
Mexico.
191. EupAmus Py1LaDEs, Scud.
Eixpanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface dark brown. The fore wings are
marked by several white hyaline spots: first three ante-
apical in the subcostal interspaces ; three more above the
cell, about two-fifths the distance from the base of the
wing to the apex,—both of these in a line back from the
costa ; two more in the median interspaces, and one below
the lower median venule, close to this venule and nearer
the margin than the others. All of these are small,
those of the costal region subquadrate, the others trian-
gular, the one in the lower median interspace more or
less obsolete. There is also a curved brown mark be-
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 369
yond the cell from the lower end of the anteapical row.
The lower three are arranged in the form of a triangle,
and when one is obsolete its place is indicated by a mark
of deeper brown than the rest of the wing. Hind wings
without spots. Fringes fuscous gray, dark brown at the
ends of the veins.
Under side of fore wings about the same color as the
upper, but shaded with darker brown at the base, and
sprinkled with pale blue scales on the outer part. The
hind wings colored as above, but with two irregular
bands across them, limited by wavy
black lines, and sprinkled on the outer
part with pale blue lines. Body above
and below dark brown.
Fig. 88 represents the egg of this spe-
cies magnified twenty-eight diameters.
The larva feeds on clover, the perfect
insect being found in June, or earlier in
the Southern States.
New England to Florida, Dakota, Colorado, Calli-
fornia.
E. Pylades, egg, XK 28
192. Evupamus BatTuyLuus, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.5 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, about the same color as E.
Pylades, with a slight grayish tinge. This is almost an
exact copy of . Pylades with the spots enlarged. The
spots in the middle of the costa of the fore wings are
connected with one in the cell that extends from the sub-
costal to the median vein, hour-glass-shaped, sometimes
separated in the middle into two triangular spots. These
are in line with two of the three spots below, forming a
¥
370 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
triangle, the one in the second median interspace and the
one below the lower branch of the median, the spot in
the first median interspace being outside the line. The
middle one of these last three spots is as large as the one
in the cell, but is not so much constricted in the middle ;
the upper is next in size, and the lower one is small.
The anteapical series consists of three quadrate, white,
hyaline spots, with a white spot next the costa. Hind
wings without spots, but with some brown clouding in
the middle. Fringes pale gray, brown at the base, cut
with brown at the ends of the veins on the fore wings.
Under side as in /. Pylades, except that there is more
gray on the hind margin of the fore wings, and the white
spots are larger than in that species, being a little larger
than on the upper side. Body and head above concol-
orous with the wings ; below grayish, the head and palpi
whitish.
West Virginia to Florida, Illinois, Kansas, New
Mexico.
193. Eupamus Lycrpas, Sm.—Abb.
Expanse of wings from 1.9 to 2 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, slightly yellow-tinted, with
a purple reflection along the costa. The fore wings are
crossed from near the middle of the costa in a direction
towards the posterior angle by a yellow band of spots,
consisting of the same spots as are found on /. Bathyllus.
The spot in the cell and the one in the second median in-
terspace are greatly enlarged, so as to be nearly or quite
quadrate ; the others also are enlarged, but not to the
same extent. Beyond this band there is the usual ante-
apical row of four spots, the fourth a little out of line,
EASTERN UNITED STATES. ok
and, not in line with the others, a smali triangular spot
above the base of the first median venule. Hind wings
without spots. Fringes of fore wings dark brownish
gray, cut with black at the ends of the veins; those of
the hind wings with the pale part paler; those of the
inner margin black ; a black line edging both wings, and
shading in a little on the hind wings.
Under side of fore wings brown, blackish inside the
mesial band, grayish along the hind margin, the apex
shaded with black and having a few whitish scales. The
spots of the mesial band are more confluent than above,
the others less distinct.
Hind wings with the base dark, slightly grayish ;
through the middle an irregular broad black band, not
reaching either margin, and having a large patch of brown
in it at the end of the cell, the black sprinkled with gray
scales. Outside this to the margin of the wing it is pure
white through the middle half; the apical portion, the
anal portion, and along the inner margin white more or
less tinged with brown; the whole crossed by abbreviated
brown streaks.
Body black, the under side of head and palpi slightly
sprinkled with gray.
Massachusetts to the Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi
Valley.
194, EupAmus CEeLuus, Bd.—Leec.
Expanse of wings from 1.9 to 2 inches.
Upper surface dark blackish brown; the fore wings
crossed by a broad continuous yellow band, beginning
near the middle of the costa and ending in a point near
the posterior angle, bending inward a little here towards
ee eee ee
372, THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
the hind margin. From the costa to the lower branch
of the median the band is of nearly uniform width, but
the rest of the distance it tapers a little. The inner edge
is nearly straight, but the outer sends out an angle just
below the end of the cell. Three-fourths of the distance
from the base, extending from the costa back, is a short
anteapical line composed of three quadrate coalescing
yellow spots, and a small dot next the outer lower corner
of the third spot. Hind wings without marks, except a
little yellowish at the apex. Fringes black or blackish,
with a few gray or whitish spots between the veins.
Under side of fore wings the same as the upper, ex-
cept that the hind margin is gray, the apical half of the
outer margin reddish brown, and the costal portion of
the mesial band and the anteapical line paler yellow.
Hind wings dark purplish brown, with three irregular,
somewhat poorly defined, darker brown bands, and a
very slight sprinkling of buff scales. Along the outer
margin is a series of deep brown lunules surrounded by
scattering pale blue scales.
Body black, under side of palpi and head pale ochra-
ceous.
West Virginia to the Gulf of Mexico, Texas, Arizona.
195. Eupamus Zrstos, Hib.
Expanse of wings from 2.2 to 2.4 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, with a slight bronze reflec-
tion, marked almost like the upper surface of H. Tityrus.
This consists of a yellow band from near the middle of
the costa back towards the posterior angle, ending in a
blunt point about the middle of the medio-submedian
interspace, the point below the lower median fork being
EASTERN UNITED STATES. Bio
about twice as large as in /. Tityrus. The inner edge
of the band above the median fork is nearly straight,
being notched a little at the subcostal vein, but is a little
more oblique than in H. Tityrus. The outer edge is
more irregular, the spot in the cell and the one in the
lower median interspace being concave, and there are
notches at the median and subcostal veins. The spot
gutside the band in the first median interspace is nearly
square. Beyond the band is the usual anteapical line of
three spots, extending obliquely outward in a curve.
Under side of about the same general color as the upper,
the fore wings with the markings of the upper surface.
The hind wings have a faintly-indicated median band of
a slightly paler color than the rest of the wing, not reach-
ing either margin, and two faint spots between this and
the anal angle, and more or less scattering tawny scales.
Both wings below have a strong purplish reflection, the
outer margin slightly paler. Fringes concolorous with
the wings, the hind wings paler, but without brown at
the ends of the veins.
Body above purple-brown; thorax covered with tawny
hairs, beneath more or less shaded with fulvous; palpi
fulvous. Club of antenne brown above, fulvous below
and at the sides.
This strongly resembles /. Tityrus above, but the yel-
low spots are less confluent and more opaque, the general
color is deeper, and the fringes are not divided by brown
at the ends of the veins. The under side lacks the con-
spicuous silver band on the under side of the hind wings.
This was described by Mr. C. E. Worthington as FE.
Oberon.
Florida; Sanford, Marco Island.
32
ERED i a a eT a
374 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
196. Eupamus Trryrus, Fab.
Expanse of wings from 1.8 to 2.1 inches.
Upper surface dark brown. The fore wings are
crossed by an oblique yellow band of four large spots
from the middle of the costa to near the posterior angle,
where it ends in a rounded point, the lower part of the
spot below the lower median fork being but little nar-
rower than the upper part which rests against the vein.
The inner edge of this band is nearly straight, a little
Fia. 89.
Kudamus Tityrus, the left hand showing the under side of wings.
convex, the band narrowed a little as it approaches the
costa. ‘The outer edge is regularly dentate, the spot in
the cell and the one below being straight on the outside.
Beyond the band there is a narrow spot in the first me-
dian interspace extending from vein to vein. The ante-
apical line near the costa is obliquely curved outward
and composed of three spots. Fringes gray, cut with
brown at the ends of the veins.
Under side brown, about the same shade as above, the
outer and costal edges tinged with purplish gray. The
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 375
fore wings haye the yellow spots of the upper side re-
peated, the spots more confluent. The hind wings have
a conspicuous silvery white band in the middle, nearly
reaching the costa, but not so near the inner margin.
This band is narrow in the anterior portion, but broadly
expanded in the middle, and rounded posteriorly, so as
to be somewhat flask-shaped. Palpi brown, slightly
yellowish beneath.
The larva of this species is to be found on the common
locust, rose acacia, Wistaria, and in the South on a species
of wild bean. When young, it cuts into the edge of a
leaf, and, drawing the flap over and fastening it with
silk, makes for itself a retreat, within which it stays.
As it increases in size, a larger section is cut in the leaf;
and, when this will no longer serve the purpose of pro-
tection, two or more leaves are fastened together. The
larvee feed mostly at night, keeping themselves concealed
within their retreats during the daytime.
The egg is nearly globular, flattened at the base, with
fifteen ridges from base to apex; diameter, .04 of an
inch. Color white, with a bright red spot at the apex,
and a ring of the same color a little above the middle.
The duration of this period is about four days.
The young larva is .1 of an inch long, orange; the
head short, a little oblique, black ; joint 2 dark brown ;
a few hairs scattered over the body. Before the close of
this period the body shows a profusion of fine elevations.
