M-^ m K(^\ X'^^Cl^V* 'W^ 'Ki OTHER WORKS ON BUTTERFLIES BY THE AUTHOR. THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES AND CANADA, with special reference to New England. 3 vols., imp. 8vo. 1889. 44 + 1958 pp.; 96 plates and maps, plain and colored. Half-levant, gilt top, $75.00. Published by Houghton^ Mifflin <5^ Co.^ Boston, Mass. BUTTERFLIES: Their Structure, Changes, and Life-Histories, with special reference to American Forms. With an Appendix of Practical Instructions. i2mo. 1881. 10 + 322 pp. ; 201 figures. Cloth, $1.50. Published by Henry Holt b' Co., New Vori, N. V. FOSSIL BUTTERFLIES. 4to. 1875. 100 pp. ; 3 plates. Paper, $2.00, Published by the American Association /or the Advancetnent of Science, Salem, Mass. HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE GENERIC NAMES PRO- POSED FOR BUTTERFLIES : A Contribution to Systematic Nomenclature. 8vo. 1875. 203 pp. Paper, $1.00. Sold by the Cambridge Entomological Club, Cambridge, Mass. THE LIFE OF A BUTTERFLY : A Chapter in Natural History for the General Reader. i6mo. 1893. 186 pp. ; 4 plates. Cloth. Published by Henry Holt &' Co., New York, N V. IN PREPARATION: A STUDENT'S MANUAL OF THE BUTTERFLIES OF NORTH AMERICA, NORTH OF MEXICO. S¥3X '^BRIEF GUIDE TO THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES OF THE NORTHERN UNITED STATES AND CANADA / JBciiig an flntro&uctlon to a 1knowlc5gc ot tbcit lltcslbistoties BT SAMUEL HUBBARD SCUDDER NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 1893 Copyright, 1893, BY HENRY HOLT & CO. ROBERT DRUMMOND, ELECTROTYPEB AND PRINTER, NEW YORK PREFACE. DuRi^^G the preparation of a long-projected and still unpublished Manual of the Butterflies of North America, it occurred to me that when that was ready there would still be needed something less technical; something which shoukl introduce to the young student the names and somewhat of the relationships and lives of our commoner butterflies; and that if such a guide Avere restricted to the commoner butterflies of the region where it would be most used, viz., our Northern States east of the Great Plains — much the same territory as was originally and wisely covered by Gray's Manual of Botany — the actual extent of the work would be so limited as to l)ring it within the reach of all, not alarm the beginner by its magnitude, and, because they are better known, permit a fuller account of their interesting life-histories. I have accordingly selected the butterflies — less than a hundred of them — which would almost surely be met with by any industrious collector in the course of a year's or two years' work in the more populous Northern States and in Canada, and have here treated them as if they were the only ones found there. I have omitted many species which are common enough in certain restricted localities (such, for instance, as our White Mountain butterfly) and included only those which are common over wide areas. As the earlier stages of these insects are just as varied, as interest- iii IV PREFACE. iiig, and as important as the perfect stage, descriptions are given of these under the guidance of the same princi^Dle, only such stages as would be more commonly met with being fully described, and the e.gg and earliest forms of caterpillar omitted as rarities and as also too difficult for the beginner's study. If, then, a young student can find noth- ing in this work to correspond with his particular capture, then he may rest assured that it is not one of the more common kinds, and he will have to go to the larger and more technical works to discover what it is. At any rate, he is likely to be pleased: either he has found out what it is and can thereby learn something of what is already known about it ; or he has found a rarity, a discovery not always distressing to the amateur. To aid in these determinations, separate keys are aj^pended for each of the three stuges, caterpillar, chry- salis, and butterfly, by which any insect included in the work may be tracked. There is another advantage in this restriction of the work to the commoner butterflies, for these are better known in the various stages of their lives, and interest in them is thereby greatly enhanced. I should be loath indeed to treat of butterflies as if they were so many mere postage-stamps to be classified and arranged in a cabinet ; and if, by adding to the mere descrij)tions of the different species in their various most obvious stages some of the curious facts concerning their periodicity, their habits of life, and their relations to the world around them, I may spread before the eyes of the young some of the attractions which lie at the open door of Nature and induce some to Avander into the by-ways for more eager personal search, I shall have gained my end. Those wishing still further accounts of the different species here described, and particularly descriptions and figures of the q^^ and earlier stages of the caterpillar of PREFACE. V any one of them, are referred to my " Butterflies of the Eastern United States and Canada/' and to Edwards's " Butterflies of North America," in one or the other of which ample accounts will often be found. Species which are found in the region embraced in this work, but not regarded as sufficiently common therein to merit a place in it, are mentioned by name in their appropriate places in smaller type; they number just about as many as those of which descriptions are given, and full accounts of most of them will also be found in the works above mentioned. A short Introduction to the study of Butterflies in gen- eral, with special application to our own, is prefixed to the body of the w^ork, and is followed by a brief section show- ing where the principal literature upon the subject is to be found. An explanation of some of the terms used is appended, and a figure added on p. 60 explanatory of the nomenclature of the wing. Cambridge, April 13, 1893. CONTENTS. PAG 3 Preface , . iii lutroductiou 1 What are Butterflies? 1 The Structure of the Perfect Insect or Imago . . . . , 2 The Appearance of the Egg . 5 What the Caterpillar is like 6 The Character of the Chrysalis 7 A Few Words about the Eggs 8 The Lives aud Habits of Caterpillars 9 How the Chrysalis Hangs 12 The General History of Butterflies 14 Variation in the Butterfly 15 Some Remarkable Differences between the Sexes .... 20 The Senses of Butterflies 22 Mimicry and Protective Resemblance 23 The Classincation of Butterflies . < . . 25 Some Works on American Butterflies . 27 Keys to the various Groups 3;} Key to the Groups, based on the Perfect Butterfly . . ■ . . 34 Key to the Groups, based on the Caterpillar 45 Key to the Groups, based on the Chrysalis 53 Nomenclature of the Parts of the Wing 60 The Commoner Butterflies of the Northern United States and Canada 63 Family Brush-footed Butterflies 63 Subfamily Danaids 63 Genus Anosia 63 Anosia piexippus 63 Subfamily Nymphs 66 Tribe Crescent- Spots 66 Genus Euphydryas 66 vu Vlll CONTENTS. Euphydryas phaeton Genus Ciuclidia Cinclidia hanisii Genus Cbaridryas Charidryas uyctei Genus Phyciodes Phyciodes Iharos Tribe Fritillaries . Genus Brenthis . Brentliis belloua Brenthis myriua Genus Argynnis Argynuis atlantis Argynnis aphrodite Argynnis alcestis Argynnis cybele Genus Speyeria . . Speyeria idalia . Genus Euptoiela Euptoieta claudia Tribe Angle-Wings . Genus Junonia . . Junonia coenia . Genus Vanessa . . Vanessa cardui . Vanessa huntera Vanessa atalanta Gcnns Aglais . . Aglais milberti . Genus Euvanessa . Euvanessa antiopa Genus Eugonia . . Eugonia j-album Genus Polygonia . Polygonia progne Polygonia faunus Polygonia comma Polygonia interrogationis Tribe Sovereigns . . . Genus Basilarchia . . Basilarchia artheniis CONTENTS. IX PAGE Basilarchia astyanax 101 Basilarcbia arcbippus 102 Tribe Emperors 104 Genus Anaea 104 Anaea audria 104 Geuus Cblorippe 105 Chlorippe clyton 105 Cblorippe celtis 106 Subfamily Meadow Browus or Satyrs 107 Genus Cissia 107 Cissia eurytus 107 Genus Satyrodes 108 Satyrodes eurydice 108 Genus Enodia 109 Euodia portlaudia 109 Genus Cercyonis 110 Cercyonis alope 110 Cercyonis nepbele Ill Family Gossamer-winged Butterflies 113 Tribe Hair-Streaks 113 Genus Strymon 113 Strymou titus 113 Genus Incisalia 114 lucisalia uipbon 114 Incisalia irus 115 Incisalia augustus 116 Genus Uranotes 117 Uranotes melinus 117 Genus Mitura 118 Mitura damon 118 Genus Tbecla 119 Tbecla liparops 119 Tbecla calanus 120 Tbecla edwardsii 121 Tbecla acadica 122 Tribe Blues 123 Genus Everes 123 Everes comyntas 123 Genus Cyaniris 125 *Cyaniris pseudargiolus • . 125 : CONTENTS. PAGE Tribe Coppers 127 Geuus Chrysopliauus 127 Chrysopbanus tboe 127 Genus Epidemia 128 Epidemia epixantbe 128 Genus Heodes 128 Heodes bypopblaeas 128 Genus Feuiseca 130 Feniseca tarquinius 130 Family Typical Butterflies 132 Subfamily Pierids 132 Tribe Red-Horns 132 Geuus Callidryas 132 Callidryas eubule 132 Genus Zerene 133 Zerene caesooia . 133 Genus Eurymus 134 Eurymus pliilodice 134 Eurymus euiytheme 135 Genus Xantbidia 187 Xautbidia nicippe 137 Genus Eurema 138 Eurema lisa 138 Genus Natbalis 139 Natbalis iole .... o ... 139 Tribe Orauge-Tips 140 Genus Antbocbaris 140 Autbocbaris geuutia 140 Tribe Wbites 141 Geuus Pontia 141 Poutia protodice 141 Genus Pieris 143 Pieris oleracea 143 Pieris rapae 144 Subfamily Swallow-Tails 145 Genus Laertias 145 Laertias pbilenor 145 Geuus Ipbiclides 1-^6 Ipbiclides ajax 14(5 Genus Jasouiades 148 CONTENTS. XI PAGE Jasoniades glaucus , . . 148 Geuus Euphoeades . *. 150 Euphoeades troilus 150 Genus Heraclides 151 Heraclides crespboutes . , 151 Genus Papilio 153 Papilio polyxenes 153 Family Skippers 155 Tribe Larger Skippers 155 Genus Epargyreus 155 Epargyreus tityrus 155 Genus Tliorybes , 156 Thorybes pylades 156 Genus Tlianaos .... 158 Tbauaos lucilius 158 Thanaos persius 159 Tlianaos juvenalis 161 Thanaos brizo 163 Thanaos icelus 163 Genus Pholisora 164 Pholisora catullus 164 Genus Hespcria 165 Hesperia montivaga 165 Tribe Smaller Skippers 166 Geuus Ancyloxipha 166 Ancyloxipha uumitor 166 Genus Atrytone 167 Atrytone zabulon 167 Geuus Erynnis , 169 Erynuis sassacus 169 Genus Anthomaster , 170 Anlhomaster leonardus 170 Geuus Polites 170 Polites peckius 170 Genus Thymelicus 171 Thymelicus mystic 171 Genus Limochores 173 Limochores taumas 173 Explanation of some Terms 175 Appendix: Instructions for Collecting, etc 179 INTRODUCTION. 1. What are Butterflies ? One of the great groups or "orders" into which in- sects are divided is called Lepidoptera (derived from two Greek words meaning scaly-wings). This group differs from all other insects by having in the perfect stage a long, hollow, thread-like tongue, through which fluids may be sucked or rather pumped i\]), and which, when not in use, is coiled up like a watch-spring; and by having four rather broad wiugs covered with colored scales overlying one another in rows like shingles, slates, or tiles on a roof. These insects undergo striking changes in the course of their lives; for they are hatched from the egg as crawling worms having a globular head with biting jaws, and a body supported not only by the three pairs of short horny legs found in the young of most insects, but by several, gener- ally five, pairs of stumpy, fleshy legs behind them ; while the two joints of the body next following those with horny legs and some other joints near the hinder end never have any; from this they change into a pupa or chrysalis, a mummy-like object with the legs, wings, and other members swathed upon the breast and with no possible motion excci^t i i (1:0 wri'-o-lino- of the joints of the abdomen 2 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. or liinoer end of the body; from this temporary prison escapes in due time the winged creature of beauty which adds such a charm to the summer hind scape. Butterflies differ from otlier Lepidoptera by having chibbed or knobbed antennae in their perfect stage, and generally in their transformations, for most of them are hung up by silken cords attached to hooks on the tail, and sometimes also by a girth around the waist; they are rarely enclosed in cocoons, or, if so, the chrysalis is in most cases also supported within ; while moths (i.e., all other Lepi- doptera) usually construct silken cocoons, often of very close texture, or make cells in the ground, in either of which cases the chrysalis lies loosely within or attached by the tail only. Butterflies usually fly by day, moths usually by night. Butterflies usually rest with their wings erect; moths usually with wings flatly expanded or sloping down- ward on either side like a tent. 2. The Structure of the Perfect Insect or Imago. The body of a butterfly is distinctly separated into three divisions: the head, to which the antennae and the coiled tongue are attached; the chest, trunk, or thorax, which supports the four wings and three pairs of legs; and the abdomen. The head is the smallest part, but contains a wonderful lot of interesting organs. The sides are almost entirely oc- cupied by large faceted eyes; from the summit spring a pair of slender thread-like but apically clubbed antennae; while beneath, between the scaly and hairy upcurved three-jointed a23pendages, called- labial palpi, the spiral tongue (maxilla) is coiled. The most interesting of these organs is this tongue. It coils up just like a watch-spring, but may be extended at full length, as when plunged into the depths of a flower INTRODUCTION. 3 in search of honey. It appears as if single and solid, bnt is really composed of two exactly similar lateral halves grooved along their iniier surface, so that when placed together the opposing grooves form a fine tube; and to secure them in place, so that the tube shall not leak, the edges of the grooves are delicately notched so as to dove- tail into corresponding teeth on the edge of the opposing groove, by which they become closely interlocked. To enable the butterfly to pump into its body through this tube the honey-ed sweets of flowers, the throat at the base of the tube expands into a sac with muscles radiating toward the walls of the head and others encircling it; when the first set of muscles contracts, the interior space of the sac is enlarged ; when the encircling muscles con- tract, it is diminished. By the alternating action of these sets, a pumping process goes on aided by a little flap at the base of the tube which lets the fluids pass in but not out; so tha^, the squeezing of the full sac presses the fluids into the stomach; its enlargement creates a vacuum which causes the honey in the flower to ascend the tube past the valve into the sac. The antennaB may be divided into a base consisting of two joints stouter than those beyond; a thread-like stalk, slender and equal, consisting of many joints; and the club, which is composed of the swollen tij), sometimes arising almost insensibly from the stalk, sometimes abruptly; and in the Skippers having usually a recurved hook at the tip; the club is usually at least twice as thick as the middle of the stalk, generally naked beneath and often flattened. The eyes are usually very convex, but vary in different groups in this respect as well as in the amount of space they cover; they are ordinarily naked, but sometimes deli- cately hairy, and in the Skippers are overhung by a curv- ing tuft of bristles. The number of facets in the eye is very great, numbering thousands to each eye. 4 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. The thorax is divisible into three parts, called from in front backward prothorax or fore-trunk, niesothorax or mid-trunk, and metathorax or after-trunk. The protho- rax, however, is scarcely more than a flattened plate in front, and is easily overlooked; the division between the other two masses is readily seen behind when the scales are rubbed off, and the mesothorax is seen to be much the largest part of the thorax. The fore wings are attached to the mesothorax, the hind pair to the metathorax, and both are composed of two films supported by a system of branching hollow rods and the surface covered with scales. Of these rods there are ordinarily four or five to each wing, but when all are jiresent there are six. The two middle ones of the six are the only ones that branch, and are called respectively the subcostal (the upper one) and the median; generally they meet or nearly meet near the middle of the wing and enclose what is called the discoi- dal cell, and the subordinate rods or nervules appear to diverge from its margin. The scales are hollow flattened sacs, covered with longi- tudinal striae on the upper surface and generally toothed or serrate at the tip, with a short bulbed stem by which they are fixed in the wing membrane; upon which they lie like shingles on a roof, and by their pigment and the re- fraction of light by their surface stride give to the wing mII its color and delicate markings. Certain scales, however, are peculiar to the male sex and are curiously distributed in special patches or concealed positions so as scarcely to be visible even under the micro- scope until they have been uncovered. These are often frinp-ed with tassels at the end, each thread of the tassel a (»anal leading through the body of the scale to a gland at the base and so serving as scent-organs — the odors being sometimes appreciable to human senses and then in all INTRODUCTION. 5 known cases agreeable perfumes like flowers, sandal-wood, and mnsk. The legs are six in number, one pair to each division of the thorax; they are always very slender and stick-like. The front pair, however, as we pass from the lower to the higher butterflies becomes more and more atrophied and useless, first in the males, then in the females, until in the highest family they are utterly useless, often not easy to detect, and render this group practically four-legged in- stead of six-legged. Their principal divisions are the femur (plural, femora) or thigh, the tibia or shank— these two parts generally of about equal length and indivisible; and the tarsus, the last composed of five always unequal joints, armed beneath with short spines and at tip with claws, a pad, and often with paronychia or whitlows, a sort of membranous imita- tive accompaniment of the claws, perhaps best seen in the f ierids. The abdomen is formed of nine essentially simple seg- ments. The males may be distinguished from the females by the structure of the last segment, the females being pro- vided with a pair of minute flaps, one on each side, which protect and form part of the ovipositor, while the males have side clasps and an upper median hook for clasping the body of the female. The abdomen of the female when filled with eggs is very much larger and fuller than that of the male, and the sex can thus often be told at a glance. 3. The Appearaxce of the Egg. The eggs of butterflies are very various in sculj^ture, and though often very simple, are at other times exquisitely ornamented. Tliey are usually broad and flat at the base, and more or less rounded above. One class may be called, in general, barrel-shaped; but this would include minor 6 THE COMMONER BUTTEHFLIES. divisions, such as thimble-, sugar-loaf-, flask-, or acorn- shaped, or even fusiform; others are globular, or hemi- spherical, or tiarate. The surface may be more or less deeply pitted, or delicately reticulate, or broken up by ver- tical ribs connected by raised cross lines, or may be per- fectly smooth and uniform; but all have a collection of microscopic cells at the centre of the summit perforated by little pores, formiug the micropyle, through which the Qgg is fertilized; and these microscopic parts are often of exceeding beauty. 4. What the Oatekpillak is like. Caterpillars of butterflies do not differ from those of moths by any single characteristic. Each family of Lepi- doptera has certain peculiarities, and one has to become more or less familiar with them to determine whether or not a given kind falls in this or that family. They are worm-like creatures, but with a distinct horny head, separable from the body. The head is very different from that of the future but- terfly, having biting jaws, no compound eyes, but in their place a semicirclet of simple ocelli, and antennae hardly visible without a glass; these last, indeed, are very like the palpi, a series of two to four rapidly-dimiuishing rounded joints ending in a bristle. The body is composed of thirteen (apparently twelve) segments of which the first three, corresponding to the joints of the future thorax, have each a pair of horny five- jointed legs ending with a single claw; while the third to sixth and last abdominal segments bear each a pair of two- jointed fleshy "prolegs," armed at tip with a single or double series of minute booklets. Breathing pores or spiracles are found on the sides of the first thoracic and the first eight abdominal segments. Besides this, the whole INTRODUCTION. body is clothed, when adult, with short hairs or longer spines set on little pimples, or with fleshy filaments or tubercles of some sort, all arranged to a greater or less extent (excepting generally the short hairs) in longitudinal series, but these are often not precisely aligned on the tho- racic and abdominal segments. In their earliest stage, however, before their first moult and sometimes for a stage or two after it, the clothing of the caterpillar is very different from what it is at maturity, tlie appendages usually consisting at first of longer or shorter bristles, often tubular and conveying fluids to the enlarged summit, and arranged in longitudinal series differ- ent from those of the spines or filaments of the mature caterpillar. This earliest stage, therefore, needs special attention in the study of butterflies, although the creature is then exceedingly minute, and, therefore, not considered in the present work. Certain caterpillars (and this peculiarity usually runs through whole groups of allied forms), havfe certain glands opening externally which may secrete fluids or odors of various kinds; some of these are eversible like the Y-shaped appendages on the top of the segment behind the head of the Swallow-Tails and here termed "osmateria"; or the lateral polypiform extrusions called " caruncles " on both sides of one of the hinder segments of some of the Blues, both kinds of organs being thrown out only under provo- cation. 5. The Character of the Chrysalis, In this state the creature is a sort of mummy, all the appendages, both of head and thorax, folded over upon the breast, packed closely and tightly glued, extending usually to the fourth abdominal segment. In a few of the lower butterflies, the tongue extends still further and is then 8 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. more or less free. All of the appendages, however, ai'e not seen, for the paljii and hind legs are entirely concealed beneath the other members, and the organs that appear are ranged in the following order from the middle line ont- ward : tongue, fore legs, middle legs, antennae, fore wings, hind wings, of the latter of which very little is seen, they being mostly covered by the fore pair. The body is compact, but there are usually some marked prominences upon the surface, notably in certain places, such as the front of the head, which usually has a pair of projections, sometimes only one; the middle of the back of the mesothorax, often ridged or with a pointed projection; the extreme base of each of the wings, which are usually tuberculate or humped ; and the middle line of the back of the abdomen or the sides of the same, which are often ridged. In the highest family, where the caterpillars are spined, there are. often rows of conical tubercles on the chrysalis corresponding generally to the position of the larger spines of the caterpillar. This is all that need be said regarding the actual struc- ture of butterllies in their different stages to one beginning their study, for it is better to dwell rather upon their livco and protean changes, their histories and habits, if we wisli to gain a true and favorable insight into their character- istics. G. A Few Words about the Eggs. The eggs of butterflies are always laid in full view, ex- cepting that in a few instances they are partially concealed by being thrust into crevices. Ordinarily they are laid on one or the other surface of the leaves of the food-23lant of the caterpillar or on the stem of the same, and usually on or in contiguity to the tenderer growing leaves. As a INTRODUCTION. 9 general rule, the eggs are laid singly, in some instances on the extreme tip of a pointed leaf; but in not a few cases they are laid in clusters of from two or three to several hundreds. KSometimes these are rude bunches jailed loosely or in layers one upon another; sometimes they are laid in more or less regular single or double rows; sometimes in a single column of three or four or even as many as ten eggs, one atop another; or they may girdle a twig like a fairy ring. The duration of the Qgg state is commonly from one to two weeks, but it varies in different species in the summer-time from five or even less days to about a month ; there are, however, some butterflies which pass the winter in the Qgg state. In all such cases the eggs are laid u2)on the stem, never upon the leaf, and some spot is chosen, like the neighborhood of a leaf-scar, which affords a certain amount of protection during the winter. 7. The Lives akd Habits of Catekpillars. When eggs of butterflies are laid in clusters, the cater- pillars are almost invariably social to a greater or less de- gree, at least in early life, sometimes to maturity ; if they are laid singly and it is only by accident that several are laid near together, the caterpillars are solitary. In the majority of cases where the Qgg is laid singly, the first act of the escaping caterpillar is to devour it entirely or in greater part. Solitary caterpillars may live exposed on the upper or the under sides of leaves, or they may retire to the stem of the food-plant for greater security, or they may construct, each for itself, some kind of concealment, or live within fruits. When fully exposed, they usually remain quite motionless, stretched at full length when not feeding, and may select for their resting-place peculiar spots. The most curious is one adopted by some Brush-footed Butterflies (and 10 THE COMMONER UUTrERFLlES. the Qgg is then commonly laid at or near the extreme tip of the leaf) which devour the apical portion of the leaf, leav- ing the midrib untouched, and percli themselves upon this midrib after having attached to it by a few threads a small packet of bits of leaf and frass which is moved by every breath of wind, — probaljly to distract the attention of its enemies from itself. Others construct shelters more or less complicated. Some merely spin transverse threads across the floor of a leaf, causing its sides to curl, and then recline, half hidden, in the shallow trough; others make it so complete that the edges meet and the leaf forms a cylinder; still others fasten the opposite edges by silk and by biting weaken the resistant ribs and also the main rib so that the leaf droops; others bite channels into the leaf at two distant points and turn the flap thus formed over upon the leaf, securing it in place by silken strands; while for winter use the partly grown caterpillar of the later brood of Basilarchia and some allied genera not only coils a leaf into a cylinder but lines it within and without with silk, leaves a ledge to crawl out upon, and secures the leaf to the twig by strong silken fastenings. In nearly all these cases the caterpillar seems to rest upon the upper surface of a leaf and curl the sides upward, very rarely the reverse. But there are others which fasten several leaves together, generally very slightly, to form a leafy bower, or in the case of grasses a tubular burrow; and in a few instances, as in Vanessa himtera, bits of the inflorescence of the plant are caught in the slight meshes of the net to make a more perfect concealment. Among our Larger Skippers many which live half their life in a nest formed of a single leaf finish it in a bower made of many. Social caterpillars often construct nests in company, which then often embrace in an irregular web the whole or nearly the whole of a branch of the food-plant. Usually INTRODUCTION. 11 the wbb is thin and hardly conceals the surface, but some- times it is almost like parchment, as in the J^Iexican Euclieira social is. Winter is sometimes passed in one of these webs, and when constructed, as it sometimes is, on an annual, the shrinkage after the death of the stalk makes a compact mass of leaves, frass, web, and caterpillars, from which it would seem as if no caterpillar could escape in the spring. When social caterpillars construct no shelter, they usually feed side by side in rows, and move from place to place in files. A very large number of our caterpillars live through the winter, and this is often the only means by which a species survives the inclement season; most of them hiber- nate when about half grown; others, strange to say, jusc from the egg, without having eaten anything but the shell from which they came; still others hibernate full grown and full fed, changing to chrysalis just when vegetation starts in the spring. Some of these caterpillars, especially those partly or fully grown, construct nests for hiberna- tion; others use the same nest which has served their larval life, strengthening it against the greater needs of winter; others seek crannies of any kind. In some cases where the caterpillars of a second brood hibernate when half-grown, the caterpillars of the first brood at the hibernating age, but in midsummer, will fall into letharg}^ from Avhich some will arouse after say a fort- night's quiescence, while others AviH prolong their pre- mature into actual hibernation, and in the following spring caterpillars of the same stage but of two successive broods will mingle together. It is apparent, then, that there is considerable variety in the duration of life of caterpillars. Instances are on record where the time from birth to chrysalis was only about ten days; ordinarily it is at least a month; with those that hibernate it may be in some cases nearly a year; 12 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. while there are several instances known where caterpillars have lived over two winters and might therefore take from eighteen to twenty or more months for their larval ex- istence alone. 8. How THE Chrysalis Hangs. In making its preparation for its final moult, when the change to chrysalis is to take place, the caterpillar proceeds in exactly the same manner as in preceding moults, except that it spins more silk and, in addition to the carpet on which it stands, adds other strands of a special nature, according to the method in which the chrysalis is to swing. The chrysalis is provided with special hooks at its posterior end with which to engage the silken pad jDrepared for it, excepting in the case of a few which change on the surface of the ground. One mode of suspension is to hang j^endent by the tail alone from a pad of silk. Generally free to swing with every jar or breeze, the more so as the pad is usually more or less loosely woven, there are some in which the hooks are distributed over a more or less elongated area, and, the caterpillars having constructed a more compact pad, the attachments are firmer and more extended, so that tlie chrysalis may be more or less rigid and even hang in a position by no means vertical but inclined strongly toward the horizontal. The movements of chrysalids of the pendent type are not confined to the looseness of attachment of the hooks or the nature of the web to which they cling, but in all there is more or less capability of motion by the sliding of the abdominal joints ..pon one another, and the chrysalis may thus effect voluntary motion, sometimes, when dis- turbed, of an extraordinarily active kind. Some chrysalids, moreover^ make slow periodic diurnal movements, helio- INTRODUCTION. 13 tropic or phaotropic, i.e. toward or away from the sun or light, sometimes lateral, sometimes forward and backward. Other chrysalids are attached not only by the tail but also by a girth, whether tight or loose, slung around the middle of the body in the dorsal depression or saddle which always exists between the thoracic and abdominal regions. If the girth be tight, the ventral surface of the chr3'salis, which touches the surface of rest, is nearly or quite straight ; if loose, it is often bent to a greater or a less degree 023po- site the girth, or describes a curve with the same point as the middle of the arc. A modification of this mode of suspension is seen in some Skippers, which make cocoons in which both the median girth and sometimes to a less extent the tail attachments form Y-shaped strands, which are attached at their ex- tremities to the walls of the cocoon ; into the centre of one set the hooks of tlie tail are plunged, while the middle of the body is slung between the longer arms of the other and larger set of strands. There is but one family of butterflies in which all the members construct cocoons — the Skippers. Their cocoons are usually of a rather fragile nature and consist (usually) of leaves, blades of grass, or other vegetable material, gen- erally living, shaped into a more or less oval or cylindrical cell by silken attachments ; sometimes the interior is more or less perfectly lined with a thin membrane of silk; within this, as just stated, the chrysalis hangs by means of Y- shaped shrouds, the form of the smaller one sometimes difficult to determine from the mingling of its threads with those forming the extremity of the cocoon. Chrvsalids which o:ive birth to butterflies the same sea- son vary in their duration from about three days to a month, but usually from ten days to a fortnight. But a consider- able number pass the winter in this shape, and may then endure from five to eleven months, and sometimes this lat- 14 THE COMMONER BUTTEUFLIES. ter variation may occur in a single species having several broods, in which an increasing proportion of each succes- sive brood of chrysalids of one season pass over the ensuing winter. Instances are on record in wliich chrysalids, nor- mally hibernating, have been known to pass over a second winter and then give birth to the butterfly. 9. The Geneeal Histoey of Butteeflies. Beginning life as an Qgg which usually hatches within a few days after being laid, the young caterpillar finds its sole duty to be to eat and escape being eaten. It feeds voraciously, and outgrows its skin so often that it is obliged to moult four or five times before it is full grown. On each of these occasions it stops feeding for a while, spins a carpet of silk, and fastens its claws therein; when the time for change comes, the old skin splits along the middle of the back of the thoracic segments by violent muscular effort, the old head-case (from which the new head was first withdrawn) is shaken off and the creature crawls out of its old skin, which in many instances it there- upon devours. In the last change, to chrysalis, the head is not removed from the old skin, but itself splits in the middle and down one or both sides of the frontal triangle, and the chrysalis emerges. After hanging awhile, the chrysalis skin splits at much the same points and the but- terfly emerges to begin the cycle again with the laying of eggs. The cycle of changes through which a butterfly moves is in temperate climates commonly passed once each year, — or rather once each season, for it is winter that usually in- terferes with the activities by robbing the creature of its means of sustenance and paralyzing its action. Inasmuch as the pupal stage is in the higher insects the period of longest inactivity, one would presume beforehand that INTRODUCTION. 