In nine days from hatching the larva moults the first
time, when it is .2 of an inch long, with the colors the
same as during the preceding period, except that the
second segment is pale reddish brown, with a central
transverse dark brown stripe.
* Go AN GRO isthe ain, SP CTD Rag.
ee
316 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
After the second moult, which occurs eleven days
later, it is .65 of an inch long, the ground color yellow-
ish black, with about six transverse yellow lines to each
joint; the interspaces being dotted with yellow, giving
the body a yellowish appearance. ‘The last two seg-
ments are a little orange-tinted. Head cordate, this and
the second segment brownish black, the latter shining,
the head with an orange spot on each side above the
ocelli.
In seven days more the larva moults again, when it
is .75 of an inch long, with the color of the body un-
changed ; but the head is dark brown, and the second
segment is black, with the sides and under parts red;
the rest orange, the prolegs with a dark yellow base.
The larva moults the fourth time in four days more,
when it is .9 of an inch long, but at the close of this
stage, before pupating, it is 1.15 inches long. The head
is broader than the middle of the body, a little oblique ;
und the second segment tapers anteriorly to a distinct
neck. The body is a little flattened, tapering from the
middle each way. The color remains about the same,
the head assuming a little more of a wine color, and
the top of the second segment and the jaws dark brown,
the sides and feet on this joint about as before.
The time from the last moult to the change to a chrys-
alis varies with the season. One that
moulted September 1 pupated October 4.
This change takes place in the cluster
fs of leaves it has woven together for a
Hu. Mtyrus, chrysalis. —_ retreat during the larval period. Before
pupating it lines the retreat with a thin coating of silk.
The chrysalis is .76 of an inch long, the head-case
EASTERN UNITED STATES. BT
blunt conical; the dorsum from near the head nearly
straight, as shown in Fig. 90; the ventral side strongly
ventricose, tapering abruptly from the end of the wing-
eases to the tip of the abdomen, the cremaster a some-
what triangular piece, .06 of an inch long. Color red-
dish brown, finely mottled and spotted with dark brown,
the end of the humerus blackish brown, with two smaller
spots between them. Stigmata and eyes darker than the
general color.
There are two or more broods of these butterflies in
a season, the last brood hibernating in the pupa state,
while the others emerge from the chrysalides in about
two weeks.
United States generally.
197. Eupamus Proteus, Linn.
Kixpanse of wings from 1.9 to 2 inches.
Upper surface dark olive-brown ; base of fore wings,
basal half of hind wings, and upper part of body with
light green hairs. The fore wings have an oblique
transverse row of four whitish hyaline spots, extending
from the costa near the middle to near the posterior
angle. These spots are in the same position as the
spots composing similar bands in LE. Zestos, Tityrus, ete. ;
but they differ in being of about the same size and
separated by the dark brown veins, the one in the cell
constricted a little in the middle, the lower three near
one another only at their corners. Beyond this band is a
spot in the first median interspace, also constricted in the
middle; and beyond the cell is an anteapical row of five
spots, curved, the first two spots oblong, the third nearly
quadrate, the fourth and fifth elongate in the direction
32%
378 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
of the line, the fourth often divided in the middle into
two spots.
Hind wings without spots, the anal angle produced
into a tail .6 of an inch long, outer margin dentate.
Fringes of fore wings gray, cut with brown at the ends
of the veins; of hind wings white, except those of the
tail on the inner margin, which are black.
Under side of fore wings brown, the costa at base, the
area between the two bands, and the outer margin pur-
plish glaucous. The spots are enlarged, and are more
confluent than above. The hind wings have the same
glaucous color all over their surface except the tail, the
anal two-thirds of the outer margin, and two bands
through the wings, which are olive-brown, the tail almost
black. The inner of these two bands reaches only to
the subcostal vein, and above that and a little to each
side are two black patches. The whole surface is
sprinkled over with a few whitish and yellowish scales.
Palpi pale gray, underneath almost white.
The mature larva is 1.5 inches Jong, fusiform, a fine
dark dorsal line, a bright yellow subdorsal band, which
is dilated on the twelfth segment, and a pale green line
along the base of the body. The dorsal space, between
the bands, is gray dotted with black and yellowish ar-
ranged in transverse lines. ‘The sides are gray, with the
upper half dotted with black. Collar lustrous black ;
anal plate yellow, greenish in the middle. Under: side.
pale green, legs black, prolegs yellow. Head large,
round, brown, pubescent, slightly depressed at top; a
yellow spot on each side of the mouth, narrowing up-
ward, and fading into the light brown of the upper
part of the face.
/
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 379
Chrysalis.—Covered with a white powder. The larva
feeds on leguminous plants,—Phaseolus perennis and
Clitoria Mariana. |
Southern States; occasionally in New York.
198. ErycrpEs BATABANO, Lef.
Expanse of wings from 2.3 to 2.6 inches.
Male.—Upper surface deep smoky brown, with a
pronounced indigo-violet reflection. Fore wings with-
out markings, other than a few scattering blue or green
scales about the base of the wings. Fringes concol-
orous.
Hind wings with a row of brilliant blue or green
elongated submarginal spots, more or less confluent, in-
terrupted by the veins, and becoming obsolete towards
the costal margin. [Fringes with some white in the
intervenular spaces.
Under side of fore wings paler, with a purplish cast,
a few blue or green scales along the costa, about the
base, and near the posterior angle. Hind wings much
like the upper side, but deeper, the purplish reflection
at the costal margin gradually changing to deep indigo
as it approaches the abdominal folds; a few blue or
green scales in the median space and along the inner
margin. Submarginal spots as above, but brighter.
Female.—Upper side paler than in the male, gradu-
ally growing deeper over both wings until nearly black
at the anal angle, both wings with a faint purplish re-
flection in certain lights. Markings on the hind wings
like those of the male. Beneath differing from the male
only in its paler color, and in having a purple reflection,
which is more prominent than on the upper side.
380 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
Body deep brown above and below, some blue or
green scales on the collar, front, and shoulders, and
arranged in bands on the posterior segments of the
abdomen. Palpi greenish white. Antenne dark brown.
Hind wings produced a little at the anal angle.
Florida.
199. Erycrpss Amynrtas, Fab.
Expanse of wings 2 inches.
Upper surface dark brown, almost black, with a
strong purple reflection. A little beyond the middle
of the cell of the fore wings is a white hyaline bar
extending across the cell, emarginate externally. Below
this, and a little farther out, in the second median inter-
space, is a similar but larger subquadrangular spot, and
in the first median interspace is another, more oblong
in shape. The first two of these three spots represent
two of the four spots which form the median oblique
band of Hudamus Tityrus and allied species. There
is near the apex an oblique row of three anteapical
small spots, subquadrate in form, the first the smallest.
Hind wings without spots. Fringes fuscous, those of
the fore wings darkest; the anal angle somewhat pro-
duced.
The under side has the spots of the upper surface of
the fore wings repeated. The surface along the costa, a
broad apical portion and the external margin of the fore
wings, and all of the hind wings, except two bands of
spots and the anal angle, rich purple, not very dark ;
all the rest of the surface is dark brown. The dark
brown portion consists of two transverse bands, marking
nearly the division of the wing into thirds, and a broad
BHASTERN UNITED STATES. 381
portion around the anal angle. Body black; palpi and
under side of head gray.
Key West, Florida.
200. MreaatHymus Yucca, Bd.—Lec.
Expanse of wings from 2.5 to 3 inches.
Male.—Upper surface deep umber-brown, the base
of both wings tinged with yellow, the markings yellow.
Fra. 91.
Megathymus Yuccex, female (natural size).
The fore wings have a large spot in the outer end of the
cell that is subquadrate ; above this in the interspaces are
three small spots in an oblique line, but little more than
mere dots. Beyond these is a submarginal row of spots
which begin in the usual line of anteapical spots about
four-fifths the distance from the base to the apex, but
the two spots opposite the cell are nearer the outer mar-
gin, and from these they gradually run nearer the mar-
gin, till the last one is close to the posterior angle, as
shown in Fig. 91. The first of the four anteapical spots
382 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
is a mere dot, the next three area little longer than wide,
the fifth and sixth are narrow but reaching from vein to
vein, the seventh and eighth are in the median inter-
spaces, and the ninth is above the submedian. The last
three are somewhat irregularly convex on the inner side,
but less so on the outer. Hind wings without spots, but
with a yellow washing along the outer margin.
Under side deep brown, like the upper, but brighter,
the outer portion of both wings pearly gray, with a patch
of the same color on the middle of the costa of the hind
wings, and a white crescent below it, and the same scales
sprinkled along the inner margin and the faint streaks
through the wings. The spots of the fore wings are re-
peated, but somewhat enlarged, the color paler yellow,
whitish in the costal region.
Female.—The general color and markings of the fore
wings as in the male, but much larger. The spot in the
cell extends from vein to vein, and inward along the
median a little way towards the base, the three spots
above nearly as long as the spot in the cell is wide. Be-
sides the much enlarged anteapical spots, which are paler
yellow than the other spots, there are three oblique pale
yellow spots on the costa before the apex. The lower
three spots of the submarginal band are widened, so that
the inner upper corner almost reaches the cell. Hind
wings, besides the yellow scales along the margin, have a
discal row of four small spots not reaching either margin.
Under side as in the male, except that the spots are more
prominent, and the spots near the costa of the fore wings
are more washed with white. The female is larger than
the male, the smaller of the expanses given applying to
the male.
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 383
According to Professor C. V. Riley, the larva of this
species lives inside the stem and root of the Yucca, or
Spanish Bayonet, being the only one of our butterflies
that lives in the larval state as a borer on the inside
of the stems of plants, unless we inciude the allied
species M. Cofaqui. There is a probability that when
the life-history of that species is known it will be found
to have similar habits. The eggs are deposited singly
on the leaves, and, when hatched, the larva conceals
itself in a web between some of the more tender ter-
minal leaves. Generally it will be found at first near
the tip of a leaf, where the sides naturally roll up and
afford a safe retreat. It then gradually works to the
base, feeding as it goes, and rolling and shrivelling the
blade as it descends. Other blades are often joined, the
insect living among the blades till it is about one-fourth
crown, seldom entering the stem before that time.
The egg is subconical, the top flattened or depressed
and with a slight central dimple, the base concave,
smooth but not polished. Color pale green when first
deposited, but inclining to buff-yellow or brown before
hatching. The diameter is about .1 of an inch, the
height about .06.
The young larva is about .2 of an inch long, of a
dark brick-red color, head and top of the second segment
pitechy black. The abdominal joints show two princi-
pal transverse folds. There are six rows of stiff black
hairs arising from the body or from very small tubercles.
Head larger than the second segment, rounded, but some-
what flat in front; cervical shield narrow and in one
piece ; both minutely punctured. No anal plate.
The full-grown larva averages 2.6 inches in length by
384 THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
-4 of an inch in diameter. Color dull translucent white.
Surface faintly aciculate, sparsely armed dorsally with
minute, evenly-distributed, short, rufous bristles, spring-
ing from the general surface, and not very noticeable
with the naked eye; covered more or less copiously with
a white, glistening, powdery secretion of a waxy nature.
Cylindrical ; the abdominal joints with eight annulate
Fra. 92.
Aig
all f
Megathymus Yucce: a, egg, side-view, enlarged; b, egg from which the larva has
hatched ; db, bbb, unhatched eggs, natural size; c, newly-hatched larva, enlarged ;
ce, full-grown larva, natural size; d, under side of head of same, enlarged to show
the trophi.
or transverse wrinkles to each joint,—the first three oc-
cupying the anterior half, the third more prominent and
widening laterally, and the other five on the posterior
half of the joint, all best defined dorsally. The thoracic
joints somewhat larger than the rest, more deeply and
irregularly wrinkled ; the substigmatal region with lon-
gitudinal folds. Head black, perpendicular, and aspe-
rous or deeply shagreened ; epistoma and labrum brown,
small, and usually with a transverse median ridge, the
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 385
A-Shaped mark white, forking before the suture, the forks
having the shape of U; mandibles stout, subtriangular,
non-dentate ; antenne (Fig. 92, f) two-jointed, exclusive
of the bulbus, the terminal joint twice as long as the
basal ; maxillee and labium and mentum forming a sub-
quadrate piece, bulging out prominently from beneath,
the parts seemingly soldered together and separated only
by deep sutures ; the maxillary palpi (Fig. 92, e) consist-
ing of two broad joints; the labium small, trapezoidal,
highly polished, with the spinneret (/) twice as long as
the palpi (g), which are small, recurved, and two-jointed,
exclusive of the bulbus; a few stout bristles on the
labrum, on the palpigerous piece of the maxilla, on the
mentum, on the base of the mandibles, and around the
ocelli, which are not easily distinguished from the more
globular of the shagreenations. Cervical shield more
glabrous than the head, and scarcely darker than the
body, except around the hind border. Thoracic legs
very short, but stout, with the horny parts deep brown,
and sparsely armed with bristles. Prolegs well devel-
oped, the hooks in a double row, and forming a distinct
purple-brown, transversely oval annulus, but slightly
broken at the narrow ends. Anal shield rounded be-
hind, coriaceous rather than corneous, and with a slight
increase of bristly hairs, especially around the border.
Stigmata large, with a purple-brown, oval annulus.
Chrysalis.—Average length 1.5 inches; ‘cylindrical,
broadest at the shoulders, recurving ventrally towards
the tip, and terminating in a broad, flattened, posteriorly
rounded, transverse, slightly decurving flap, the borders
thickened basally and extending ventrally. Eyes prom-
inent, with a transverse carina; wing-casces reaching the
BR & 33
eS =
386 ° THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE
hind part of the fourth abdominal segment. Surface
but slightly polished, and faintly corrugate; a few ex-
tremely minute, bristle-like spines distributed over the
abdominal joints dorsally, and the two
or three terminal joints with stiff rufous
hairs, increasing posteriorly. Color
black-brown anteriorly, paler on the
abdomen, and more or less densely
covered with a white powdery secre-
tion like that on the full-grown larva.
There is but one brood in a season,
the butterflies appearing in April and
May. The eggs hatch in about ten
days, but the larva does not pupate till
late in the following winter or early in
the spring. The burrow often extends
two feet or more below the surface of
the ground. Before pupating, the larva
makes a place of exit for the butterfly, lightly closing
this cavity near the top. It then makes a cell suf-
ficiently farther down to give it room enough to pupate,
and in this it undergoes its transformations.
Southern States, New Mexico, Arizona.
pupa.
201. MrecaTHymus Coraqul, Strecker.
Expanse of wings from 2.25 to 2.6 inches.
This differs from JM. Yucce in having more yellow at
the base of the wings, the female having the yellow spots
in and above the cell of the fore wings connected in a
continuous row with those below instead of the spots be-
yond the cell, and the anteapical spots making up with
these the row across the wing. This is due to the greater
EASTERN UNITED STATES. 387
expansion inwardly of the three lower spots, so as to
bring them under the cell. Below the median vein there
is a yellowish spot about one-third the distance from the
hase to the margin. The anteapical spots and the two
beyond the cell are like those in MZ. Yucce. Hind wings
with a yellow spot on the costa and a more distinct
yellow border, besides the discal row of yellow spots.
The male has on the outer half of the fore wings au
irregular row of five pale yellow spots of various sizes
and shapes, the lower three pointed internally. The
hind wings have a rather narrow, even, straw-colored
border. Fringes dirty white.
The under side of the fore wings of both sexes is like
the upper, the hind wings with the addition of some gray
shading on the costa and several subterminal white spots,
otherwise much as in the other species.
The whole of the upper surface of the hind wings of
the male, except the space occupied by the outer border,
is thickly covered with long, fine, black hairs, which
stand nearly at right angles to the surface, to the height
of nearly a quarter of an inch. The basal third of the
under side of the fore wings is furnished with a similar
coat of hairy appendages.
Florida, Colorado. (See Addenda.)
ACD) Dian DX.
3. PAPILIO ASTERIAS, Fab. (Page 89.)
On page 92, the food plants of this species are given
as “parsley, celery, parsnips, ard other related plants.”
The larve have been found in Lincoln Park, Chicago,
feeding on fennel (Feniculum Vulgare) and common
rue (Ruta Graveolens). The first of these is a plant re-
lated to the ordinary food-piants of the species, but the
other is a species differing widely from the order Um-
belliferze to which the others belong.
173. CALLIDRYAS STaTrRA, Cramer. (Page 119.)
The male is of the color of C. Hubule, but the border
of raised scales extends more than half-way across the
wing, and there is a large spot of these scales in the end
of the cell. The inner edge of this border is nearly
straight, and it is very pale yellow, almost white. On
the hind wings the border is narrower, more irregular,
and ends before reaching the anal angle. The under
side is much as in C. Hubule, but with only faint traces
of any spots.
Taken at Lake Worth, Florida.
Var. FLorIDENsis, Neumogen.—In this form the
males have a bright sulphur-yellow on the basal half
of the fore wings, the broad anterior space being of a
creamy white. The hind wings have the basal three-
fourths bright sulphur-yellow. The females are not
33* 389
390 ADDENDA.
yellow, but creamy white, with large, black discal spots ;
costal margin and apex of fore wings black; the basal
area of hind wings with prominent citron tinge.
Upper Indian River, Florida.
21. CALLIDRYAS AGARITHE, var. Maxima, Neum.
(Page 126.)
Expanse of wings 2.60 inches.
In this form the ground color of the male is intense
orange, with prominent black dotlets at the inception of
the venules and on the outer margin of both fore and
hind wings. The female is of the same color. The diseal
spot, the diagonal line of dots from apex to submedian
vein and along outer margin, are brownish red. On
the hind wings the markings along the outer margin are
dark red with a blackish tint, much resembling those
of C. Philea.
Upper Indian River, Florida.
354. CoLznis Detina, Fabr. (Page 148.)
Expanse 3.50 inches,
Upper surface clear reddish fulvous, paler than Julia.
The fore wings have a very narrow black edging on che
costa and outer margin, scarcely more than the width of
a vein, the subcostal vein black, with a few black scales
between this and the costa beyond the cell. One exam-
ple from Florida has a black bar at the end of the cell.
two small black points projecting inward from the outer
margin, and a narrow short bar between the lower point
and the end of the cell. Hind wings with the costa’
edge grayish, and outer border black with two more or
less complete rows of fulvous spots.
ADDENDA. 39]
Under side paler than the upper, clouded; a whiie
streak along the costa of fore wings at base, and another
on the hind wings below the subcostal vein ; hind wines
with a small red spot bordered with black at the bass «1
the median vein, the bases of the submedian and inter-
nal veins white with a black edging; some black and
white crescents at the anal angle.
Occasionally in Florida and Texas.
384. ARGYNNIS LETO, Behr. (Page 155.)
Expanse of wings from 2.6 to 3 inches.