15 this period would coincide with winter ; and so it does in a large number of cases. Yet among butterflies the ex- ceptions to such a rule are not only exceedingly common, but, as miglit be expected were there any departure, they are very varied and winter is j^assed, by one species or an- other, in every conceivable stage of existence, including every part of caterpillar life. Indeed, cases are not un- known, especially in high latitudes and altitudes, where more than one season is required to bring a butterfly to maturity. On the other hand, a large number of our butterflies, and this is especially true southward, complete the cycle of their changes twice or oftener in a season, and there are not a few having an extended latitudinal range which vary in this respect, having one or more broods in the northern part of their range, and an added brood or more in the southern. The end of the season generally surprising multiple-brooded butterflies in all stages of existence, an opportunity has easily arisen for every possible form of hibernation or lethargic life, which accounts for the variation discoverable in the lives of our butterflies, each form settling at last upon that series of changes which is best fitted for it. 10. Variation in the Butterfly. Like most creatures, butterflies, when they are found over a wide territory, show great difference between indi- viduals found in the extremes of the range, so that it is sometimes difficult to tell, at least until collections are made over the intervening country, whether specimens from distant places should be regarded as distinct species or as geographical varieties. The most skilled may make mistakes for lack of proper material. But quite apart from this, butterflies appear to be ex- ceptionally sensitive to the environment and to offer an Tinusual amount of variation of a different sort ; for di- 16 THE COMMONElt BUTTERFLIES. morphism or ])olymorpliism of various kinds, that is, the existence of a given species under recognizably distinct forms (two or more, even sometimes to five or six) is by no means nncommon. This distinction is often sexual; indeed there are relative- ly fcAV species in which the ontward aspect of the two sexes does not differ, in some cases to a remarkable degree. It is universal in the numerous species of Eurymus, for example, where in general the inner margin of the dark outer bor- dering of the wings is sharp and ])reci8e in the male, con- fused and irregular in the female. In very many cases, however, it is accompanied by a simple dimorphism, some- times affecting one sex only (and then usually the female), as in many species of Eurymus, where one form of female has the bright ground color of the male, the other a pallid ground color ; at other times affecting both sexes, as in some species of Polygonia : in P. interrogatlonis, for ex- ample, there are four sets of individuals differing in the general coloring of both surfaces of the wings and even in the form of the wings — differences all of which may occur in the progeny of a single individual and fed on the same plant. But these differences are very often correlated with, generally confined to, differences of brood. One of the most striking and at the same time one of the simplest examples is in the double-brooded European species Arasclinia pro?'^a, where the first brood is composed of individuals of one type with highly variegated markings (levana), the second of a very distinct type with more sharjdy-contrasted coloring (prorsa), which, until they were bred from each other, were universally, and reason- ably, regarded as distinct species. This is called seasonal dimorphism. Numerous striking examples occur in this country, not a few of which are excellently shown in Edwards's Butter- INTROD UCTION. 17 flies of Xortli America, such as many species of Polygonia (in F. iiiterrogationis tliey are largely seasonal, the latest brood being all of one type), Phyciodes tharos^the species of Pieris, and especially Jplildides ajax. The latter instance is the more remarkable, because the three forms (marcel- lus, telamonides, and ajax), though sequent in the order named, do not strictly represent distinct broods, since the earlier emerging individuals of the first brood are marcel- lus, the later-appearing individuals of the scDue brood are telamonides, while the subsequent broods, of which there arc several, are ajax. Distinct climatal differences, whether temperature or moisture (or both), are unquestionably the prime cause of seasonal dimorphism, the former in temperate, the latter in tropical, regions. The first has been practically proved by experiment, the latter by the correspondence of the ^^he- nomena to that of temperate climates and their synchro- nism with the dry and w^et seasons. Many cases of dimorphism are compound. Instances of this have already been given; indeed, most cases of dimor- phism involve some distinct element, such as season or lati- tude, or temperature in some form. Thus, Jasoniades glaucuSy which exhibits dimorphism in the female, does so only in the south, for the dark form of the female (in which the conspicuous normal stripes of the male are ob- scured) occurs but rarely north of Pennsylvania, although there is a distinct tendency in botli sexes to a broadening of the darker markings and the partial suppression of the yellow in high northern latitudes or their equivalent, as among the White Mountains of New Hampshire. A sim- ilar instance occurs in Everes comyntas with the boundary limits of the dark female at about the same place. Nearly all the above instances of dimorphism where it is not of the simplest kind (whether seasonal or not) may be termed polymorphic, since more than two types of individ- 18 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. uals appear in a single species; especially is this the case where a sort of double dimorphism occurs, like that of Iphidides ajax or oi PoUjgoiiia inter royationis mentioned above. Instances have also been cited where the geo- graphical element entered; but polymorphism is most con- spicuous and comj^lioated whei-e all the above elements are combined, — where dimorphism between the sexes, dimor- phism also between the members of one sex confined to distinct portions of the range of the species, and seasonal dimorphism more or less limited in its geographical range and in its correlation with the broods (as the species may be multiple-brooded or not), may be further complicated by geographical variations independent of and running through all the others. Two cases may be cited as remark- able instances of complicated polymorphism if the facts shall prove well grounded. In the extreme north, Cijaniris i^seudaryioliis is single- brooded and appears in two forms, an earlier with heavier markings (lucia) and a later (violacea) ; tlie males of both are blue above; the females paler blue with broad dark margins to the fore wings. In New England it is double- brooded, the sexes differing as before; the first brood is trimorphic and serial, the earliest individuals having heavy markings (lucia), the next intermediate markings (vio- lacea), the last light markings (neglecta), while the second brood is comj^osed entirely of neglecta; in the northern part of the belt in which the first brood is trimorphic, the form neglecta is comparatively rare, and lucia the most abundant, while the reverse is the case in the southern part of the same belt (and lucia itself is so variable that one type of it has been separated as marginata). Farther south lucia disap23ears altogether and the first brood is di- morphic,— violacea and neglecta in theorder of their appear- ance; but now a new element is introduced, for the males INTRO D UCTION. 1 9 of violticea, become diiiiorphicj one form resembling the males of the same found farther north, the other being uniformly dark above (violacea-nigra). In the southern part of its range, the latest individuals (neglecta) of the first brood are usually much larger than the members of the second brood, all of which are otherwise of the same type. This butterfly flies not only from Hudson Bay to Georgia, but also from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and in California we have a new form (piasus), hardly distinguish- able from neglecta, which appears to be double-brooded in the south but to show no difference between the broods. Farther north, however, near tlie British boundary, the conditions of New England are at least in part repeated, wliile in Arizona an ashen variety (cinerea) occurs. The different forms assumed by Eurymus eurytlteme have caused their description as distinct species on four or five occasions. It, too, has an immense range. In Texas the cycle begins in November (the summer and not the winter interfering with its activities) with a yellow type (ariadne) succeeded by a yellow-orange tyi:>e (keewaydin) and finally by an orange type (amphidusa), each a distinct brood, the last-named indeed double-brooded; with the in- crease of temperature, the size and the dej^th and brilliancy of color increase; the form keewaydin has a sexually di- morphic female, one resembling the male in ground color, the other pallid (keewaydin-pallida), and the form amphi- dusa is similarly favored (amj^hidusa-alba). In the north- ern part of the range of the species, the earliest (May) form, a yellow one, differs so much from the earliest (November) type of the south as to be given a distinct name (eriphyle), and when keewaydin and amphidusa have had their turn, it again appears in the latter part of the season, and though the autumn form has not received a distinct name, it can be distinguished from the spring form, at least in 20 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. the male sex, the spring individuals being uniform chrome yellow above, while the October males are of a whitish yel- low and the hind wings are dusted with gray. 11. Some Remarkable Differences between the Sexes. Many male butterflies may be readily distinguished by characteristic tufts, rows, or wisps of hairs or patches of special scales or membranous folds generally rendered in some way conspicuous, and which do not occur in the female. Of the first we have a good example in our species of Argynnis, which show a row of long semi-recum- bent hairs on the upper surface of the hind wings between the costal and subcostal nervures; of the second in the mealy-looking margins of the upper surface of the wings of Callidryas, tlie discal patch on the fore wings of many Hair-streaks, the apparently blackened and thickened veins of the fore wings of Argynnis, or the discal streak accom- panied by large tilted scales so common in the Smaller Skippers; of the last in the blackened pocket of the hind wings of Anosia, the plaited fold of the hind wings of Laertias, or the deftly inconspicuous costal fold of the Larger Skippers. These very patches or folds usually conceal scales differ- ing to a greater or less extent from the surrounding scales and peculiar to the males, called scent-scales or androconia, i.e., male-scales. They do not, however, always occur in these patches (where they are usually concealed from vicAV to some degree), but may be simply scattered among the other scales and then, being almost invariably much smaller, almost completely concealed from view. While the ordinary scales of butterflies, common to both sexes, show very little variety in their structure, being striate, more or less fan-shaped or shingle-shaped lamina? INTRODUCTION. 21 with finely-toothed apical margin, the androconia show an extraordinary variety of structure, but are rarely toothed at the tip. They may be shaped like an Indian club, a shepherd's crook, a long needle ending with a whip-lash, a twisted ribbon, a battledore, an elongated fan, a row of beads, a spatula, a tapering ribbon with fringed tip, or may assume many other forms which could only be described at length ; they are generally very slender and minute. Where they are fringed, it is highly probable that the separate threads of the frino-e are so manv canals conductinof to glands at the base of the scale, for in many instances odors plainly perceptible have been traced to this source. These odors are in all cases of an ao:reeable nature and have generally been compared either to the fragrance of certain flowers or to the musky odors of quadrupeds; the last is a very common scent among insects and is known in such difi:erent creatures as the imago of the beetles Prionus and Osmoderma, the imago of the butterfly Argynnis, and the half -grown caterpillar of the moth Arctia parthenos. These androconia are very capricious in their occurrence both as to exact location and as to their presence or absence in allied forms. They appear to be almost invariably pres- ent in all the species of any given genus or else absent from all, but allied genera in a single tribe often vary in this particular. They occur in all families and in most, per- haps all, tribes of butterflies. They are usually found upon the ujoper surface of the fore wings, very rarely, if ever, upon the under surface of any; they may be scattered indiscriininately over the wing, be collected into definite but vague areas traversing the in- terspaces, assemble along the principal nervures or at the extremity of the discal cell, or in a narrow discal streak or costal fold, or be confined to a little pocket on the broad face of the hind wings, or lie in a closed j^lait next the anal margin, or in various other positions. 22 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. 12. The Sekses of Butterflies. The power and range of vision in butterflies (and in insects in general) have without doubt been popularly overestimated. Both direct experiments and study of the structure of the compound eye lead to the same conclusion: that while insects have a quick perception of moving objects or of objects among which they are moving, they have no power of distinguishing precise form or delicate distinc- tions of color or patterns, their visual perception being confused or vague. The delicacy of the sense of smell in insects, and espe- cially in Lejudoptera, makes full amend for defective vision. The quick advent of males among many tribes to secluded and concealed females, the possession of many odoriferous organs, the evidence that many others exist where the odors are imperceptible to human sense, all point to a delicate and keen perceptive power in this direction. It is alto- gether probable — and no other exjolanation has so great probability — that it is by the exercise of this sense that the j)arent butterfly discovers the proper food-plant for the deposition of her eggs. The organs for this sense are probably resident in the antennae. The fondness of butterflies for the honeyed sweets of flowers at once suggests a high development of the sense of taste; for that it is not jmrely a matter of hunger or the need of nourishment maybe seen in the cases so often noted where butterflies fill their bodies until they can scarcely fly, which is far beyond any need of nourishment; or in the groups which continue for hours around a moist spot in a road imbibing the innutritive fluids. The organs for this sense are probably resident in the tongue-2:)apilla?. There seem to be no reasons for believing that any high degree of power in hearing is to be found among butter- INTRODUCTION. 23 flies, as there are no organs known to serve as receptive elements, and the sounds made by butterflies arc apparently due simply to the rustling of the wings. All motions that look as if j)ossibly meant to convey sound (where none can be detected by the human ear), such as the quivering of the wings in sexual approximation, may be solely to waft emitted odors the more effectivel3\ Little can be said or ]oresumed regarding touch of animals whose external parts are all crustaceous; but it is plain that warmth and cold, which deal with the same nervous elements, have decided influences in every stage beyond the Qgg. The ordinary inactivity of caterpillars in the nio-ht can not be laid to the absence of lifrht, for their behavior in darkened apartments is much the same as out of doors; the movements of chrysalids tell the same story; and we know that a measurable amount of movement of the antennae occurs with changing temperature in hiber- nating, practically dormant, butterflies. 13. Mimicry axd Protective Resemblance. Most butterflies when at complete rest close their hind wings back to back and sink the fore wings as far as pos- sible into concealment behind them. The area of these wings then exposed to view is in a very large proportion of butterflies so colored and mottled or marbled as to render the butterfly immensely less conspicuous in its resting- place than if settled with wings expanded or the front pair not mostly concealed; in very many cases so little con- spicuous as to be difficult to detect. Earely are any other parts similarly colored. That this resemblance is protective there can be no doubt, especially in view of its common occurrence. There are, however, innumerable instances of special and striking provisions in this direction, of which one of the 24 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. most generally known is that of the oriental genus Kallima, the species of which are highly colored on the upper sur- face and conspicuous objects when in flight, but which are so colored and marked upon the under side that when alighted upon a twig, as they do with the fore wings thrown well forward and all wings closed, the pattern and color of the under surface are such as to make a perfect resem- blance to a leaf whose midrib, a colored stripe crossing both wings and terminating at the apex of the fore pair, takes its rise from a tail-like extension of the hind wings which just reaches the twig from which the mock leaf thus springs, the tail of the wing corresponding to the pedicel of the leaf ! These phenomena, however, reach their culmination in the examples of mimicry of one butterfly by another, of which there are numerous examples of an extraordinary kind such as perhaps no other group of animals can pro- duce. A large proportion of the objects of mimicry belong to the subfamily Euploeinae, known to be a group protected to a large extent against foes by the possession of nauseous qualities, and it is therefore presumed that all other objects of mimicry have from some cause or other some immunity from early death above their fellows. Such a supposition is the only one, and a sufficient one, to account for the extraordinary resemblance of otherwise unj^rotected butter- flies, especially in the female sex (for not always do the males become mimickers), to such nauseous or protected butterflies, a resemblance not only striking for its exceed- ingly impressive quality, but for the departure required from the normal type of coloring or j)attern of the grou]:*, or even from that of the other sex alone; for its extension to structural features, such as length of antennae and form of wing, and to mode of flight ; and also for the fact that the mimicker seems to fly only in the territory occupied by the mimicked, while in neighboring territory occupied by INTRODUCTION. 