Male.—Upper side pale fulvous, obscure at base,
lightly marked and spotted with black ; hind margins
of both wings bordered by two fine parallel lines be-
tween which the space is fulvous ; the fore wings have
a submarginal row of serrated spots, not touching each
other or the marginal lines ; a transverse line of rounded
spots, an indistinct bar on costal margin, sometimes
wanting, a zigzag median band of separated spots,
mostly lunular; outside the are a spot shaped like the
letter P inverted, and three sinuous bars in the cell.
The hind wings have a submarginal row of lunate
spots, separated and not touching the marginal lines, a
second of small rounded spots or points, and a mesial
of small widely separated crescents in size and shape like
those of Aphrodite ; on the area pyriform or obovate spot.
On the under side the fore wings are pale fulvous at
the base, light buff on the costal margin and the marginal
interspaces, the venules edged with brown ; the subapical
patch brown; submarginal spots serrated, enclosing buff
spaces, not silvered; other markings as on the upper
surface.
399 ADDENDA.
The under side of hind wings dull ferruginous from
the base to the second row of spots; between the two
outer rows a broad buff belt, as in Cybele; the silver
spots are twenty-one or twenty-two in number,—viz.,
seven submarginal, lunate, edged with ferruginous be-
low and above; the second row of seven or eight, all but
the last heavily edged above with black, and projecting
a brown shadow on the belt, the first, second and fifth
largest, third and sixth half the size of the others, the
fourth minute, the seventh and eighth (when present)
streaks; the third row of three, edged also with black
above; a small rounded spot in the cell, a patch at the
origin of the median venule and another at base of cos-
tal; costa at base and abdominal margin slightly, if at
all, silvered.
The body above is dark brown, beneath the abdomen
is yellowish ; palpi fulvous; antennze fulvous, the club
tipped with fulvous.
Female.—The upper side dark ferruginous brown
from base to the middle of disk ; and beyond, to the
brown marginal band, grayish-yellow. On the under
side the fore wings have the base and posterior margin
port-wine color, and the apical and costal portion, as far
as the middle of the cell, grayish yellow ; the hind wings
have the basal two-thirds deep ferruginous, and between
the two outer rows of spots a clear band of grayish
yellow, brighter colored than on the upper side ; spots as
in the male.
The larva and food plant of this species are unknown.
California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Montana,
and lately it has been found in Iowa and Michigan.
ADDENDA. 393
844, NEoNyMPHA MITCHELLII, French. (Page 238.)
Expanse of wings, male, 1.20 to 1.30 inches; female,
1.50 inches.
Male.—Upper surface grayish wood-brown, rather
dark, without spots or marks, except that the spots of
the under side of the hind wings and the dark lines bor-
dering the terminal dark yellow line on the same wings
show through a little. Fringes concolorous, in certain
lights a little smoky tinged. Under surface slightly
paler than the upper, a little more of the mouse order
of color, sprinkled with buff scales. Both the wings are
crossed by four transverse brownish-yellow stripes, so
dark on the fore wings as to be yellow brown, occupying
the same position as the same lines in its ally, NV. Areo-
latus, the first and second uniting by a rounded end
about a tenth of an inch from the inner margin of hind
wings, the two outer—one terminal and the other sub-
termioal—also uniting before reaching anal angle. In
Areolatus these lines do not unite. ach of these lines
has a dark brown [more or less distinct] fine bordering
line on each side of it. The first line crosses the fore
wings a little more than two-thirds the distance from
the base of the wing to end of cell, the hind wings about
two-thirds. The second line crosses fore wing a little
beyond the end of cell, the hind wings across the end
of cell. The second and third are approximate anterior-
ly, as in Areolatus. Fore wings with a row of four
small ocelli between second and third lines, circled with
pale Naples yellow or buff, the first varying from a dot,
the size of an ordinary period, to about twice that diam-
eter; in four examples circular, in two, a little oval, in
394 ADDENDA.
{wo, a silvery metallic centre; the second a little more
than twice the diameter of the first, in three examples
circular, the other three slightly ovate, each with from
one to three metallic points, when three present in the
form of a triangle; the third averaging the size of the
second, circular, with from one to two metallic points,
when one central, when two in line with the row of
spots ; the fourth about one-fourth larger than the first,
circular, all but one, which has the buff circle almost
complete on the outside, but also a few buff scales out-
side the circle, a single metallic point to each of these.
Hind wings with six ocelli to each wing, circled with
buff as those on the fore wings. ‘The first varying from
a few buff scales, in one example with the black centre,
to twice or thrice the diameter of an ordinary period,
circular, the largest with, in one example, a silvery
metallic point ; the second about .04 of an inch m diam-
eter [the black portion], circular in four examples, in
two, a slight bulging in outer anal part, from one to five
metallic scales, aggregated or scattered ; the third from
.06 to .O7 of an inch in diameter, all nearly or quite cir-
cular, two silvery metallic points, in line with the ocelli ;
the fourth size of the third and the same shape. In
each of these one example has a few black scales pro-
jecting into the buff annulus externally on one wing,
voinis as in the third, except that in one the metallic
seaies are scattered on one wing; iifth of the size of
third, circular, in one example a few buff seal; invade
the bieck externally on one wing, in two other examples
they are a little irregular in shape externally on both
wings, two metallic points te sauh, with a few sesitcring
scales in two examples; sixth about constant in size, as
ADDENDA. 295
large as the largest of the first, one metallic point in all
but one ocellus where the scales scatter a little, circular.
Body concolorous ; antennze above on basal two-thirds
of the color of the wings, terminal third orange shading
into the basal color ; beneath whitish, outer third orange ;
sides of basal two-thirds brown and whitish.
Female.—Differs from the male in being paler both
above and below, and slightly in the arrangement of
the transverse lines on the under side. In two out of
four the second and third lines distinctly unite with each
other near the anal angle, while the lines by which the
first and second and the third and fourth unite are to be
seen, but are obscure. In one of the other there is no
union between the second and third, while there is plain
union between first and second and third and fourth.
The fourth has a distinct union between the first and
second and third and fourth, but the rounded ends of
these unions touch. Both wings of the same example
are alike in this character. Ocelli as in the males, with
about the same amount of variation.
The food-plant is probably one of the wild grasses.
Cass County, Michigan.
94. KumMENIA ATALA, Poey. (Page 254.)
In the catalogues this species is given Florida as a
habitat. I believe, however, that it is more widely
distributed, for I have found it once in Carbondale,
Illinois.
121. Lycmna Lyepamus, var. Oro, Seud. (P. 285.)
This form is of the same size and general markings
as the typical species, but the blue of the upper surface
396 ADDENDA.
is a little more delicate, and the ground color of the
under side is paler, being more of a brownish gray.
The base of the wings are well sprinkled with blue
scales on the under side.
Illinois, west to California.
1241. Lycmna Atcr, Edw. (Page 294.)
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Upper side of male brown, with a pinkish-blue reflec-
tion, deeper blue next to the base. The hind wings
have two fuscous points in the interspace near anal
angle and a round spot in the space next preceding.
Fringes grayish white.
Under side fawn color, on the outer half of both
wings reticulated with whitish lines. The fore wings
have a mesial series of large, black, rounded spots, and
a concolored spot on the end of cell, all edged with white.
The hind wings have three spots on hind or outer mar-
gin, corresponding to those of upper side, velvet black
with metallic green edges ; two black spots on costa and
two at base. Body above covered with blue hairs, be-
low gray ; palpi white, last joint black ; antenne annu-
lated black and white; club black above, fulvous below
at tip.
Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Kansas, Missouri.
1323. ANCYLOXYPHA LONGLEYI, French. . (Page
301.)
Female.—Expanse' 1 inch. Fore wings with the
costa more straight from the shoulder to near the apex
than in Numitor, in this respect approaching Thymelicus ;
apex rounded, but less than in Numitor ; outer margin
ADDENDA 297
and hind wing rounded much as in Numitor ; antennee
reaching but little more than one-third the distance to
apex of fore wings; palpi as in Numitor, but the third
joint longer ; abdomen surpassing hind wings, but less
so than in Numitor ; the whole insect more robust than
Numutor.
Fore wings brown, darker than in Numitor, with-
out the discal yellow patch, emitting a pale-blue sheen
in reflected ight; a few yellow scales below the costa
between the venules, and a few scattered on the base
of the wing, but in either case not enough to give a
yellow color; otherwise the wing is uniform brown.
Hind wings marked and colored as in Numitor ; yellow,
with outer and costal borders and base brown, the brown
along internal margin running to a point before reach-
ing anal angle.
Under side differing very little from the under side
of Numitor ; the dark central and posterior area of fore
wings a littie darker brown, the costal and outer mar-
gins yellow, the yellow running to a point before reach-
ing the posterior angle. Hind wings uniform yellow.
Antenne black, annulate with white; club black,
tipped with brown—the club of Numator is tipped with
blaek ; palpi white at sides, black above, terminal joint
black ; thorax concolorous with fore wings, abdomen
concolorous with hind wings.
The above description is drawn from a single speci-
men taken at Ridgeland, near Chicago, September 6,
1896, by Mr. W. E. Longley, in whose cabinet it is
and after whom I have named the species. In de-
scribing the species I have compared the specimen with
Numitor because that species is so common all over this
34
398 ADDENDA.
portion of our country. I hope the Chicago collectors
will be on the lookout for this species the coming season.
134. PAMPHILA MAssasolt, var. SUFFUSA, Laurent.
(Page 302.)