25 another of the protected group another mimicker more nearly resembling it will represent it. We have one remarkable example of this mimicry in our own country in the resemblance of Basilarchia arcliippus to Anosia plexippus. 14. The Classification^ of Butterflies. The number of family groups into which butterflies should be primarily divided has been variously given by naturalists as from two to sixteen. Writers who have in- sisted on any large number have, hoAvever, relied mainly upon single and relatively unimportant characters, mostly drawn from the neuration of the wings of the imago, and almost ignoring the earlier stages of the insects. Those who have paid serious attention to the latter and have re- garded all parts of the structure have generally considered the number as from four to six. In the present work they are regarded as but four in number, called Skippers (Hes- peridae). Typical Butterflies (Papilionid^e), Gossamer- winged Butterflies (Lycaenidae), and Brush-footed Butter- flies (Nymphalidae). If we examine these d liferent groups with regard to their interrelationship it is plain that the Skippers show by far the greatest and most numerous points of resem- blance to the moths; and if we look to the sum of the characters of each as regards their departure from the char- acteristics of the lower Lepidoptera, we shall see that they unquestionably fall into the order in which they are here placed. In addition to this we shall find two very distinct parallel series in structure and transformations which fol- low precisely the same course, each independent of the other, each pointing out the lines along which develop- ment has proceeded and thus indicating a natural classifi- cation. 26 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. One of these concerns the mode of transformation. In the moths, with very few exceptions, a cocoon or cell is formed within which the transformations take place. The Skippers form a cocoon, bnt lighter than is common among the moths, and in addition (j^erhaps not universally, but very generally) the chrysalids are loosely swung up within the cocoon by the Y-shajied shrouds mentioned above. The Typical Butterflies retain the shrouds though they droj") the cocoon, but, as the result, the hinder shrouds become a mere pad of silk, the median shrouds a loose loop. The only change in the Gossamer-winged Butterflies is the tight- ening of the median loop and the flattening of the ventral surface of the chrysalis to correspond. Lastly in the Brush- footed Butterflies the median loojo is dropped and the chry- salis hangs by the tail-fastenings alone, while the straight ventral surface is generally retained — a significant atavistic indication of the girt stage. The other regards the structure of the forelegs of the imago. In the Skippers these agree perfectly with the other legs (as in the moths), except in the presence of a median spine on the tibiae. The same is true of the Typical Butter- flies excepting that the median spine is wanting in one of the two subfamilies (Pierids) regarded as the further re- moved from the Skij)pers. In the Gossamer-winged But- terflies atrophy has begun, but is insignificant excepting in the male sex. While in the Brush-footed Butterflies atrophy in both sexes has extended to complete disuse in both, though usually more excessive in the male than the female; one subfamily, nearest to the Gossamer-winged Butterflies, partakes in this particular of the characters of the latter, namely, the Snout Butterflies or Long Beaks (Libytheinae). SOME WORKS ON AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES. 27 SOME WORKS ON AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES. The first important work on American Butterflies was published in England nearly a century ago by Sir Edward Smith, and contained the observations and colored illus- trations of John Abbot, an Englishman some time resident in Georgia. The work* was issued in two folio volumes, but only a part of the first volume treated of butterflies, the remainder relating to moths. Drawings of caterpillar, chrysalis, and butterfly were given in every case, and as a rule they were very well executed. A single page of text accompanied each plate, and 24 plates of butterflies are given, rejoresenting as many species. Many unpublished drawings of Abbot are still preserved, as he supported him- self by their sale and was a most industrious entomological artist. The first substantial addition to our knowledge, so far as the early stages are concerned, was derived 2:>rinci2oally from the same source — Abbot's drawings. This was a smaller octavo volume f prepared by Dr. Boisduval of Paris in collaboration with Major LeConte of New York, published in parts but never completed. The twenty-six parts contained T8 plates, illustrating about 93 species, while the text only covered 85 sj)ecies, not all of which * The Natural History of the rarer Lej^idopterous Insects of Georgia. 2 vols. fol. London, 1T9T. 104 pi. f Histoire generale et iconographie des Lepidopteres et des che- nilles de TAmerique septentrionale. 8vo. Paris, 1829-42. 228 pp., 78 pi. 28 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. were figured. The illustrations, in color, are inferior to those of the preceding work. Both the above works can now be obtained only by chance through the second-hand dealers of Europe, and are high-j^riced. Two other richly illustrated and costly works upon our native butterflies have been published in our own country. The first is Edwards's Butterflies,* a serial work, irregularly issued and of which the third volume is now nearly com- pleted. The plan of this work is to describe and figure rare or interesting species or those of which the life-history has been discovered, the species following no regular order. Usually only a single species is given on a plate, but some- times two or more of one genus appear, or a species may cover two or three plates. The wealth, delicacy, and ac- curacy of the drawings in certain species has never been sur- passed or even nearly equalled in any work ever published in any country; nowhere else have the eggs, caterpillars, and chrysalids of single species or the variations of the perfect butterfly been illustrated with such copiousness; while the text is often full of the most interesting accounts of the habits and life of the insects. Each volume contains 50 plates or more, and on the 162 which have appeared up to this writing about as many different butterflies have been depicted; of 57 of the species more or less abundant details of the early stages are given and often a surprising number of illustrations. Through this work the early lives of some of our butterflies are better known than those of any other country, and this often applies to species from far-distant and inaccessible parts of the country like the Rocky Mountains. Nearly all the illustrations are in color. The other work is of a more limited scope, but has the advantage of completeness as far as it goes, and of a systematic arrangement whereby our knowledge becomes *Tlie Butterflies of North America. 3 vols. 4to. Boston, 1868-93. SOME WORKS ON AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES. 29 clearer.* It covers only the butterflies of nearly the same region as the present volume, but describes them all^ and as far as possible in every stage of life with exceptionally full accounts of their distribution and life-histories, and full definitions of tlie characters of all the higher groups as well as of the species, drawn from every stage of life, 164 species are described, and some account of the early stages is given of all but 35 of them, of many far fuller de- tails than ever before. Two other books published a generation or more ago on the insects of limited regions may be mentioned, because they gave particular attention to our butterflies. The first f was by Emmons, describing such species as he knew from New York and giving figures of them. This work con- tained a bare description of the perfect butterflies (31 species), and colored illustrations (occupying the part or whole of 6 plates) poorly engraved and colored ; it contained nothing new and was very poorly executed. It is not now of the least value. Quite otherwise is the less pretentious but classic work of Harris,^; which, though purporting to treat only of injurious insects and mainly those of Massachusetts, contained in the last edition (to a far less extent in the earlier editions of 1841 and 1852) descriptions and figures of a number of New England butterflies as defoliators of trees, etc., in- cluding descriptions of some new forms ; 54 species are described, and, when known, — which was not then the case with many, — brief descriptions are given of the earlier *The Butterflies of tlie Eastern United States and Canada. By S. H. Scudder. 3 vols. imp. 8vo. Boston, 1889. 44 + 1958 pp., 96 pL, of which 41 are colored. f The Agriculture of New York, Vol. V. 4to. Albany, 1854. 8 -f 272 pp., 50 pi. \ A Treatise on some of the Insects injurious to Vegetation. 3d ed. Svo. Boston, 1862. 640 pp., 278 figures, 8 col. pi. 30 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. stages tiud full accounts of the habits, perhaps half of the text being given up to these latter features. The figures, 54 of them, are, with 9 exceptions, woodcuts and remark- able examples of the woodcutter's art, all being engraved by Henry Marsh. Two other books of my own may be mentioned here, since they deal largely with the life-histories of our butter- flies. The first * is based upon a course of lectures upon butterflies in general, and has something in particular to say about 74 of our butterflies, with figures illustrative of many of them. The other f treats in the fullest possible manner of the structure, life-history, distribution, and habits of a single butterfly, Anosia plexippus, at every point draw- ing comparisons witli others, so that it serves in a measure as a popular introduction to all. Finally, attention may be directed to three or four works whicli deal almost exclusively with thebutterfly stage and give descriptions either of all our known species or of all found in a definite portion of our country. The first I pre- tends to be nothing but a compilation of published de- scriptions (many of them translations from the French) arranged in a systematic order, pieceded by a very meagre key to the genera. It contains 240 species, but is now quite out of date. The second § is an original systematic description of the * Butterflies : their Structure, Changes and Life-histories, with spe- cial reference to American forms. 12mo. New York, 1881. 10 -f- 323 pp., 201 figs. fThe Life of a Butterfly. 16mo. New York, 1893. 186 pp., 4 plates. :j: Synopsis of the described Lepidoptera of North America, Part L Diurnal and Crepuscular Lepidoptera. Compiled by J. G. Morris. 8vo. Washington, 1862. 27 + 368 pp. § The Butterflies of the Eastern United States, for the use of classes in zoology and private students. By G. H. French. 12mo. Phila- delphia, 1886. 402 pp., 93 figs. SOME WORKS ON AMEHICAN BUTTERFLIES. 31 butterflies of the same region as the present work, but in- cluding also the Southern States east of the Mississippi. 201 species are included in the work, w^hich is preceded by an analytical key for the determination of the species, but which is largely based on color; the genera are now^here characterized except in this key, and there too vaguely or scantily to be of much assistance. The early stages are treatel of only under the species, the descriptions being compiled and condensed from preceding writers. The third * is called a manual and covers the whole North American field north of Mexico; but it is difficult to understand how it can Avell be used as such, as it con- sists of bare descriptions of the species, with scarcely the slightest aid to discovering the genera; consequently one may have to wade through the whole to find the one sought. Its redeeming features are the cuts, which, though very rude, are generally confined to some characteristic part, a single wing or even a part of a wing. 625 species are given, and each of the woodcuts contains several figures. The plates are exceedingly poor. No attention whatever is paid to the early stages. The work reflects no credit upon the author beyond his industry. Nor does an earlier work, by the same,t on New England butterflies, in which an attempt is made to characterize the genera and higher groups and some little attention is given to the caterpillars and chrysalids; for the work is so filled with errors as to be quite untrustworthy, and the figures so very poor as to be available only when the butterfly has little resemblance to any other; when most needed they are of least use. The histories of our butterflies, however, are by no *A Manual of North American Butterflies. By C. J, Maynard. 8vo. Boston, 1891. 4 + 226 pp., 60 figs., 10 pi. fThe Butterflies of New England. 4to. Boston, 1886. 4 + 68 pp., 8 pi. col. 32 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. means related only in the works we have mentioned. Others are spread broadcast in all manner of places and only the diligent student can find them. The greater por- tion of these scattered accounts will be found in the mis- cellaneous writings of Henry Edwards, W. H. Edwards, Fitch, Fletcher, Gosse, Lintner, Riley, Saunders, and Scudder; and are particularly to be looked for in the pages of the different entomological publications of our country, past and present, and especially in the " Canadian Ento- mologist," " Psyche," and " Papilio." KEYS TO THE VARIOUS GROUPS. 33 KEYS TO THE VARIOUS GROUPS. In" using the following keys the student has only to keep in mind three points : 1. That there are always two contrasting alternates to choose from (occasionally three). 2. That these alternates are marked by similar initial letters, A, B, c, d, etc., and by similar indentation on the page, and distinguished by superior numerals. A", B^, c^, etc. 3. That the contrasting alternate is the nearest line in the same set which begins with the same indentation and the same initial letter, though with a different numeral. For example, in the first table, the A' on p. 34 has its alternate A", which is a long way off (on p. 42), but is never- theless the next line beginning with an A, and it has the same indentation, while D' on p. 34 is immediately followed by D'. When alternates relate, one or the other or both of them, to tribes or higher groups, an initial capital is prefixed ; when both refer to genera, or pairs of genera, a small letter is prefixed. The final terms are the numbered genera. For the explanation of the numbered veins in the first table, see the figure on p. 60. 34 THE COMMONER BUTTEMFLIEa. Key to the Groups, Based on the Perfect Butterfly. A'. Anteuiije near together at base, less tlian half as far apart as the height of the eye, the end clubbed but not hooked ; eyes with no overarching pencil of bristles. B'. Besting on four legs only, the fore legs being un- used, much shorter than the others, without claws at the end, and folded against the breast. (Fam. Brush-footed Butterflies.) C\ None of the veins of fore wings swollen at the base. D\ Antennae without any scales. (Subfamily Danaids.) 1. Anosia. D^ Antennae covered, at least above, with numerous scales. (Subfamily Nymphs.) E'. Club of antennae short and stout, three or more times as broad as the stem, more or less abruptly thickened. W, Naked portion of club of antennae with only a single longitudinal ridge or none. G\ Club of antenna3 about three or four times as long as broad ; palpi slender, com- pact, the last joint from one third to one half as long as middle joint. (Tribe Crescent-Spots.) h\ Middle joint of palpi of nearly equal size throughout ; fore tibia of male stout and swollen, not more than five or six times longer than broad. KEY TO THE GROUPS— BUTTERFLY. 35 i\ Outer margin of fore wing scarcely shorter than the hind margin. 2. Eiqjhydryas. i\ Outer margin of fore wing much shorter than the hind margin. 3. Cinclidia. h^ Middle joint of palpi tapering consider- ably on apical half ; fore tibia of male very slender and of equal size throughout, at least ten times longer than broad. i\ Last joint of palpi nearly half as long as the middle joint ; fore tibia of male much shorter than the femur. 4. Cliaridryas. i\ Last joint of palpi less than one third as long as the middle joint ; fore tibia of male scarcely shorter than the femur 5. Phyciodes. G^ Club of antennge spoon-shaped, about twice as long as broad ; palpi large and bushy, the last joint extremely short (Tribe Fritillaries.) h*. Vein 2^ of fore wings arising before the end of the cell. i\ Middle joint of palpi more than three fourths longer than the greatest length of the eye 7. Ai^gyimis. i^ Middle joint of palpi only about one fourth longer than the greatest length of the eye 8. Speyeria. h\ Vein 2^ of fore wings arising beyond the end of the cell. i\ Curve of outer margin of fore wings opening outwardly 6. Brentliis. 36 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. i\ Curve of outer margin of fore wings opening inwardly ... .9. Euptoieta. F\ Naked portion of club of antennae with three distinct lono-itudinal ridges. (Tribe Angle- Wings.) g\ Fore wings rounded in the interspace between 2^ and 22- h\ Eyes naked ; conspicuous eye-like spots on fore wings above. . .10. Junonia. h". Eyes hairy ; no conspicuous eye-like spots on upi^er surface of fore wings. 11. Vanessa, g\ Fore wings sharply angulated in the inter- space between 2j and 2.^. h'. Basal three fifths of hind wings uni- formly dark above ; no silvery comma in middle of hind wings beneath. i\ Hinds wings without spinous hairs on under surface 12. Aglais. i^ Hind wings with numerous straight spinous hairs beneath. 13. Euvanessa. h\ Basal three fifths of hind wings above more or less spotted with black; centre of hind wings beneath with a white or silvery comma-like mark. i\ Hind border of fore wings straight. 14. Eiigonia. i\ Hind border of fore wings strongly sinuous 15. Polygonia. E\ Club of antennae long and slender, hardly more than twice as broad as the stem, gradually thickened. F\ Club of antennae with four longitudinal ridges on naked portion ; vein 0 of KEY TO THE GROUPS— BUTTERFLY. 