This form has the yellow markings of the under sur-
face of the hind wings almost obliterated by a suffusion
of dark brown, while the upper surface of the fore wings
is of a uniform dark brown, the light-colored margin
found in the normal form being entirely wanting. The
variation is generally found aniong the males, but also
occurs sparingly in the females.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1353. Pampuina AARONI, Skinner. (Page 3085.)
Expanse of wings from 1 to 1.25 inches.
Male.—Upr2r surfree tawny, the fore wings with a
blackish-brown border about one-eighth inch in width.
The base of the wing is shaded a darker color by the
same dusky scales. The veins are not defined by the
dark color, as in var. Hobomok. The tawny middle
area of the wing is darker and more fiery than in the
latter. The discal bar or dash is black and very distinct
and well defined, although quite small in most of the
specimens ; running from this obliquely towards the body
to the posterior margin is a broken, very faint line. The
hind wings are a practical reproduction of the fore wings,
the only difference being that the dark border encircles
the entire wing, but is narrower on the anterior margin,
and the venation is well defined.
Under side, extending from the thorax into the wing
for about one-eighth inch, and covering only the lower
ADDENDA. : 299
half of the base, is a sharply defined black spot, which
has a pointed projection extending into the third median
interspace. The middle area of the wing is tawny, but
some shades lighter than the upper side. The border
along the lower half of the outer margin is about the
same width as above, but it widens considerably as it
approaches the apex; this border and the immaculate
hind wings are of a light cinnamon-brown color. There
is a brownish-black streak running along the posterior
margin of the fore wings.
Female.—A little larger than the male, and the colors
of a lighter shade than in the male, ana not so well de-
fined. On the upper side it resembles var. Hobomok,
and beneath P. Delaware, except in color.
Food-plant and larva unknown.
Cape May, New Jersey.
1393. PamMpHita YEHL, Skinner. (Page 309.)
Expanse of wings 1.38 inches.
This species looks considerably like P. Aaroni, and
the fore wings are marked not unlike P. Pawnee, thus
having a heavier stigma than P. Aaroni. On the upper
side the fore wings are yellowish fulvous, with a brown
border three-sixteenths of an inch wide ; three yellowish-
fulvous subapical spots situated in the brown border,
the border extending inward from these to the end of
the cell; stigma rather wide, and mud color in the
middle; it is faintly divided in two by the venule.
Beyond the stigma and extending to brown border are
two quadrate, yellowish-fulvous spots, and at outer end
of stigma a small V-shaped one; and at end of this, and
directly below the extra discal, is another minute V-
a eee SS = > r
400 ADDENDA.
shaped spot. The hind wings have the centre yellowish
fulyous, with a dark-brown border extending all around ;
the yellowish fulvous is broken into four distinct parts
by the venules, with an extra one in the cell.
Under side.—There is nothing characteristic about
the fore wings below; the hind wings are light cinna-
mon-brown in color (much like P. Leonardus) ; in the
centre of the wing, closely placed, there is a semicircle
of four yellowish, round spots, with an additional one
placed more inwardly towards the base.
Florida.
1403. PampHILA Siosson#, Skinner. (Page 310.)
In size and markings this species comes nearest to
P. Leonardus. The male expands rather less than an
inch and a half. Ground color of fore wings dark
brown, with basal half of wing thickly covered with
tawny scales, which beyond the stigma form three spots,
and just above these are two small square ones. The
three subcostal spots are represented as in P. Leonardus.
Stigma narrow, black, and concave posteriorly. Hind
wings same color as the fore wings, with tawny scales
scattered over the basal half. There are four small,
square, tawny spots close together, with a fifth elongated
one at right angles with the four, on outer half of wing,
running nearly parallel with the outer margin, only the
angle made by the spots is more acute. Fringes of all
wings dingy white. The maculation on under side of
fore wings is nearly the same as in P. Leonardus, but in
color very different, the ground color in this species
being made up of yellowish and greenish scales ; under
side of hind wings olive-green, with the spots on the
ADDENDA. AQ]
upper side repeated, except that there is a sixth one near
the centre of the wing, and all are dingy white. Fringes
on under side same as above. Head and thorax above
covered with greenish hair, beneath grayish yellow.
Palpi almost white. |
The female expands a little more than an inch and a
half. Fore wings very dark brown, with a broken
band of yellow, consisting of five spots, commencing at
the submedian vein and extending to within one-eighth
inch of the apex. The subcostal spots are present as in
the male, with additional ones at end of cell. The hind
wings as in the male, but with spots fainter ; under side
of wings also same as in male, but the white spots on
hind wings are smaller. J ringes in female dark on fore
wings, but gradually getting lighter on the hind wings
towards the anal angle.
Florida.
1574. PAMPHILA PANOQUINOIDES, Skinner. (Page
331.)
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Color, brown. Fore wings have two minute fulvous
spots on the subcostal venules and a larger spot on the
disk below these. Hind wings immaculate. On the
under side the fore wings are of the same color as above,
but of a lighter shade, with a patch of fulvous scales
about one-eighth of an inch from the base; the spots
seen above are repeated, and there are two additional
ones. One of these is V-shaped and is the largest, and
situated between the first and second median venules.
The last spot is near the middle of the posterior margin.
The hind wings have a row of three white spots near
aa 34*
402 ADDENDA.
=
the centre of the wing; they are half as wide as long.
Head, thorax, and abdomen same color.as wings above,
lighter beneath.
Key West, Florida; Texas.
1644. PampnitA Howarpt, Skinner. (Page 341.)
Male.—Expanse of wings 1.50 inches.
Upper side: the fore wings are tawny with a fuscous
border a little more than one-eighth inch in width ;
there are from one to four small subapical tawny spots
on the fuscous border ; at end of cell a dark spot which
may or may not be connected with the stigma; stigma
rather more than an eighth of an inch in length, very
narrow and unbroken, and extending to inher margin.
The hind wings have the same fuscous border and tawny
central area. Under side: the fore wings have tawny
central area and border the same as the upper side;
there is a large triangular spot extending into the wing
from the base. The tawny color above this spot is of a
darker hue than that below and outside it. Hind wings
very light brown, generally with four or five very faint
tawny spots in the central area.
The females are larger, without the stigma, and have
the under side of hind wings immaculate.
Larva and food-plant unknown.
Florida.
1663. PampPHILA STRECKERI, Skinner. (Page 343.)
Expanse of wings 1.25 inches.
Male.—This is a yellowish-fulvous species, with a
narrow dark-brown border to all the wings. T he fore
wings are yellowish fulvous, except the dark border,
ADDENDA. 403
which is about one-eighth of an inch in width. The
stigma is a long, narrow, black line, extending from
median venule to submedian vein, crossing obliquely
two vein-spaces; at the end of cell there is a distinct,
black, V-shaped mark, composed of two lines, with the
point towards the tip of the wing. The hind wings are
yellowish fulvous, with a dark border similar to the
fore wings, except that on fore wings there is no fuscous
on costa, except at tip; whereas on hind wings the dark
border extends all around, and widens towards base of
wings. The border on outer margin of hind wings is
narrower than on fore wings, and the yellowish fulvous
of central area of wings runs into it in marked inden-
tations, there being four well-defined teeth. Fringes
yellowish fulvous on all wings.
Under side.—Fore wings same as above, excepting
that there is the usual dark basal mark ; the border
is same width as above, but lighter in color, and the
yellow veins run through it, giving the fuscous a den-
tate appearance; and the yellowish-fulvous fringe is
separated from wing by a remarkably distinct and well-
defined black line. The hind wings are greenish gray,
with the veins lemon-yellow, making a distinct and
curious combination; the interspace between the last
median venule and the median vein is bright yellowish
fulvous. The fringe and black line the same as on fore
Wings.
Florida.
1703. PamputiuA Carona, Skinner. (Page 347.)
Expanse of wings 1 inch.
Male.—Fore wings fuscous, with three small, sub-
404 ADDENDA.
s
apical, yellow spots, the uppermost one very small in
comparison with the other two. There are two yellow
spots about the middle of the cell, which are almost
coalesced. There is a row of four yellow spots extend-
ing across the wing from about its middle nearly to the
posterior margin. The inner third of wing to base is
dusted with yellow scales. Hind wings without spots,
or rarely mere traces of yellow spots.
On the under side the spots of the fore wings above
are repeated, but not so well defined, with a distinct
costal edging of brownish yellow. Hind wings brownish
yellow, distinctly spotted with dark-brown dots. The
body above is concolorous with the wings. The an-
tenne are distinctly annulated, and the club beneath
is entirely yellow, except the tip. Body and _ palpi
below concolorous with under side of wings.
Richmond County, North Carolina. :
177. Pyreus TEssELLATA, Scud. (Page 352.)
Preparatory stages.
Ege.—Diameter .02 inch. Blunt conical, height about
the same as the diameter; ridged with about 30 longi-
tudinal strize, with shallower cross striz. Color pale
green. Duration of this period six days.
Young Larve.—Length .08 inch ; cylindrical ; head
somewhat cordate, two-thirds the width of the body ;
the anterior part of joint 2 about one-half the diameter
of the head, the posterior part as wide as joint 3; each
joint back of 2 with four low transverse folds besides
the very narrow fold at each end of the joint. Color
pale greenish with a white sheen ; piliferous spots con-
colorous; hairs erect, forked to about the middle, the
ADDENDA. A05
forks curving back towards the body anteriorly and
posteriorly. ‘These are the hairs from the piliferous
spots. Hairs on the body black, hairs on the head and
joint 2 white and not furcate. Head jet black ; joint 2
pale yellow-brown with a black transverse bar just back
of the middle of the joint; dark along the sides; tho-
racic feet black. There are eight hairs in pairs on the
dorsal bar of joint 2. Duration of this period two or
three days.