37 liind wings arising opposite the part- ing of veins 1 and 2. (Tribe Sovereigns.) 16. Basilarchia. '¥\ Club of antenna3 with three longitudinal ridges on naked portion ; vein 0 of hind wings arising beyond the part- ing of veins 1 and 2. (Tribe Emperors.) g\ Antennae fully as long as the width of the fore wings 18. Chlorippe. g\ x\ntenn9e much shorter than the width of the fore wings 17. Anma. C\ Some of the veins of the fore Avings swollen at the base. (Subfam. Satyrs or Meadow-Browns.) d'. Antennae gradually thickened from just beyond the middle 19. Cissia, d'. Antennas gradually thickened only on the apical third or fourth, e'. Eyes hairy. f. Tibial spines of middle legs very numerous; antennae composed of less than 36 joints 20. Satyr odes. f". Tibial spines of middle legs infrequent; an- tennae composed of more than 40 joints 21. Enoclia. e'. Eyes naked 22. Cercyonis. B^ Resting on six legs, the fore legs, however, some- times a little shorter and with dimin- ished armature, at least in the male. C. Of small size. Face between eves much narrower than high ; eyes notched to give room for the antennae. (Fam. Gossamer-winged Butterflies.) P\ Vein 2^ of fore wings simple; under side of hind 38 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. wings generally with continuous markings. . . . (Tribe Hair-Streaks.) e\ Hind wings without thread-l?ke tails. i\ Hind wings of very different shape in the two sexes, the outer border not crenu- late 23. Strymon. f . Hind wings of similar form in the two sexes, the outer border crenulate. 24. Licisalia. e\ Hind wings with one or two thread-like tails, f '. Interspace of hind wings between veins 4 and 5 apically lobed ; male with no stigma on fore wing 25. Ura^iotes. t\ Interspace of hind wings between veins 4 and 5 not produced ; male with stigma on fore wing above. g\ Club of antennae comparatively short and stout, only five times as long as broad 2G. Mitura. g". Club of antennae comparatively long and slender, eight times as long as broad. 27. Theda. D\ Vein 2^ of fore wings forked; under side of hind wings generally with discontinuous markings. E'. Spines on under side of tarsi comparatively few and ranged in pretty regular se- ries; colors of upper surface usually more or less violet and dark brown. (Tribe Blues.) f '. Hind wings with thread-like tails. 28. Everes. f ^ Hind Avings without tails 29. Cyaniris. E\ Spines on under side of tarsi numerous and clustered irregularly at the sides ; colors of upper surface more or less KEY TO THE GROUPS-BUTTERFLY. 39 coppery or fulvous and dark brown. (Tribe Coppers.) f^ Vein 2^ of fore wings arising at the tip of the cell. g\ First joint of middle and hind tarsi not greatly enlarged in male ; ground color of upper surface of fore and hind wings the same, or different only in the female, h^ Fore tarsi of male Jointed; ground color of upper surface of fore and hind wings in the female different. 30. Clirysoplianus, \C. Fore tarsi of male not jointed; ground color of upper surface of all wings the same in the female. . .31. Ejndemia. g^ First joint of middle and hind tarsi of male twice as stout as rest of tar- sus; ground color of all wings above the same in both sexes . . 32. Heodes. r. Vein 2^ of fore wings arising far beyond the tip of the cell 33. Feniseca. C". Of medium or large size, rarely small. Face be- tween eyes as broad as high ; eyes not notched next the base of the antenna. (Family Tyj^ical Butterflies.) D'. Antennae straight ; vein 3 of fore wings w^ith three branches; each claw bifid. (Subfamily Pierids.) E'. Antennas generally very gradually increasing in size to form the club; palpi stout, the last joint short. (Tribe Yellows or Red-Horns.) 40 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. i\ Club of antennae cylindrical, broadly rounded at tip. g\ Middle joint of j^^ljn but little longer than broad 34. Callidryas. g^ Middle joint of paljii fully twice as long as l)road. \i\ Vein 2^ of fore wings arising at the tip of the cell ; front margin of fore wings very strongly arched. 35. Zereiie. h^ Vein 2^ of fore wings arising beyond the tip of the cell ; front margin of fore wings only moderately arched. 36. Eiirymus. f. Club of antennse distinctly flattened, the last joint more or less pointed. g\ Club of antennce very gradually formed and several times longer than broad. \\\ Hind femora only about three fifths as long as the middle femora. 37. Xantliidia. li\ Hind femora about three fourths as long as the middle femora. 38. Eurema, g\ Club of antennae abruptly formed, hardly more than twice as long as broad. 39. Nathalis. E\ Antennae with an abrupt broad flattened club; palpi slender, the last joint about as long as the middle joint. F'. Vein 2^ of fore wings forked near the mid- dle ; middle tibiag shorter than femora (Tribe Orange Tips.) 40. Anfliocliaris, KEY TO THE GROUPS— BUTTERFLY. 41 r\ Vein 2^ of fore wings forked only at the tip ; middle tibi^ at least as long as the femora. (Tribe Whites.) g\ Vein V of fore wings arising at or beyond the tip of the cell ; fore tibiae very much shorter than middle tibiae. 41. Pontia. g' Vein 2^ of fore wings arising distinctly before the tip of the cell; fore and middle tibiss of equal length. 42. Pieris. I)^ Antennae more or less arched; vein 3 of fore wings with four branches; each claw simple. (Subfamily Swallow-Tails.) e'. Club of antennae nearly straight, almost im- perceptibly upcurved ; i\]) of abdo- men almost reaching emargination of hind wings 43. Laertias. e'". Club of antennae curved strongly upward throughout; tip of abdomen not nearly reaching emargination of hind wings, i\ Club of antennae relatively short; hind wings, exclusive of tails, nearly twice as long as broad. 44. Ipliidides. f\ Club of antennae relatively long ; hind wings, exclusive of tails, hardly more than half as long again as broad. g'. Fore tibiae decidedly shorter than the tarsi; tails of hind wings broadened at the end. h\ Vein 4 of hind wings nearly straight; vein 2^ of fore wings arising at about 42 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. oue third the distance from the tip of the cell to the apex of the w'ing. i'. Vein closing the cell of hind wings and connecting veins 2 and 3 not much shorter than the short vein above it ; no transverse stri2:)es on upper side of fore wings. 45. Ja^oniades. i^. Vein closing the cell of hind wings and connecting veins 2 and 3 less than half as long as the short vein above it ; transverse stripes on upper side of fore wings . . . 4G. Euphoeades. h^ Vein 4 of hind wings strongly sinuous; vein 2* of fore wings arising at much less than one third the distance from the tip of the cell to the apex of the wing 47. HeracUdes. g\ Fore tibiae decidedly longer than the tarsi; tails of hind wings not broad- ened at the end 48. Paj^ilio. A". Antennae distant at base, more than half as far aj^art as the height of the eye, the tip of the club more or less distinctly pointed and recurved; eyes usually overhung next antennae with a curv- ing pencil of bristly hairs. (Family Skippers.) B'. Eecurved part of antennal club nearly or quite as long as the thicker part; abdomen generally shorter than the hind wings (Tribe Larger Skippers.) c'. Hind wings tailed or distinctly angulate at the tip of vein 4; vein 3* arising hardly or no nearer the base of the hind wing KEY TO THE GROUPS-BUTTERFLY. 43 than 2'; club of antennae abruptly- bent in the mirldle. d^ Hind wings Avith a distinct tail or tooth at ti^o of vein 4 49. Epargyreus. d'. Hind wings merely broadly angulate at tip of vein 4 50. Tlioryhes. c\ Hind wings regularly rounded at tij) of vein 4 as elsewhere; vein 3' arising much nearer the base of the wing than 2'; club of antennae curved throughout. d\ Club of antennae generally ending in a long-drawn point; if not, the antennae half as long as the fore wing. .51. Tlianaos. d'. Club of antennae tapering but little on apical half, the tip bluntly pointed, the whole antenna less than half as long as the fore wing, e'. Club of antennae six or seven times as long as broad, tapering from the middle equally in both directions. 52. PlioUsora, e^ Club of antennae not more than four or five times as long as broad, tapering more rapidly from the middle toward the tip than in the opposite direction. 53. Ilesperia. B^ Recurved part of antennal club brief as compared with the thicker part, occasionally absent ; abdomen reaching to or be- yond the outer margin of the hind Aving (Tribe Smaller Ski^jpers.) c'. Club of antennae with no apical hook. 54. Ancyloxipha. c^ Club of antennae with a distinct, though some- times slight, apical hook. 44 THE COMMONER BUTTERFIJK8. d'. Hind tarsi shorter than, though sometimes nearly equal in length to, the middle tarsi, e'. Hook of antennal club as long as the width of the club 55. At ry tone. e"*. Hook of antennal club shorter, generally much shorter, than the width of the club. i\ Cell of fore wings two thirds as long as the wing 5G. Ery nnis. f\ Cell of fore wings only about three fifths as long as the wing. g\ First joint of palpi greatly expanded at tip; middle and hind tibiae conspic- uously spined on the upper surface as elsewhere 57. Antkomaste?\ g'. First joint of palpi not expanded at tip; middle and hind tibiae with no con- spicuous spines on upper surface. 58. Polites. d\ Hind tarsi longer than the middle tarsi. e\ Cell of fore wings only three fifths as long as the wing 59. Thymelicus. e^ Cell of fore wings nearly two thirds as long as the wing 60. Limocliores. KEY TO THE GROUPS— CATERPILLAR. 4o Key to the Groups, based ok the Caterpillar. A\ Head and body not separated by a strongly and ab- ruptly strangled neck. B\ Body generally covered with spines; when naked or merely covered with pile, either the head is tubercnlate, or the last seg- " ment ends in a fork, or the body joints are crossed by not more than three creases. (Family Brush-footed Butterflies.) C\ Last segment entire, rounded. D\ Body with no spines. e\ Body furnished with a few long fleshy fila- ments. (Subfamily Danaids.) 1. Anosia. e'. Body covered with pile only 17. Anwa. W, Body covered with spines. (Most of Subfamily Nymphs.) E'. Body uniform, with uniform series of taper- ing spines. F'. Spines more like tubercles, leathery, not horny, their sides crowded with needles, no one at tip distinguished from the others. (Tribe Crescent-Spots.) g'. Body distinctly tapering in front, cross- striped on all but the front seg- ments. 46 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. \\\ A tubercle just below the spiracle-line on the third thoracic segment.* 2. Euphych^yas. h^ No tubercle just below the spiracle-line on the third thoracic segment. 3. Cinclidia. g\ Body scarcely tapering in front, striped longitudinally. h\ Tubercles slender, tapering but little, three times as high as broad. 4. Charidryas. h." Tubercles stout, conical, less than twice as high as broad 5. Pliyciodes. r\ Spines horny, their sides supporting scat- tered needles, one at tip crowning the whole. G\ No spines along the middle line of the back (Tribe Fritillaries.) h\ Spines only about half as long as the joints of the body G. Breniliis, h^. Spines fully as long as the joints of the body, i*. All the sjiines of upper row equal or subequal and like the rest. 7. Argynnis, i^ Most of the upper spines of ab- dominal segments a little longer than the rest, the others nearly equal 8. Speyeria. i^ Upper spines of first thoracic segment longer than the rest and distinctly enlarged at tip, the others equal. 9. Euptoieta. * There is of course no spiracle on this segment ; the spiracle-line may be determined by comparing those of the segments next suc- ceeding. KEY TO THE GROUPS— CATERPILLAR. 47 G\ Some spines on the middle line of the back, especially on the seventh or eighth abdominal segment. (Tribe Angle-Wings.) h^ Head with no conspicuous spines above. i'. Second abdominal segment with a spine on the middle line of the back. j'. First abdominal segment with a similar spine 11. Vanessa. j\ First abdominal segment with no similar spine 12. Aglais. i". Second abdominal segment with no spine on middle line above. 13. Euvanessa. h'. Head crowned with prominent spines. i'. Spinules of body spines not arranged in a stellate manner. j'. Spines of thoracic segments with spinules throughout. ..10. Junonia. j^ Spines of thoracic segments with no spinules on basal half. 14. Eugonia. i^ Spinules of body spines arranged in a stellate manner 15. Polygonia. W, Body hunched, with irregularly-developed series of tubercles. (Tribe Sovereigns.) 16. Basilarcliia. C^ Last segment bifurcate. D\ Head crowned by a branching appendage. 18. Cliloriiype. D^ No coronal spines, or else simple ones on the head. (Subfam. Satyrs or Meadow-Browns.) e\ Head with coronal spines or tubercles. V. Coronal spines slight and inconspicuous. 19. Cissia, f\ Coronal spines nearly as long as the head. 48 THE COMMONER BUTTEUFLIES. g\ Head sleuder and, including the spines, twice as high as broad. 20. Satyrodes. g'. Head stout and, inchiding the spines, half as high again as broad.. 21. Enodia. e'. Head uniformly rounded above 22. Cercyonis, B\ Body never furnished with spines; the joints crossed by more than three creases, the last joint never forked. C*. Body oval and slug-shaped, flattened beneath, rarely almost cylindrical, with very small head. (Fam. Gossamer-winged Butterflies.) D'. Head not one fourth, sometimes not one sixth, the width of the body; dorsal shield behind head wanting or covered with hairs like the parts about it. (Tribe Blues.) e\ Last segment of body broad and greatly flat- tened 28. Everes. e\ Last segment of body comparatively slender and less flattened 29. Cyaniris. D\ Head generally at least one third the width of the body; dorsal shield behind head distinct and naked or covered with many fewer hairs than the parts about it. E\ Segments of body highest next hind edge, or at least with the hinder slope the more abrupt. Head capable of im- mense extension. (Tribe Hair-Streaks.*) * The genera of this group are not sufficiently known to give a key to them. ^12 KE7 TO TUB GROUPS— CATERPILLAR. 49 E\ Segments of body highest next front edge, or with the front sloj^e the more abrupt. Head not capable of special extension . i\ Body flattened, covered with short hairs uniformly distributed. 30. Cliryso- 2)]ianus. 31. Eindemia. 32. Heocles. r. Body hardly flattened, covered with long hairs arranged in transverse masses. 33. Feniseca, . Body cylindrical or enlarged in front, with head of ordinary size. (Family Typical Butterflies.) D\ Back of head descending from summit ; body with numerous papillae and no scent- organs (Subfamily Pierids.) W, Papilla (supporting hairs) nearly equal in size, or if not, the larger ones are numerous and distinctly arranged in transverse and not longitudinal series on the abdominal segments. (Tribe Yellows or Red -Horns.) f. No anterior process on first thoracic seg- ment, above. g\ Papillae (supporting hairs) elevated, dis- tinctly higher than broad. h\ Papillae of two sizes, the larger ar- ranged in definite transverse rows. 34. CalUdri/as. h'. Papillse of nearly uniform size with no definite transverse arrangement. i\ Largest papillse on head larger than largest ocelli 37. Xanthidia. i'. Largest papillse on head smaller than largest ocelli 38. Eurema, 50 2 HE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. g^ Papillae (supporting hairs) mere raised points, not distinctly higher than broad. h\ A shining lenticle just above the spir- acle-line on second and third tho- racic segments 35. Zerene. h^ No shining lenticle just above the spir- acle-line 36. Eurymus. r. A pair of anterior processes on first thoracic segment above 39. Nathalis. E'. Papillae (supporting hairs) of unequal size, the larger arranged in longitudinal as well as sometimes in transverse series on the abdominal segments. F'. Body slender ; head much broader than high. (Tr. Orange Tips.) 40. Antliocliaris. F*. Body less slender ; head scarcely or not broader than high . . (Tribe Whites.) g\ Larger hair- bearing papillae broader than high 41. Pontia. g^ Larger hair-bearing papillae higher than broad 42. Pieris. D^ Back of head with no descent from summit; body almost naked, with exceedingly few papillae and with scent-organs which can be thrust out of the seg- ment behind the head. (Subfamily Swallow-Tails.) e\ Body with long fleshy filaments on the sides. 43. Laertias. e\ Body with no permanent fleshy filaments. i\ Hinder thoracic segments noticeably larger than the next succeeding segments. KEY TO THE GROUPS— CATEHPILLAR. 51 g\ Third thoracic segment with no transverse ridge above. h\ Middle of third thoracic segment with- out markings 44. Iphiclides. h^ Middle of third thoracic segment with a }3air of eye-like spots. i\ First abdominal segment with no large bright patches above. 45. Jasoniades, i^ First abdominal segment with a pair of bright patches above, nearly as large as the eye-like spots in front. 46. Eiqjliceades. g\ Third thoracic segment with a trans- verse dorsal ridge ... 47. Heraclides. r. Hinder thoracic segments scarcely larger than the succeeding segments. 48. Papilio. A^ Head and body separated by a strongly and abruptly strangled neck . . (Family Skippers.) B'. Body comparatively stout ; upper half of head as seen from in front rounded or quad- rangular. . . (Tribe Larger Skippers.) c\ Head at least as high as broad, the highest point of each hemisphere lying within the middle line of that hemisphere; dorsal shield obvious. d\ Papillae of body inconspicuous except from col- oring, 49. E'pargyreus. d^ Papillae of body conspicuous, giving a granulat- ed appearance 50. Thoryhes. c\ Head distinctly broader than high, the highest point of each hemisphere at or out- side the middle line of that hemi- 52 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. sphere: dorsal shield inconspicuous except sometimes at hinder edge. d\ Head as seen from in front angulated at upper outer corners ; hairs of head simple. 