After First Moult.—Length .15 inch. Shape not
materially changed. Head and joint 2 jet black ; hairs
all white, shorter than before, more numerous, the end
capitate instead of bifid; head and neck corrugated.
Duration of this period six days.
After Second Mouit.—Length .40 inch. Marked as
before ; hairs still capitate, white ; a dorsal and subdor-
sal line a little more plainly green; head and joint 2
profusely Fairy, but the hairs are all short, surface cor-
rugated. Previous to this moult the larve mostly lay
coiled on the surface of the food-plant, but now they
straighten out under a thin silky covering. Duration of
this period four days.
After Third Moult.—Length .50 inch. Cylindrical ;
head about the same width as the body ; black, covered
with white hairs, each of which has about six short side
spurs from about the middle up ; joint 2 black, with the
dorsal bar red-brown with a whitish margin ; hairs on this
joint of two kinds, short and long, the long about one-
sixth the width of the body in length and very shallowly
trifid at the end; body, each joint with five folds, the
anterior twice the width of the others; two forms of
hairs, one very short and the other long, each long one
ANG ADDENDA.
about the length of those on joint 2 and arising from a
white conical base, trifid at the outer end ; the short ones
arising from a shorter cone and capitate at the end.
Color of the body pale yellowish green, a more distinet
dorsal and subdorsal stripe and the subdorsal space with
mottlings of darker green ; stigmata sordid white. Du-
ration of this period four days.
After Fourth Moult.—Length .85 to .95 inch. About
the same as during preceding period, but the head hairs
have a brown tinge, and joint 2 is brown, with a whitish
dorsal line, and sometimes subdorsal also. Duration of
this period seven days.
Pupa.—Length .55 inch; diameter .15 inch. Nearly
cylindrical; from the head to the posterior part of the
wing-cases .37 inch, these extending nearly to the pos-
terior edge of joint 5; body pretty well covered with
short, simple, white hairs; head rounded, eyes rather
prominent, a prominent tuft of hairs between them
(frontal hairs they might be called), another anterior
tuft on the inner edge of margin of eye, more on the
outer margin, while the space around the eye between
these tufts is without hairs. Color gray; head gray
with a greenish tinge except on the eye-space ; dorsal
part of thorax gray with a slight green tinge, three
transverse rows of small black spots, the first, one on
each side, subdorsal ; the second row six, one on each side
of a very slight green dorsal line and one on each side of
what would be a subdorsal line if such were present, a
little anterior to the others; third row six, one on each
side of the dorsal line and one outside and a little an-
terior to this, and one on the shoulder of hind wings.
Spiracle just back of the eye large, elevated, dark, or
ADDENDA. AQ
Vandyke brown, the outer portion pale. Wing-cases
green, ribbed as usual, mottled slightly in two shades,
but not strongly contrasting ; abdomen with each joint
eray (the gray of the whole pupa a more sordid white
with a gray tint, as there is none of the dark gray about
it), slightly green tinted, the incisures more distinctly
pale green, each joint with its row of small black spots
across the middle, supplemented back of the row with a
less perfect row of smaller spots, the first row of six
spots, of which the outer spot on each end of the row is
the black spiracle; cremaster brown, elongated hooks
at the end that fasten into a thin, loose button of silk.
Duration of this period eight days,
The larvee, when ready to pupate, folded a leaf to-
gether and loosely fastened it with silk, but there was
no lining of silk except a small, thin button to which
the cremaster was attached.
The eggs were sent me by Dr. C. Hoeg, of Decorah,
Iowa. At first he sent me two eggs under date of July
31, 1897, that he had found on Malva Rotundifolia.
These did not hatch on account of injury in transit, and
under date of August 6 he sent me fifteen more found on
the same plant. These hatched out August 12. I fed
them first on a species of Abutilon, but as they did not
take to that readily, though eating a little, I changed to
Althea Rosea. I think they will eat any of the rough-
leaved Malvacee readily. On account of being away
from home part of the time, the larvee were somewhat
neglected in the last stages, but notwithstanding this two
passed through all their stages, producing the first imago
September 12, 1897.
Saini ain rp Neo OSE EEO
408 ADDENDA.
2013. CasTNIA CRONIS, var. Corningii, Hy. Edw.
(Page 387.)
Expanse of wings 2.4 inches.
Ground color of the wing, velvety black. Disk with
a clear white space, running parallel with the posterior
margin, and reaching nearly to the base, whence it is
separated by a narrow black line from another white
triangular spot which touches the thorax, at the extreme
base of the wing. On the upper edge this mark runs
obliquely but almost parallel with the costa, to about
the centre of the wing; there it is cut off straight along
the corner of the median vein. The space thus enclosed
covers about one-third of the whole wing. On the costa
is a large ovate spot, and along the margin, only near
the posterior angle, are five subtriangular spots, and two
oblong spots at the apex, all clear white. The costa is
reddish at the base. The hind wings are yellow-white,
with rather narrow black margin slightly dentate on the
inner edge. Beneath, the markings are repeated, but
the ovate mark on the costa of fore wings is here tri-
angular, and there is a second triangular mark nearer
the apex. Head black, with two white spots at the base
of the antennze, and one in front. Thorax also black,
with red lines at the sides, and four transverse white
dashes. The red line at the base of costa is also carried
on to the thorax. Abdomen creamy white, with the tip
orange. Beneath, the abdomen and thorax are clear
white, the coxe and tibie black. :
The description of this species was published in “ In-
sect Life” in 1891, but was overlooked in the third re-
vision. It is claimed by some entomologists that this
ADDENDA. 409
species and the two species of Megathymus belong to
another family, Castniide, and that they are not butter-
flies, but moths. The species of both Megathymus and
Castnia are borers in their larva state in the roots of
certain Liliaceous and other related plants, and if we
retain the species of Megathymus in the butterflies we
must place the species of Castnia there also. The in-
sects from which this description was taken were bred
from the rocts of an Orchis (Lelia Majalis) in a green-
house in Albany, N. Y.
GLOSSARY.
Abdomen, the posterior part of the body.
Aciculate, needle-shaped, more slender than subu.dte.
Alba, or Albus, white.
Anal, pertaining to the posterior part of the body.
Anal angle, tae inner or posterior angle of the hind wings, next to
the body.
Annulate, furnished with colored rings.
Annulus, a ring.
Anteapical, before the apex; on the front or costal portion of the
wing, near the apex.
Antenne, two articulated organs of sensation, situated on the head.
Anterior margin, the front margin of a wing; the costa.
Apex, that part of a wing which is farthest from the body ; the angle
between the costa and the outer margin.
Approximate, near to; near together.
Aureus, golden yellow.
Azure, sky-blue :—-nearly the same as ceruleus.
Basal, reiating to the base.
Base, as applied to a wing, that part which is joined to the body.
Bifid, cleft.
Bipupillate, applied to an ocellate spot having two pupils or dots
within it of a different color from the rest of the spot.
Blind, applied to a round spot destitute of a central spot or pupil.
Body, the three parts of an insect,—head, thorax, and abdomen
Bronze, the color of old brass.
Ceruleus, color of the sky; sky-blue.
Cesius, pale blue, approaching gray.
Canus, hoary, with more white than gray.
Capillary, hair-like; long and slender, like a hair.
Carina, a keel.
411
412 GLOSSARY.
Carinate, keeled; having a longitudinal prominence like the keel
of a boat.
Carneous, flesh-colored.
Caterpillar, the larva.
Cauda, the tail.
Caudate, tailed :—generaily applicd to the posterior wings of Lepi-
doptera to indicate tail-like projections.
Cell, usually in Lepidoptera the space between the subcostal and
median veins; the discal cell.
Chitine, the hard part on the outside of insects.
Chrysalis, the third stage of the insect, counting the egg one.
Cie, fringes.
Ciliate, fringed.
Cinereous, ash color; gray tinged a little with blackish; the color
of wood ashes.
Cingula, a colored band.
Clavate, club-shaped.
Coalesce, to grow together or unite.
Collar, scales back of the head, forming more or less of a ring; the
neck.
Voncolorous, of the same color, as the body agreeing in color with
the wings.
Confluent, running into each other.
Connivent, converging or approaching.
Contiguous, touching; placed so near as to touch.
Convergent, approaching each other towards the tip.
Cordate, heart-shaped.
Corrugated, wrinkled. .
Costa, the thickened anterior part of the wing from the base to the
apex.
Coxa, the jointed base of the leg.
Cremaster, the anal hooks of the chrysalis, which fasten into silk to
hold the chrysalis in place.
Crenate, scalloped.
Cuneiform, wedge-shaped.
Cupreous, coppery ; the color of copper.
Cyaneus, dark blue, like Prussian blue.
Dentate, toothed.
Diaphanous, semi-transparent; clear.
Dichotomous, forked: dividing by pairs.
GLOSSARY 413
Diffuse, spreading.
Dimorphous, two-formed :—applied to a species existing in two
forms having different colors or markings.
Disk, the surface within the margin,—usually between the end of
the cell and the outer margin.
Dorsal, of the back.
Dorsum, the back or upper surface.
Echinate, set with prickles.
Edematous, dull translucent white.
Edge, the margin.
Egg, the first stage of an insect.
Elliptical, in the form of an ellipse.
Emarginate, notched.
Entire, the margin smooth, or without teeth.