51. TlianaoH. d^ Head regularly rounded at upper outer corners; hairs of head branching. e\ None of the hairs on abdominal segments longer than the shorter sections of those segments 52. Pliolisora. e\ Among the hairs on abdominal segments are some serially arranged which are much longer than the sections of those segments 53, Ilesperia, B^ Body very elongated ; upper half of head as seen from in front tapering above. (Tribe Smaller Skippers.) c\ Head pyramidal, much higher than broad, the front facing upward when at rest. 54. Ancyloxipha. c\ Head more or less rounded, the front facing for- ward when at rest. [The further analysis of the genera of Smaller Skippers can hardly be attempted with our present slight informa- tion about them.] KEY TO THE GROUPS-CHRYSALIS, 53 Key to the Groups, based ox the Chrysalis. A'. More or less augulated or with j^i'ojectiiig shoulders, or if smooth and rounded, then very short and stout, the thoracic spiracle inconspicuous. Not concealed in a cocoon. B\ Hanging by the tail only, or else with no hooks at the tail to hang by. (Family Brush-footed Butterflies.) C\ AVith generally numerous conspicuous prominences. (Subfamily Nymj^hs.) D'. Head forming a single mass w4th the thorax. (Tribe Crescent-Spots.) q\ a tubercle on second abdominal segment just above the spiracle-line. i\ Tubercles of eighth abdominal segment nearly as prominent as on the pre- ceding segment 2. Eupliydryas, f\ No distinct tubercles, but only dark sjDots on eighth abdominal segment. 3. Cindidia. e\ No tubercle just above spiracle-line on second abdominal segment. f '. No distinct ridge uniting tubercles of fourth abdominal segment. .4. Cliaridryas. f. A distinct ridge uniting tubercles of fourth abdominal segment. . .5. Phyciodes. D'. Head projecting independently beyond the thorax. 54 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. E'. Base of wings marked by a pair of tubercles. F'. Tail-jiiece short and stout. (Tribe Fritillaries.) g\ Upper row of tubercles on abdominal seg- ments distinctly unequal in size. 6. Brentliis, g^ Upper row of tubercles on abdominal seg- ments equal in size, h'. Front of head between the smooth crescents tuberculate at the side. 7. Argynnis. 8. Speyeria. h^ Front of head between the smooth crescents regularly arched. 9. Eu]}toieta, F^ Tail-piece long, slender, and tapering. (Tribe Angle- Wings.) g\ Ocellar tubercles blunt and rounded, h'. Ridge following upper margin of wings blunt, the dentations rounded. 10. Junonia. h^ Ridge following ui)per margin of wings sharp, the dentations pointed. 11. Vanessa. g^ Ocellar tubercles pointed. h^ No tubercle on middle line of second abdominal segment. . 13. Euvanessa. h*. A small tubercle ou middle line of second abdominal segment. i\ Middle prominence of thorax moder- ate, almost uniformly tectate. 12. Aglais. r. Middle prominence of thorax large and compressed, at least at ti]3. j'. Tubercle just above spiracle-line on KEY TO THE GROUPS— CHRYSALIS, 5o eighth abdominal segment scarcely perceptible 14. Eiujonia. j^ Tubercle just above spiracle-line on eighth abdominal segment minute but distinct 15. Polygonia. E^ Base of wings marked by only a single tuber- cle. F'. Middle prominence of thorax very high and strongly compressed. (Tribe Sovereigns.) 16. Basilarchia. F\ Middle prominence of thorax not highly developed (Tribe Emperors.) g\ Abdomen transversely ridged on the fourth segment, with no longitudinal ridge 17. Ancea, g^. Abdomen longitudinally ridged along the middle of the back, with no trans- verse ridge 18. Clilorippe, C\ With no conspicuous prominences. D'. Back of abdomen with a transverse series of tubercles. (Subfamily Danaids.) 1. Anosia. D\ Back of abdomen with no transverse series of tubercles. (Subfam. Satyrs or Meadow-Browns.) e'. Front and lower planes of head forming less than a right angle. t\ Abdomen with a pair of distinct longitudi- nal ridges 19. Cissia. f^ Abdomen with no longitudinal ridges. g\ Abdomen beyond tip of wings as long as the wings 20. Satyrodes. g^ Abdomen beyond tip of wings shorter than the wings 21. Enodia. 56 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. e^ Front and lower planes of head not forming less than a right angle. 22. Cercyonis. B\ Fastened aronnd the middle by a silken sling as well as by the tail. C\ Body stont, short, and with all j^i'^j^^tions rounded, the front end broadly rounded. (Fam. Gossamer-winged Butterflies.) \)\ llair-like appendages of the skin cylindrical, pointed, or else stellate at tip. E'. These appendages tapering only at tip, the abdomen rarely more than half as long again as broad. (Tribe Ilair-Streaks.*) f^ A delicate ridge along middle of thorax. 24. Incisalia. f . No distinct ridge along middle of thorax. g\ Abdomen much wider than thorax. h\ Longest hairs nearly half as loug as segments of abdomen. . 25. Uranotes. h^ Longest hairs not one fourth the length of abdominal segments. 26. Mitura. g*. Abdomen scarcely wider than thorax. 27. Thecla. E^ These a2'>pendages tapering throughout or stellate at tip, the abdomen gener- ally almost twice as long as broad. (Tribe Blues.) f*. Body much more than three times as long as broad 28. Everes. V. Body much le?s than three times as long as broad 29. Cyaniris. * Chrysalis of Stryinon not examined. KEY TO THE GROUPS-CHRYSALIS. 57 D^ Hair-like aj^j^endages of the skin short, mush- room-shaped (Tribe Coppers.*) e\ Abdomen rounded, the last segments not sepa- rately protuberant, f '. Only the lower half of ninth abdominal seg- ment sloping forward. 30. Cliryso])lianus. f^ The whole of ninth abdominal segment sloping forward 32. Heodes. e\ Abdomen with irregular surface, the hind segments protruding and expanded. 33. Feniseca. C\ Body elongate with angular projections, the front with one or two projecting tubercles. W. Front end with a single conical j^rojection or rounded prominence. (Subfamily Pierids.) E\ Wing-cases distinctly protuberant below the general under surface of the body. r\ The head well distinguished from the frontal projection. (Tribe Yellows or Eed Horns.) f g'. Ventral protuberance of wings doubling the depth of the body. \\\ Fourth abdominal segment with a distinct sharp ridge along the sides. 34. Callidryas. li\ Fourth abdominal segment with no distinct ridge 37. Xantliidea. g\ Ventral protuberance of wings not doubling the depth of the body, h'. Frontal process slender, acuminate. 38. Eurema. * Chrysalis of Epidemia unknown, f Excepting Natlialis. 58 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. h^ Frontal process blunt, angulate. 35. Zerene. 36. Eurymus. F". Head insensibly merging into the frontal process. G'. Head with no marked projection. 39. Nathalis, G". Head with an excessively long frontal projection. (Tribe Orange Tips.) 40. Anthocharis, W, A¥ing-cases scarcely protuberant below the general under surface of the body. (Tribe Whites.) f '. Frontal process stout, no longer than broad. 41. Pontia. i\ Frontal process slender, very much longer than broad 42. Fieris, 'D\ Front end with two projecting tubercles. (Subfamily S wallow-Tails.) e\ Surface of body except the large projections tolerably smooth, f. Distinct ridges along the sides of abdomen above. g\ Abdomen greatly expanded next the base. 43. Laertias. g\ Abdomen gently enlarged in the middle. 44. I^jhidides. t\ No ridges along sides of abdomen above. 46. Etijiliaeades. e\ Surface of body very much roughened. i\ Under surface of body, as seen from the side, hardly bent. . . 45. Jasoniades. i\ Under surface of body, as seen from the side, strongly bent. g'. Base of antennae with a distinct tubercle. 47. Heraclides, KEY TO THE GROUPS— CHRYSALIS. 59 g^ Base of antennas with no tubercle. 48. Papilio. A\ Smooth and rounded, elongate, the thoracic spiracle conspicuous. Concealed in a co- coon (Family Skipjiers.) B'. Tongue-case not free, not extending beyond the wings (Tribe Larger Skippers.) c'. Abdomen exclusive of tail-piece no longer than the rest of the body. d\ Thoracic spiracle with no posterior elevated flaring lip 49. Eparcjyreus, d\ Thoracic spiracle with a posterior elevated flar- ing lip 50. Thonjhes, G'. Abdomen exclusive of tail-jiiece longer than the rest of the body, d^ Hinder lip of thoracic spiracle scarcely raised, not flaring 51. Tliaiiaos. d\ Hinder lip of thoracic spiracle much elevated, flaring, fluted. e\ The hinder equal part of tail-jiiece, seen from above, scarcely longer than broad. 52. FJtoUsora. e*. The hinder equal part of tail-piece, seen from above, twice as long as broad. 53. Hesjieria. B'. Tongue-case free at tip, extending beyond, some- times much beyond, the wings. (Tribe Smaller Skippers.) [The genera of Smaller Skippers are too little known to separate them by their chrysalids. ] NOMENCLATURE OF THE PARTS OF THE WING. Neuration op Anosia plexippus. cm costal margin. om outer margin. im inner margin. dc discoidal cell. aa anal angle. pc (0) precostal vein. c (1) costal vein. sc (2) subcostal vein. VI (3) median vein. sm (4) submedian vein i (5) internal vein. 60 NOMENCLATURE OF HIE PARTS OF THE WING. 61 The veins may for conciseness, as in our "Key to the Groups/^ be numbered from above downward from 0 to 5 as in their explanation above, and their branches may be further indicated by adding to the number one which shall designate whether it is the first branch, second branch, etc., and also whether it is thrown off from the upper or under edge. Thus the branches striking the margin of the fore wing in the above figure, beginning above, would have tliis consecutive designation : 1, 2', 2% 2', 2', 2, 2,, 2^, Sg, 3„, 3,, 4 (the internal running into the submedian) ; while those of the hind wing (including the postcostal, which does not quite reach the margin) would be : 0, 1, 2', 2^^, 2", 83 , S^ , 3^ , 4, 5. In this way equivalent nervules of the two wings, or of the same wings in different butterflies, would have a similar symbol. THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES OF THE NOETHEEN UNITED STATES AND CANADA. FAMILY BEUSH-FOOTED BUTTEEFLIES. Subfamily Daxaids. 1. Genus Anosia. ANOSIA PLEXIPPUS— THE MONARCH OR MILK-WEED BUTTERFLY. (Danais arcliippus, Danais erippus.) Butterfly. — Wings above and fore wings beneath rather light tawny brown, the veins margined with black, and the wings broadly margined with the same enlivened by a double row of small whitish spots; besides, all the apex of the fore wings is more or less black, but contains two or three dashes of obscure tawny and, just beyond the cell, a couple of oblique series of large buff-tawny spots, those nearest the front margin smaller, elongate, and white. Beneath, the ground color of the hind wings is buff, and the black veins are edged with some whitish scales. The male is distinguished by a conspicuous thickened black patch (really a pocket containing special scales) next one of the veins near the middle of the hind wings. Expanse 4 inches. Caterpillar. — Head smooth and rounded, yellow, conspicuously banded with black. Body cylindrical, tapering a little in front, 63 64 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. naked, but with two pairs of long and very slender black thread- like filaments, one pair, the longer, on the second thoracic, the other on the eighth abdominal, segment. The body is white with numerous slender black and yellow, and especially black, trans- verse stripes, repeated with considerable regularity on each of the segments, so that there are nowhere any broad patches of color. Length nearly 2 inches. Chrysalis. — Pea-green. Stout and not elongated, largest in the middle of the abdomen, where it is transversely ridged; else- where it is smooth and rounded, with no striking prominences, but with little conical projections at most of the elevated points like those which half encircle the body at the abdominal ridge, all of a golden color except the latter, which are situated in a tri-colored band, black in front, nacreous in the middle (these dividing the points between them), and gilt behind. Length more than 1 inch. We begin with one of tlie most interesting of our butter- flies, about which a volume might be written, but of which we have still much to learn. It is found in the summer- time over almost the entire continent, certainly as far north as into the Dominion of Canada; and yet it is probable that it does not exist in the winter further north than the Gulf States. It has extraordinary powers of flight, more so than any known butterfly, and every autumn when abundant (after first collecting in vast flocks or bevies of hundreds of thousands, changing the color of the trees or shrubs on which it alights for the night) migrates south- ward in streams, like our migrating birds. After passing the winter on the wing, without so far as known hibernat- ing in torpidity, it leaves its winter quarters in the extreme south with the opening spring and flies northward, not in flocks or streams, but singly. The females lay their eggs when they are ripe wherever they may chance to be, some flying even as far as southern New York and Minnesota before concluding their life-duties. The caterj^illars born from these eggs develop into butterflies, many of which again fly northward before they lay their eggs; while the FAMILY BliUSH-FOOrED BUTTERFLIES. ^^^ butterflies developing from these last do not lay eggs the same season (unless possihl}^ in the warmer south), but migrate southward at the end of the season, to return again the next spring. North, therefore, of the farthest points to which the wintering butterflies have journeyed in the sj^ring, there appears to be but one brood a year, south of it two, and in the extreme south possibly more. As a further proof of the transcendent powers of flight of this butterfly, it may be mentioned that it has been seen at sea five hundred miles from land and has within thirty years spread over nearly all the islands of the Pacific and even to Australia and Java. Undoubtedly carried in the first place hy trading or other vessels to the Hawaiian Islands and thence to Micronesia, it has un- questionably Jtow7i from island to island many hundreds of miles apart. It has also appeared at various times in different places on the sea-coast of Europe, here also probably transported accidentally by vessel. In 1885, for instance, no less than nine specimens were captured in four different counties of England, and in 188G it was reported at different points from England to Gibraltar. The egg is long oval in shape, with over twenty low up- right ridges and many cross lines, is of a pale green color, and is laid singly on the food-plant of the caterpillar (various kinds of milk-weed, especially the commonest kind, AscJepiafi cornuti) and usually upon the under sur- face of the tender upturned apical leaves near the middle. It hatches in about four days, the caterpillar feeds quite exposed upon the leaves, generally resting, however, upon the under surface, and takes two or three weeks to grow to its full size. In New England the eggs are usually laid during July, and belated caterpillars may be found even in September. The chrysalis hangs from nine to fifteen days. But the chief interest attaching to this butterfly is that m THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. it belongs to a favored race, as, like all the members of its tribe, it is protected from its natural enemies among the birds by some nauseous peculiarities. The males can pro- trude from the end of the abdomen on either side a bunch or brush of hairs which may be the means of producing an offensive smell; but besides this the whole body of both sexes seems to have a rank odor, and its protection is the cause of its unconscious mimicry by another of our butter- flies, BasilarcMa arcliippus. It is the best example of mimicry known in North America. The subfamily of Heliconians is represented in the southern part of our district by the genus Agraulis, with one species, A. tsanillae, a southern species which has occasionally been taken as far north as Pennsylvania. Subfamily Nymphs. TRIBE CKESCENT-SPOTS. 2. Genus Euphydryas. EUPHYDRYAS PHAETON— THE BALTIMORE. (Melitaea phaeton.) Butterfly. — Wings black, marked with red and pale straw- yellow, the markings larger on the under than on the upper sur- face ; the red is confined to two or three spots (more below) near the base of each wing and to a broad outer margin, divided by the black veins ; the yellow mostly to four i)arallel series (two on the upper surface of hind wings) of small round or squarish spots (the outer row lunulate) between the veins in the outer half of the wing, before the marginal band. Expanse of male 2 inches; of female 24 inches. Caterpillar. — Head black with low conical summits. Body spined, dark orange transversely ringed with black lines, the tlioracic segments tapering, mostly black ; spines bluish black, about as long as the segments with numerous long black bristles, set on papillae ; there is a dorsal series, two others on each side equally dividing the space between that and the spiracles, and one FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 67 other below the spiracles, including one on the third thoracic seg- ment ; a row of smaller spines, two to a segment, occurs at the base of the prolegs. Length 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Very pale bluish white, marked with velvety black and pale orange ; little conical orange tubercles mark the position of the spines of the caterpillar, black dots or small dashes are sprinkled over the body especially on the abdomen, and larger dashes divided by orange nervules cross the middle of the wings in a continuous series. Legs orange marked with black. Tubercles of eighth abdominal segment distinct. Length nearly f inch. The eggs are largest below, taper above to a very broad and depressed summit, the sides vertically ribbed on upper half, at first yellow, afterwards purplish; they are laid in large irregular clusters, several layers deep, upon the under surface of a leaf of the food-plant, and hatch in about twenty days. During the season in wdiich they are born the caterpillars feed in society, living in a web with which they line and envelop their food-plant, the snake-head, CJi el one glabra, and less commonly other Scrophulariaceous plants. After moulting three times, which the caterpillars do under and within their webs, the whole colony hiber- nates within the web, made more dense for the purpose, which, contracting as the w^inter dries the foliage, becomes a compact rounded mass as large as an egg, filled with caterpillars, cast skins, and filth. In the spring the cater- pillars make their way out, disperse, and no longer con- struct webs but feed openly, frequently choosing other food- plants, Lonicera or Viburnum, Caprifoliaceous plants. The chrysalis hangs from fourteen to eighteen days. The butterfly is extremely local, often confining its wanderings to an acre of ground, and is only found near or in swampy places; it flies heavily — indeed it is our most sluggish but- terfly— and is single-brooded, appearing early in June and flvinor for more than a month. 