Epupillate, applied to an ocellate spot included in a colored ring, but
destitute of a pupil or central dot.
Erect, upright.
Eyes, the organs of sight, composed of numerous hexagonal facets.
Face, the anterior or front part of the head.
Fascia, a transverse band or broad line.
Fasciated, banded.
Feet, the organs of motion.
Femur, the thigh or third part of the leg.
Ferruginous, of the color of iron-rust.
Filiform, thread-shaped.
Flexuous, zigzag without acute angles.
Fuliginous, sooty ; soot-colored.
Fulvous, orange-yellow.
Fuscous, dark brown with a slight mixture of gray.
Fusiform, spindle-shaped; gradually tapering towards each end
from near the middle.
Geminate, situated in pairs.
Genus, an assemblage of species which correspond in particular
characters.
Glabrous, smooth.
Glaucous, gray bluish green.
Globular, like a round ball.
Glutinous, slimy, viscid.
Granulated, covered with small grains.
Gregarvus, living in society, or many feeding together.
35*
414 GLOSSARY.
Griseous, light gray
Habitation, or Habitat, a situation or locality frequented by insects.
Head, the anterior part of the body.
Hibernaculum, a case of web and leaves in which larve or pupa
hibernate ; or a cocoon of silk.
ITibernate, to pass through or survive the winter.
Hind margin, that part of the fore wings which is included between
the base and the posterior angle.
Hirsute, rough with strong hairs.
ITispid, bristly ; rough with stiff, short, sparse hairs.
Hoary, covered with a fine white silvery substance or pubescence.
Humerus, the anterior base of the wing.
Hyaline, transparent; vitreous.
Imago, the perfect or adult insect.
Imbricated, tiled; placed one over another, like shingles on the
roof of a house.
Immaculate, without spots.
Incanous, hoary.
Inconspicuous, not readily discernible.
Inner margin, or Interior margin, that margin of the hind wings
which extends from the base to the anal angle; by some authors
used to denote the posterior or hind margin of the fore wings.
Tris, of an ocellate wing-spot, is a circle that surrounds the principal
spot.
Irrorate, sprinkled.
Joints, or Articulations, the divisions of the body or segments of the
larva; the divisions of the pupa, more particularly the abdomen ;
the divisions of the antenne.
Keel, the carina.
Labial palpi, articulated filaments, one on each side of the labium
Labium, the lower lip.
Labrum, the upper lip.
Lanceolate, lance- or spear-shaped.
Larva, the second stage of an insect, counting the egg the first.
Larvarium, a retreat of silk and leaves, or of silk, in which some
larvee stay when not feeding.
Lateral, situated on the side.
Lenticular, lens-shaped.
Lepidoptera, an order of insects having four wings covered with
minute imbricated scales; butterflies and moths.
GLOSSARY. 415
Lethargic, becoming torpid or inactive.
Ingula, tongue.
Lilacinous, lilac color.
Tinear, narrow and of nearly uniform width.
Inneated, streaked, or marked with lines.
Inwid, dark gray, verging towards violet.
Longitudinal, the direction of the longest diameter.
Lnumnate, crescent-shaped; formed like a new moon.
Lurid, of a dirty brown color.
Inuteus, unmixed yellow.
Macula, a spot larger than a puncture, of some other than the gen-
eral color.
Maculate, or Maculated, spotted.
Mandibles, the upper jaws.
Margin, the edge of a wing, or along the edge.
Maxille, the lower jaws, placed between the upper jaws and the
lower lip.
. Maxillary palpi, filaments attached to the maxille.
Mesial, middle, as a band or stripe across the middle portion of the
wing.
Mesonotum, the covering of the middle of the dorsal portion of the
thorax.
Mesothorax, that division of the thorax to which the middle pair
of legs are attached.
Metamorphoses, transformations.
Metathoraz, that division of the thorax to which the hind pair of
legs are attached.
Micropyle, the apex of the egg of. an insect.
Moult, or Molt, shedding or casting off the larva skin.
Nebulous, clouded.
Nervures, divisions of the nerves or veins of a wing.
Niger, black a little tinged with gray.
Obconic, inversely conic.
Obcordate, inversely heart-shaped.
Oblong, the transverse diameter much shorter than the longitudinal.
Obovate, inversely egg-shaped.
Obsolete, indistinct.
Occiput, the hinder part of the head.
Ocellt, eye-like spots on the wings of Lepidoptera; simple eyes of
insects.
416 GLOSSARY.
Ochreous, yellow with a slight tinge of brown.
Orbicular, round.
Order, the subdivision of a class.
Osmateria, scent-organs of the larve of the genus Papilio.
Oval, broadly elliptical.
Ovate, egg-shaped.
Overlaid, heavily sprinkled with scales of a different color from the
ground color; clouded; overcast.
Palpi, in butterflics, the three jointed organs beneath the head
between which the tongue is coiled like a watch-spring. J
Piceous, pitchy; the color of pitch.
Pile, very minute, short hairs.
Pilous, kaving long, sparse hairs.
Polymorphous, applied to a species existing in several different forms
as to color, markings, or size.
Porrect, straight out.
Posterior angle, the angle formed by the outer margin and the pos-
terior or hind margin of the fore wing.
Posterior margin, that portion of the fore wings which is opposite
the costa.
Proboscis, the tongue, or sucking organ.
Prolegs, the fleshy legs of caterpillars.
Pronotum, the anterior part of the covering of the thorax; the
covering of the thorax.
Prothoraz, the first division. of the thorax, to which the first pair
of legs are attached.
Pruinous, hoary; covered with a whitish powder.
Pubescent, coated with fine hair or down.
Punctured, marked with small impressed dots.
Pupa, the third stage of an insect, counting the egg the first; the
chrysalis.
Pupate, to assume the pupa form.
Pupil, of an ocellus, the central point.
Quadrangular, having four angles.
Quadrate, square, or nearly square.
Remote, separate; not near together.
Reniform, kidney-shaped.
Reticulate, resembling net-work.
Retractile, capable of being exserted or drawn in at pleasure.
Retuse, ending in an obtuse sinus.
GLOSSARY.
Ribs, ridges on eggs from the base to the apex.
Roseus, rose color.
Rosy rose color.
Rufous, reddish.
Rugous, or Rugose, wrinkled.
Sagittate, arrow-shaped.
Sanguineous, of the color of arterial blood.
Scabrous, rough, with projecting points.
Scales, the dust or imbricated pieces covering the wings.
Segment, a ring or division of the body.
Sericeous, silky.
Serrate, saw-toothed.
Sessile, connected with the part to which it is attached without the
intervention of a peduncle or stalk.
Seta, a bristle.
Sexes, the two divisions of animals: in insects distinguished by &
for male and Q for female.
Sinuate, indented.
Sinus, an indentation or excavation.
Sparse, scattered.
Species, an assemblage of individuals possessed of permanent char
acters of size, color, and ornamentation, by which they may be
distinguished from other forms, and which breed true to their
type.
Spinous, armed with spines.
Spiracles, breathing-holes on the side of the body; the stigmata.
Sprinkled, marked with thinly-scattered scales of another color than
the ground color.
Stigmata (singular, Stigma), the breathing-holes on the sides of the
body; also, sometimes, spots on a wing.
Strie, lines; transverse elevated lines on eggs.
Striate, marked with lines.
Submarginal, applied to a space or line within the margin.
Subocellate, applied to an ocellus without a pupil.
Suffused, blurred with a color other than the usual one.
Sulphureous, bright yellow; the color of sulphur.
Tail, the terminal segment of the abdomen; an appendage at the
posterior part of the hind wings.
Tarsi, the feet.
Tawny, dull yellowish brown.
bb
418 GLOSSARY.
Terminal, at the extremity.
Testaceous, tile or brick color.
Thorax, that part of the body which is back of the head.
Tibia, that part of the leg which is next to the foot.
Tongue, the sucking-tube of Lepidoptera.
Torpidity, a lethargic state of hibernation.
Transverse, crosswise.
Trochanter, an appendage at the base of the thigh.
Trophi, the mouth parts.
Truncate, cut square off.
Tubercle, a small swelling or prominence.
Variety, a form of one or more examples of a species differing from
the usual form, but not breeding true to type.
Veins and Venules, the framework of the wings.
Venter, the lower part of the body.
Ventricose, distended.
Villi, soft hairs.
Violaceous, violet color.
Vitellinus, yellow with a slight tinge of red.
Vitta, a longitudinal colored line.
Washed, covered with scales of a color different from the ground
color, but not quite obscuring the latter.
Acadica, 260.
Accentuated List, 51.
Accius, 327.
Acis, 269.
Agarithe, 124,
Agraulis Vanills, 148.
Ajax, 84.
Alcestis, 158.
Alicia, 217.
Alope, 243.
Amblyscirtes Hos, 349.
sf Samoset, 350.
re Textor, 351.
of Vialis, 348.
Ammon, 297.
Amyntas, 380,
Analytical Key, 57.
Anartia Jatropha, 202.
Ancyloxypha Numitor, 301.
Anthocharis Genutia, 118.
se Olympia, 117.
Antiopa, 193.
Apatura Alicia, 217.
Celtis, 215.
“ Clyton, 218.
le Flora, 221.
Aphrodite, 157.
Archippus, 144.
Areolatus, 237.
Argynnis Alcestis, 158.
ode Aphrodite, 157.
ss Atlantis, 160.
es Bellona, 164.
es Cybele, 155.
= Diana, 153.
INDEX.
Argynnis Idalia, 150.
és Montinus, 16%
se Myrina, 16].
Arpa, 339.
Arthemis, 208.
Asterias, 89.
Atala, 254.
Atalanta, 196.
Atlantis, 160.
Augustus, 272.
Ausonius, 360.
Autolycus, 258.
Bachmanni, 250.
Batabano, 379.
Batesii, 180.
Bathyllus, 369
Bellona, 164.
Berenice, 146.
Bimacula, 334.
Borealis, 253.
Brettus, 314.
| Brizo, 354.
Byssus, 344. !
Cabinet, 43.
Ceenius, 253.
Ceesonia, 127.
Calanus, 263.
Calephalis Borealis, 253.
ff Caenius, 253.
Callidryas Agarithe, 124.
s Kubule, 119.
s Philea, 124.
66
Senna, 120.
419
42(
Canthus, 232.
Cardui, 199.
Carlota, 174.
Carterocephalus Mandan, 299.
sé Omaha, 300.
Catullus, 367.
Cellus, 371.
Celtis, 215.
Centaureze, 353.
Cernes, 320.
Charitonia, 147.
Chionobas Jutta, 248.
es Semidea, 249.
Chrysalis, the, 23.
Chrysophanus Dione, 280.
“f Epixanthe, 28
Hypophleas, 283.
Thoe, 281.
Classification, 15.
Claudia, 165.
Clyton, 218.
Coenia, 200.
Cofaaui, 386.
Coleenis Julia, 147.
Coleoptera, 15.
Colias Cesonia, 127.
66
Zs
66 St
66
Kurytheme, 128.
Interior, 135.
Philodice, 133.
Collecting Butterflies, 36.
Columella, 271.
Comma, 185.
Comyntas, 292.
Cresphontes, 101.
Cybele, 155.
6
éb
Danaine, 143.
Danais Archippus, 144.
“Berenice, 146.
Debis Portlandia, 229.
Delaware, 342.
Delia, 139.
Diadema Misippus, 206,
INDEX.
Diana, 153.
Dion, 337.
Dione, 280.
Diptera, 15.
Disippus, 210,
Edwardsii, 261.
Kgg, the, 16.
Kos, 349.
Epixanthe, 282.
Bresia Frisia, 181.
Eros, 214.
Erycides Ainyntas, 380,
ef Batabano, 379.
Erycinide, 252.
Ethlius, 332.
Eubule, 119.
Eudamus Bathyllus, 369,
Cellus, 371.
Lycidas, 370.
Proteus, 377.
Pylades, 368.
Tityrus, 374.
Zestos, 372.
Bufala, 345.
Kumenia Atala, 254.
unica Monima, 202.
Euptoicta Claudia, 165.
Kurytheme, 128.
Kurytris, 238.
Exilis, 295.
Faunus, 187,
Favonius, 257.
Feniseca Tarquinius, 279.
Filenus, 294.
Flora, 221.
Frisia, 181.
Fusca, 346.
Gemma, 235.
Genutia, 118.
Glossary, 389,
Gracilis, 189.
Grapta Comma, 185.
“« Faunus, 187.
« Gracilis, 189.
‘¢ Interrogationis, 182.
«J Album, 192.
“ Progne, 190.
IIabits of Butterflies, 32.
Jfalesus, 255.
Harrisii, 170.
Hayhurstii, 367.
Ileliconia Charitonia, 141.
ITeliconina, 141.
Ilemiptera, 15.
Ifenrici, 273.
ilesperidze, 299.
Tlianna, 347.
Humuli, 259.
IIuntera, 198.
I{uron, 312.
Ilymenoptera, 15.
Hypophleas, 283.
Tcelus, 355.
Idalia, 150.
Haire, 106.
Imago, the, 26.
Interior, 135.
Interrogationis, 182.
Tole, 115.
Trus, 273.
Tsophthalma, 295.
J Album, 192.
Jatropha, 202.
Jucunda, 140.
Julia, 147.
Junonia Coenia, 200.
Jutta, 248.
Juvenalis, 363.
Kricogonia Lyside, 126.
INDEX.
36
Leeta, 277.
Larva, the, 19.
Leonardus, 310.
Lepidoptera, 15.
Libythea Bachmanni, 250.
Libytheine, 250.
Limenitis Arthemis, 208.
“s Disippus, 210.
f Eros, 214,
¢ Ursula, 206.
Lisa, 139.
List of Illustrations, 11.
Loammi, 328.
Lucilius, 357.
Lycena Ammon, 297.
Comyntas, 292.
sé Exilis, 295.
< Filenus, 294.
« — Tsophthalma, 295,
« Lygdamus, 284.
ee Pseudargiolus, 286.
GS Scudderii, 285.
fs Theonus, 298.
Lycaenidae, 254.
Lycenine, 279.
Lycidas, 370.
Lygdamus, 284.
Lyside, 126.
Maculata, 330.
M Album, 256.
Manataaqua, 323.
Mandan, 299.
Martialis, 362.
Massasoit, 302.
Megathymus Cofaqui, 386.
- Yucce, 381.
Melitaea Harrisii, 170.
“s Phaeton, 168.
Meskei, 311.
Metacomet, 326.
Metea, 306.
Mexicana, 137.
A421
—
422
Milbertii, 195.
Misippus, 20€.
Monima, 202.
Montinus, 163.
Monuste, 106.
Myrina, 161.
Mystic, 318.
Myus, 321.
Naevius, 366.
Names of Butterflies, 50.
Napi, 110.
Nathalis Tole, 115.
Neonympha Areolatus, 237.
re Canthus, 232.
sf Eurytris, 238,
af Gemma, 235.
‘ Sosybius, 240.
Neuroptera, 15,
Nicippe, 136.
Niphon, 276.
Nisoniades Ausonius, 360.
se Brizo, 354,
“ Icelus, 355.
“ Juvenalis, 363.
& Lucilius, 357.
sf Martialis, 362.
ss Naevius, 366.
sé Persius, 359.
Ge Petronius, 364.
os Somnus, 356.
Numitor, 301.
Nycteis, 172.
Nymphalidae, 141,
Nymphalineg, 147.
Ocola, 332.
Olympia, 117.
Omaha, 300.
Ontario, 265.
Orthoptera, 15,
Osyka, 345.
Otho, 315.
INDEX.
Palamedes, 94.
Palatka, 340.
Pamphila Accius, 327,
6
6
¢
Arpa, 339.
Bimacula, 334.
Brettus, 314.
Byssus, 344.
Cernes, 320.
Delaware, 342.
Dion, 337.
Ethlius, 332.
Eufala, 345,
Fusca, 346.
Hlianna, 347,
Huron, 312.
Leonardus, 310.
Loammi, 328.
Meculata, 336.
Manataaqua, 323.
Massasoit, 302.
Meskei, 311.
Metacomet, 326.
Metea, 306.
Mystic, 318.
Myus, 321.
Ocola, 332.
Osyka, 345.
Otho, 315.
Palatka, 340.
Panoquin, 331.
Peckius, 317.
Phyleus, 313.
Pontiac, 335.
Sassacus, 305.
Seminole, 309.
Uncas, 308.
Verna, 324.
Vestris, 325.
Viator, 347.
Vitellius, 341.
Zabulon, 303.
Panoquin, 331.
Paphia Troglodyta, 226.
Papilio Ajax, 84.
«“ Asterias, 89.
“ Cresphontes, 101.
« Palamedes, 94.
« Philenor, 86.
“ — Polydamas, 105.
“Troilus, 93.
“« -Turnus, 97.
Papilionida, 83.
Papilioning, 83.
Peckius, 317.
Pegala, 242.
Persius, 359.
Petreus, 203.
Petronius, 364.
Phaeton, 168.
Phaon, 176.
Philea, 124.
Philenor, 86.
Philodice, 133.
Pholisora Catullus, 367.
of Hayhurstii, 367.
Phyciodes Batesii, 180.
“ Carlota, 174.
Nycteis, 172.
a Phaon, 176.
thd Tharos, 177.
Phyleus, 313.
Pieris [aire, 106,
« ~ Monuste, 106.
“ Napi, 110.
“« Protodice, 107.
«Rap», 114.
“ Virginiensis, 113.
Poess, 270.
Polydamas, 105.
Pontiac, 335.
Portlandia, 229.
Poweshiek, 301.
Proteus, 377.
Protodice, 107.
Pseudargiolus, 286,
Pupa, the, 23.
INDEX.
Pylades, 368.
Pyrameis Atalanta, 196,
sf Cardui, 199.
“ Iluntera, 198.
Pyrgus Centaurem, 353,
“< Tessellata, 352.
Rape, 114.
Samoset, 350.
Sassacus, 305.
Satyring, 229.
Satyrus Alope, 243.
«< ~Pegala, 242.
Scudderii, 285.
Semidea, 249.
Seminole, 309.
Senna, 120.
Smilacis, 268.
Somnus, 356.
Sosybius, 240.
Steneles, 204.
Strigosa, 266.
Tarquinius, 279.
Terias Delia, 139.
«© Jucunda, 140,
Lo JSS as
«Mexicana, 137.
“ Nicippeo, 136.
Tessellata, 352.
Textor, 351.
Tharos, 177.
Thecla Acadica, 260.
“« Acis, 269.
«sO Augustus, 272,
« Autolycus, 258,
“« Calanus, 263.
«~~ Columelila, 271.
«¢ ~~ Edwardsii, 261,
““ Favonius, 257,
“ HHalesus, 255.
“« Henrici, 273.
424
Thecla Humuli, 259.
CUT) inns eAyiay
«Lata, 277.
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