68 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. 3. Genus Cincltdia. CINCLIDIA HAKRfsiI— HARRIS'S BUTTERFLY. (Melitaea barrisii, Phyciodes liarrisii.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings nearly black, the fore wings with a broad sinuous band of dull orange across the middle broken by the black veins, followed outwardly by a sinuous row of similar unequal spots and inwardly by a few irregular orange spots ; hind wings with most of the disk dull orange, begrimed with black and cut by black veins. Under surface brownish orange, the veins mostly black, marked with usually black-edged white spots, conspicuous on the hind wings where the median spots are sordid cut by a black line, the subbasal and lunular subapical spots shining. Expanse If inches. Caterpillar.— Head shining black, summits tuberculate and low conical. Body spined, tapering on the thoracic segments, deep orange with a black dorsal line, and ringed narrowly with black stripes throughout ; spines jet-black, a little shorter than the segments, covered with black needles set on papillae ; they are arranged as in Euphydryas excepting that there is no spine on the third thoracic segment in the row just below the spiracles. Length nearly 1 inch. Chrysalis.— Snow-white, marked much as in Euphydryas phaeton, but with the darker markings mostly confined to edgings of the orange tubercles. Legs white tipped with black. No dis- tinct tubercles on the eighth abdominal segment, but their place marked by spots. Length ^ inch. The eggs, wliich are shaped as in Euphydryas but with a smaller summit, are pale lemon-yellow and are laid in patches of tw^enty or more in a closely-crowded single layer on the under side of a leaf of the food-plant; their period in unknown. So far as know^n, tlie caterpillars have but a single food-plant, Aster {Doelliiigeria) iniibellatus. They first eat the parenchyma of the under surface of the leaf on which they are born and then move in company down the plant, devouring the parenchyma of each surface of every leaf as they go, covering everything wath a thin w^b, beneath and upon which they live until the end of the FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 69 season, their nests resembling those of Enphydryae but less dense. Early in September and after two or three moults they desert these nests and hibernate in crannies, probably to some degree in company; for in the early S2)ring they may be found again in loose companies, but living openly, often four or five on a single leaf of their food-plants and in close vicinity to their birthplace. The caterpillars change to chrysalis at the end. of May or early in June and hang from ten to sixteen, usually about thirteen, days. The butterfly is extremely local, occurring only in the im- mediate vicinity of places where the food-plant grows; but not always there, for the butterfly hardly occurs south of lat. 42° or west of Wisconsin, while Doellingeria- extends to Georgia and Arkansas. It is single-brooded, appearing upon the wing about the middle of June and flying throughout July. 4. Genus Charidryas. CHARIDRYAS NYCTEIS— THE SILVER CRESCENT. (Melitaea nycteis, Phyciodes nycteis.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings pale orange fulvous, marked with black; fore wings with outer border very broadly margined with black, especially above, where it nearly reaches a broad bar descending from the costa to the middle of the wing ; base and cell with a tangle of black lines ; hind wings mostly black with an exceedingly broad subequal transverse fulvous belt, broken in the middle by a brown stripe and with a row of round spots in outer half. Under surface of fore wings much like upper (but washed out) excepting for varied light markings near apex; hind wings pale buff marked with dark brown, the veins brown, dull silvery spots next the base and one or two on the costal and apical margins, on the latter in the middle of a broad brown field. Expanse If inches. Caterpillar. — Head shining black, rounded on summits. Body spined, scarcely tapering on thoracic segments, velvety black above with a dull orange stigmatal band; spines black or 70 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. blackish, slender, at least three times as high as broad, arranged much as in Euphydryas. Length nearly 1 inch. Chrysalis. — "Some are light-colored, nearly white, with delicate blackish spots and fine streaks of brown over the surface; others are almost wholly black, while others again are between the two extremes " (Edwards). It closely resembles that of CincUdia harrisii^ from which it may be distinguished by having no suprastigmatal tubercle on the second abdominal segment, and by the wing spots hardly forming a definite band. Length ^ inch. The eggs, the sides of which are ribbed above, pitted iji the middle, and smooth below, are pale green and are laid on the under surface of a leaf of the food-plant in clusters of from a few up to a hundred, side by side in regular rows; they hatch in from nine to fourteen days. The caterpillars feed on various Composite plants, jiarticularly sunflower and Actinomeris; when young they are gregarious and feed on the parenchyma of the leaf; later they eat the whole leaf, but at no time do they spin a web for conceal- ment or protection; they hibernate when partly grow^n, doubtless in crevices, and separate in spring, feeding singly. The chrysalis hangs from ten to fifteen days. The butterfly is not at all local and is far more common in the West than in the East, where it has not been recog- nized east of the middle of Maine. It appears to be single- brooded in the North, flying in the latter half of June and in July; bnt according to observations in AVest Virginia and^Missouri it appears to be there partly single- and partly double-brooded, a first generation appearing in May and a second, partial generation in July, some of the caterpillars from the May butterflies going into early hibernation, others passing forward to form the second generation. Another species of this genus is C. ismeria, which is a southern form, but in the West occurs as far north as Colorado and Montana and has even been reported from Brandon, Manitoba, FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES, 71 5. Genus Phyciodes. PHYCIODES THAROS— THE PEARL CRESCENT. (Melitaea tharos, Melitaea marcia, Melitaea j)liaros ) Butterfly. — Wings dull orange, heavily marked with blackish brown, the markings heavier in the female and found on the upper surface principally in a broad outer margin, a broad divided bar across the middle of the fore wings, and a mesh of lines, confused in the female, at the base of the wings ; a pre- apical series of dots on the hind wings. On the under surface tlie dark markings of the fore wings are mostly confined to irregular patches at the middle of the costal and at the middle and just before the tip of the inner border; the hind wings are ochraceous with a transverse median tracery of lunulate cinnamon lines, and a large brown cloud on the hind margin ; the preapical dots of the upper surface are repeated. Expanse 1^ inches. Caterpillar. — Head shining bronze, marked with wiiite, rounded on summits. Body spined, scarcely tapering on thoracic segments, blackish, dotted above with yellow, with a black dorsal stripe (often wanting), a yellow line in the middle of the sides, and a yellow band just beneath the spiracles; spines mostly yellowish, stout, less than twice as high as broad, arranged much as in Euphydryas. Length | inch. Chrysalis. — Grayish white, the effect of brownish creases on a wdiite ground, darker on the abdomen, where there is a dull band below the spiracles ; no band on the wings. Length | inch. The eggs, which taper so that the siinimit is only half as broad as the base and are ribbed above on the sides, are light yellow-green and are laid in clusters of from twenty to two hundred on the under side of the leaves of the food- plant, crowded together, sometimes in one layer, at others in several ; they hatch in from five to ten days. The cat- erpillars feed ou asters, but their proper food-plant appears to be only Aster novae angliae. They feed in company, de- vouring at first only the parenchyma of the under surface of the leaf, later in life the entire leaf, spinning no web at any time. The caterpillars of the latest brood become lethargic after the second or third moult and then hiber- 72 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. nate. The chrysalis haugs for an uncertain period, gener- ally from six to thirteen days, sometimes prolonged to a month. The butterfly flies slowly and for short distances only ; it is everywhere abundant in open places and is single- or double-brooded according to locality, triple- or even quadruple-brooded further south. In New England it is double-brooded, the first brood appearing in the latter half of May and flying until the end of the first week in July ; the second brood appears about the middle of July and may be found even to October, there being great irreg- ularity in the development of different caterpillars, among which there is sometimes a certain amount of temporary lethargy. The full accounts of the behavior of the cater- pillars of this species given by Mr. W. H. Edwards are well worthy of close attention. The species is dimorphic, the butterflies of the first brood (wdierever there are more than two) differing from those of the later in having more accentuated markings. A second species of this genus, P. batesii, has been taken sparingly east of the Appalachians ; and a third, P. gorgone, an extreme south- ern species, has been recorded from Kansas. TRIBE FKITILLARIES. 6, Genus Bkenthts. BRENTHIS BELLONA— THE MEADOW FRITILLARY. (Argyunis bellona.) Butterfly.— Upper surface of wings fulvous, heavily marked with black ; on most of the basal half or more, bounded by an augulate dentate outer line, the black predominates, touclied wiMi fulvous dashes ; outer margin bordered with black reduced to small T-shaped spots on the hind wings, preceded by two rows of spots, the inner circular and crossing the middle of the fulvous field. On the under side the fore wings are fulvous heavily blotched with black excepting on the outer fourth, where there are cinna- moneous clouds ; hind wings cinuamoneous fulvous on the basal FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 78 half, one or the other tint predominating in large spots, traversed by brown lines, the outer half purplish brown, obscurely clouded and marked with brown. Expanse nearly 2 inches. Caterpillar. — Head shining blackish green, the summits round- ed. Body spined, purplish black, mottled with yellowish and with a velvety-black broken lateral stripe ; spines leathery, dull luteous tipped with fulvous, all of nearly the same size. Length nearly 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Dark yellowish brown, resulting from brown creases on a yellowish-brown ground ; laterodorsal tubercles of abdomen (very prominent on third segment) constricted before the tip, those of first and second segments of equal size. Length more than ^ inch. The eggs, which are tall sn gar-loaf -shaped with twenty or more prominent vertical ribs, are dull olive-yellow and are jDrobably laid singly on the food-plant ; one observer says he has seen the female drop her eggs loosely w^hile hovering in the air ; they hatch in from five to nine days. The cater j)illars feed singly and openly upon violets, but only at night, making no w^eh and concealing themselves about the roots of the herbage by day. AVinter is passed by the caterpillars when half grown. The chrysalis hangs for about a week. The butterfly is most commonly found about wet meadows and bogs, and is a northern species, hardly found south of lat. -41"; it has a moderately rapid but low zigzag flight. There are three broods annually: the first appears about the middle of May and fresh speci- mens continue to emerge throughout June ; the eggs, how- ever, appear not to be laid until the middle of June and may be laid all through the rest of the month and July, for the butterfly is very long-lived; the second brood ap- pears about the middle of July before the first brood has disappeared and continues on the wing into September; the third brood appears late in August and continues up to the time of frosts. There are some strange anomalies about the development 74 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. of this butterfly. It would appear that in the first brood of butterflies, and sometimes but not always in the second, the eggs are not developed in the bodies of the females so as to be ready to lay until the butterfly has been on the wing two or three weeks ; while in part of the second and all of the third brood the eggs are fully developed as soon as the butterflies emerge from the chrysalis, or at any rate in a day or two. So, too, the behavior of the caterpillars is very different, at least in the second brood, some feeding regularly and passing forward to form the chrysalids from which the butterflies of the third brood emerge ; others be- coming lethargic in midsummer, when half grown, and passing into premature hibernation curled up in crannies. As the caterpillars from the eggs of the final brood of but- terflies probably hibernate before moulting at all, the spring opens with caterpillars of different stages of growth and of different generations of the preceding year, which passing on to chrysalis combine to make the first long-drawn-out brood of butterflies. Whether any of the caterpillars of the first brood behave in this way (so that the spring brood of butterflies shall be made up of parts of all the generations of the preceding season) is not yet determined, but it seems probable from the irregularity and long continuance of the second brood of butterflies. BRENTHIS MYRINA— THE SILVER BORDERED FRITILLARY. (Argynnis myrina.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings fulvous marked with black ; the markings consist principally of an outer margin inwardly dentate and enclosing fulvous dots, a curving series of round spots beyond middle of outer half of wing, and across the base and middle a coarse and irregular mesh of subcontinuous dashes. Under surface of fore wings fulvous with black markings feebly repeated, a cinnamoneous cloud at apex and apical silvery spots ; of hind wings mixed cinnamoneous and ochraceous, with two FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 75 transverse series of silvery spots, besides those at base and apex. Expanse If inches. Caterpillar. — Head dark metallic green, the summits rounded. Body spined, mottled with dark green, purple, and luteous ; spines leathery, blackish fuscous or partly luteous, those on the back of the first thoracic segment several times longer than the others. Length f inch. Chrysalis. — Dark luteous, the abdomen darker, the whole marked with fuscous ; laterodorsal tubercles of abdomen (very prominent on the third segment) uniformly conical, those of first segment smaller than those of second. Length ^ inch. The eggs, which are tall sugar-loaf- shaped, with sixteen or seventeen prominent vertical ribs, are olivaceous yellow and are laid singly on the leaves or stems of the food-plant or on immediately adjoining vegetation ; also, according to some observers, dropped loosely on the wing; they hatch in from six to ten, sometimes fourteen, days. The cater- pillars feed by night upon violets, and hide by day, and are very quick in their movements and easily disturbed. The chrysalis hangs from seven to eleven days. The haunts and flight of the butterfly are the same as those of B. hellona and its life-history probably identical; certainly it passes the winter in the caterpillar state, both just from, the Q^g and half grown, but the lethargic features noticed ill the preceding species have not been observed, though they probably occur, in this; the butterfly, however, is a few days later than B. lellona in appearing in its successive broods in a given locality. Three other species of Brenthis occur in the northern parts of our district, two in the high north, B. cliaridea and B. freija, both of them circumpolar insects, sometimes taken in Canada not far from our border ; and B. montinus, known only from the subalpine dis- tricts of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, and thought b^ some to be merely a variety of B. charidea, 76 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. 7. Genus Akgynnis. ARGYNNIS ATLANTIS— THE MOUNTAIN SILVER SPOT. Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings orange fulvous, witli well- defined black markings. These consist, in all our species of Argynnis, in the fore wings, of three sinuate bars across the outer part of the cell besides a straight and a sinuate bar at the tip, a more or less disconnected zigzag band across the middle of the wing, and a series of rounded spots on the middle of its outer half, besides a submarginal series of sagittate spots on a dusky border. On the under surface the design of the fore wingt: is a vague repetition of the upper markings, while the hind wings have submarginal, extramesial, intramesial, and prebasal serit-s of very large silvery spots, those of the outer series usually the larger. The peculiarities of each species are seen principally on the under surface of the hind wings, which in the present species is distinguished by the depth and griminess of the basal tint and by the width of the buff belt between the two outer rows of silver spots, which is intermediate in this particular between A. aphro- dite and A. eijhele. Expanse 2^ inches. Caterpillar. — Head dark. Body spinous, dark velvety purple above, scarcely paler beneath ; spines corneous, livid at base, the spinules nearly half as long as the spines. Length 1^ inches. Chrysalis. — Chestnut-brown irrorate with black, basal seg- ments of abdomen unicolorous; dorsal and ventral surfaces of front part of body set at an angle of about 50^ Length | inch. The eggs, which are short sugar-loaf-shaped, as high as broad, with twelve to fourteen vertical ribs and honey-yel- low, are laid singly on the food-plant and hatch in about a fortnight. The caterpillars go into winter quaiters im- mediately after emerging from the Qgg without tasting of vegetable food, a^vake early in the spring, and feed singly and by night upon violets, hiding in crevices by day. The chrysalids are found attached to the under side of logs lying on the ground and in similar places; their period is unknown. The butterfly is wilder than the succeeding species of the genus and is a more northern form, being limited southwardly by about the annual isotherm of 45° F. FAMILY BRUSH FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 77 It is single-brooded, appearing about the middle of June, but not becoming common until the middle of August, and is still on the wing in September; although the males appear some time before the females, the latter may be found long before they are ready to lay their eggs, which is not until the latter half of August. The males have a yery perceptible odor of sandal-wood. ARGYNNIS APHRODITE— THE SILVER-SPOT FRITILLARY. Butterfly. — The ground color of the under surface of the hind wings is a pure chmamoneous, and the buff band between the two outer rows of silver spots is very narrow, narrower than the outermost brown margin, and at its extremities often disappears. Expanse 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, reddish yellow behind. Body spined, blackish brown, with a velvet-black spot at base of each spine, not so dark beneath; spines corneous, black, some reddish yellow at base. Length fully H inches. Chrysalis. — Livid brown and blackish, less coarsely rugose, and with less prominent tubercles than in A. cyheUy the basal seg- ments of the abdomen bicolored. Length nearly 1 inch. The eggs, which are short sugar-loaf -shaped, as high as broad, with sixteen to nineteen vertical ribs and honey- yellow, are laid singly on the food-plant and hatch in a fortnight. After devouring their egg-shells, the cater- pillars move actively about as if searching for winter quar- ters, utterly declining all vegetable food. After hiberna- tion they feed by night on all kinds of wild violets, and during the day lie concealed on the ground under chips and stones; they are very active. The chrysalis hangs from seventeen to twenty days. The butterfly is very fond of the blossoms of the thistle, and when feeding can readily be taken with the fingers. Though a more northern but- terfly than A. cyhele, it is more southern than A. atlantis and more eastern than A. alcestis. It is found throughout New England, excepting in the heart of the White Moun- 78 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. tains. It is single-brooded and a little later in appearance than its companion-species, first appearing about the beginning of July; the butterflies are seldom abundant before the end of the first week in July, and disappear by the middle of September; the eggs are not laid, apparently, before the middle of August. The males have no percep- tible odor. ARGYNNIS ALCESTIS— THE RUDDY SILVER SPOT. Buttterfly. — The ground color of the under surface of the hind wings is a nearly uniform and pure deep cinnamoneous, with no distinct band of buff between the outer rows of silvery spots. Expanse 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, yellowish behind. Body spinous, velvety black; spines corneous, black above the yellowish base. Length If inches. Chrysalis. — Ked, brown, or drab, irregularly mottled and creased with black; abdominal segments drab, edged in front with black. Length 1 inch. The eggs, which are short stigar-loaf-sha2:)ed, much higher than broad, with about eighteen vertical ribs, are presumably laid on the food-plant and hatch in from twenty-five to thirty days. Nearly all the caterpillars, after devouring their egg-shells, go at once into hiberna- tion, but some have been known (in captivity, in a region south of their native home) to feed and moult once or twice before winter; they feed readily on violets. The chrysalis hangs for three weeks or more. The butterfly is fond of the open country and is found only in the West, occurring in the Mississippi Valley from Michigan to Mon- tana north of lat. 40°. Its seasons are all similar to those of our eastern species of Argynnis. The male has been credited with no odor. FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 79 ARGYNNIS CYBELE— THE GREAT SPANGLED ERITILLARY. Butterfly. — The ground color of the under surface of the hind wings is rather dull cinnamoneous, more or less sprinkled with buff, and the buff band between the two outer rows of silver spots is very broad, broader than the outermost brown border, and extends from margin to margin. Expanse fully 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head dull black, castaneous behind. Body spined, dull black, the more exposed parts somewhat velvety; spines corneous, shining blackish castaneous, the base of many dull orange luteous. Length 1| inches. Chrysalis. — Dark brown, creased and mottled with drab or reddish brown, or almost wholly dead-leaf brown, more coarsely rugulose and with more prominent tubercles than in A. aphrodite, the basal segments of abdomen unicolorous. Length more than 1 inch. The eggs, which are short siigar-loaf-shaped, higher than broad, with sixteen to eighteen vertical ribs, and honey-yellow, are laid singly on the food-plant, and also, according to some observers, loosely dropped by the mother while poising in the air; they hatch in about fifteen days. The caterpillars go at once into hibernation, and become full fed on violets during the next June. \A^hen about to pupate, the caterj^illar seeks the under surface of stones and of bark lying on the ground, and the chrysalis hangs from fourteen to twentj-four days. The butterflies are found in open fields and are single-brooded, the earliest appearing the last of June and continuing to emerge from the chrysalis until at least the middle of July; they re- main on the wing until the middle of September or later; although pairing by the end of July, the earliest females not appearing until the beginning of that month, eggs are hardly laid before the middle of August. Further south, according to W. H. Edwards, the butterfiies appear at the end of May, but by the first of July have all disappeared, a fresh brood' appearing about the middle of August; jQi he has never been able to get butterflies of this first brood 80 THE COMMON EH BUTTERFLIES. to lay eggs, nor has he found mature eggs in the bodies of females at that season. The male has no perceptible odor. 8. Genus Speyekia. SPEYERIA IDALIA— THE REGAL FRITILLARY. (Argynnis idalia.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of fore wings brilliaiit orange, marked with black, much after the pattern of Argynnis ; of hind wings purpUsh bkxck, with an extramesial bent series of cream- colored roundish spots and a subniarginal series of similar spots, cream-colored in the female, orange in the male. Under surface of fore wings as in Argynnis, of hind wings dark olivaceous, heavily marked, Argynnis-fashion, with series of large silvery spots, edged, especially on the basal side, with bhick. Expanse 3^4 inches. Caterpillar. — Head black below, reddish above. Body s])inous, velvety black, heavily banded and striped witli ochrey yellow or reddish; spines corneous, mostly yellowish, the spinules black. Length If inches. Chrysalis. — Brown, tinged with pink and marked with black in rather small spots, scattered over the thorax and wings and in front of, sometimes including, the tubercles. Length more than 1 inch. The eggs, which are short sugar-loaf-shaped, broader than high, tapering rapidly, with sixteen to eighteen verti- cal ribs and pale green, are laid singly on the food -plant, probably on the under side of the leaves; they hatch in about thirty days. The caterpillars at once hibernate after devouring their egg-shells, or possibly some remain in the ^g^ all winter. The remainder of the life-history transpires the next season, the caterpillar feeding upon violets (and Compositae ?), the chrysalis hanging (in the single instance recorded, in West Virginia) seventeen days. The butter- fly is somewhat local and is found in open breezy places, oc- curring only in a relatively narrow belt across the country, following the annual isotherm of 50° F.; it flies low and FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 81 with no great rapidit}^, settling suddenly, and is single- brooded, the males appearing at the very end of June or early in July, the females [ibout ten days later, and both continuing on the wing until near the end of September, fresh specimens coming from the chrysalis until after the middle of August, indicating probably some lethargy in the caterpillars. The eggs are not laid until the last of August and usually not until Sej^tember. This is one of our show- iest butterflies and the male has a slight musky odor. 9. Genus Ecptoieta. EUPTOIETA CLAUDIA— THE VARIEGATED FRITILLARY. (Argynnis columbina ) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings pale fulvous, darker in the basal half, with an irregular, transverse, black mesial line, darker, broader, and much more abruptly zigzag on the fore than on the hind wing, and a pair of extramesial, moi'e or less wavy brown lines enclosing between them a series of round blackish spots. Under surface of fore wings much like the upper, with the addi- tion of a large apical clouded patch of gray and brown, obliquely divided; of hind wings dark yellowish brown with the markings of the upper surface obscurely repeated and overlaid by hoary patches and streaks, especially forming a marginal and a broad extramesial band, in both more intense in tint toward the costal margin. Expanse more than 2 to nearly 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head blackish, orange above. Body spinous, very variable in color but generally of some glistening shade of reddish orange, twice longitudinally banded on each side with black, enclosing or partly enclosing squarish white spots. Length IJ inches. Chrysalis. — Silvery white, dotted and blotched with black ; wings much blotched with black; tubercles gilt, but sometimes silvery behind, nearly encircled with black. Length f inch. The eggs, which are short sugar-loaf-shaped, with from thirty to forty vertical ribs and pale green, are laid singly on the food-plant and hatcli in from five to twelve da3^s. 82 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. The caterpillar feeds on a considerable variety of polypeta- lons plants, but particularly on Passiflora and Sedum; it feeds readily on violets and has been known to be injurious to the garden pansy; it probably feeds only by night. The chrysalis hangs for about eleven days. The butterfly fre- quents open fields and is a southern form, though occurring farther nortli in the Mississippi Valley than in the East; it is rarely found in southern New England and perhaps does not Avinter there. It is apparently triple-brooded ; the last brood is the most numerous and appears so late that, taking into account the appearance of butterflies very early in the spring, it seems probable either that the butterfly itself hibernates or else that some of the autumn chrysalids con- tinue over the winter, or both ; but it is not unlikely also that caterpillars from eggs laid late in the season may hibernate as soon as hatched or when partly grown. It is only by further careful observation and experiment in the Middle and Southern States that the life-history of this butterfly can be determined. The inequality of the broods would indicate lethargic tendencies in midsummer caterpillars. The genus Semnopsyche (5. diana) also occurs in the southernmost part of our district. TRIBE ANGLE-WINGS. 10. Genus Junonia. JUNONIA C(ENIA— THE BUCKEYE. (Vanessa coenia, Junonia lavinia). Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings blackish brown, marked with orange patches and with peacock-eye spots; on the fore wings two parallel orange bars cross the cell, and between them and the tip a broad bent whitish band crosses the wing, broaden- ing below and enclosing near the lower outer angle a large pea- cock-eye with a velvet-black ground; on the outer half of the hind wings are two such spots, the smaller the lower, and between FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 83 them and tlie brown margin an orange band. Under surface gray-brown, more or less ferruginous, only the markings of the fore wing repeated, the spots of the hind wing becoming small and inconspicuous ocelli. Expanse more than 2 inches. Caterpillar. — Head dark glossy brown, sprinkled with yellow tubercles, the summits crowned with an equal spine of moderate height. Body spinous, black-gray, marked with minute, black- edged orange dashes and dots transversely arranged and a pair of maculate pale stripes next the spiracles ; spines nearly as long as the segments, all furnished throughout with spinules, not stel- late, luteo-fuscons with a metallic lustre. Length H inches. Chrysalis. — Brown with dusky shades and more or less mottled and marked with black and cream color, the latter on the abdomen; tubercles and alar ridge blunt and rounded. Length 1 inch or less. The eggs, which are globose, with ten very thin high vertical ribs and dark green in color, are laid singly on the tips and nnJer side of the leaves of the food-plant and hatch in four days. The caterpillar feeds on Gerardia and a few other Scrophulariaceae, as well as on some other plants, at first upon the under surface leaving only a skeleton, afterwards openly and at all times with no web. The chrysalis hangs from seven to seventeen days, according to the season. The butterfly lives in the open country, has a strong and vigorous flight, and is a southern spe- cies, though it is seen occasionally as far north as south- ern New England and the southern edge of the Great Lakes. In the South there are several broods annually, the butterfly hibernating; in the northern ^i\i't of its range there may more probably be only two, and it is doubtful whether in the farthest points at which it is found it is indigenous, as all captures have been made late in the sea- son, perhaps the progeny of individuals which have flown far north beyond the natural limits. A single specimen was even taken by Geddes in the Rocky Mountains of Canada, to which it must certainly have flown from a dis- tant point. 84 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. 11. Genus Vanessa. VANESSA CARDUI— THE PAINTED LADY, or THISTLE BUTTERFLY. (Cyntliia cardui, Pyrameis cardai.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings blacki.sh brown, lieavily and irregularly marked with orange; apical half of fore wings uneqnally spotted with white and hind wings with a premarginal series of round black spots. Under surface of fore wings like the upper with exaggerated markings; of hind wings lieavily marbled and transversely lined with a mingling of white, oliva- ceous brown, and gray, the submarginal spots of the upper sur- face becoming more or less perfect and unequal peacock-eye ocelli, occurring in nearly all the interspaces. Expanse 2^-3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head blackish with pale hairs, not spined on summit. Body spinous, dingy olivaceous yellow, with a more or less inconspicuous delicate tracery of paler color and a mottling of velvety black, varying considerably in relative amount, and with a conspicuous infrastigmatal yellow stripe; spines, including a mediodorsal one on both first and second abdominal segments, yellowish, the spinules of the apical circlet as long as the spine below the circlet; hairs on body much more than half as long as the spines. Length \\ inches. Chrysalis. — Greenish, nacreous, or bluish white, delicately creased with black and banded with light brown or livid, the tubercles often gold-tipped; no distinct supralateral tubercle on eighth abdominal segment, and the wing tubercles blunter liuui in the other species of the genus. Length somewhat less than 1 inch. The eggs, which are barrel-shaped, a third higher than broad, with about sixteen thin high vertical ribs and pale green, are laid singly upon the npper surface of the leaves of the food-plant and hatch in from six to eight days. The caterpillar feeds upon almost any kind of thistle, which is its favorite plant, but also upon other Comj^osite plants, especially x\naphalis, and it is also partial to Mal- vaceae. On hatching the caterpillar leaves its egg-shell FAMILY BRUSH FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 85 uneaten, and after a meal or two on the parench^'ma of the upper side of the leaf 2iasses to the under surface and makes a filmy solitary nest next one of tlu' ribs, into ^vhich from time to time, as it needs to enlarge it, it weayes bitten particles of the leaf or leaf-hairs; later it makes a larger nest or tent, often at the summit of the plant, sometimes implicating seyeral of its leaves, or stretching across inequal- ities of surface in a single leaf beneath which it liyes. The chrysalis hancrs from eio'ht to fourteen days. The butter- •,00 «> fly inhabits open fields and is more nearly cosmopolitan in its distribution than any butterfly known, being found in almost eyery quarter of the globe except in South America (in the northern parts only of which is it found) and the arctic regions. It is generally regarded as single-brooded throughout the greater part of Europe, but with us, even as far north as Xew England and Canada, it is certainly double-brooded. It hibernates in the butterfly state (per- haps also some autumn chrysalids pass over the winter) and so appears early in the spring. Eggs are laid late in May and early in June; the caterpillars become fully grown between the middle of June and the end of July, and before the middle of July the first brood of butterflies makes its appearance. Eggs are again laid by the end of this month niul during August, and late in August or early in Septem- ber a second brood of butterflies appears. More than most butterflies this species is subject to extensive fluctuations in numbers, and in Europe at least has been known to migrate in vast flocks. VANESSA HUNTERA-THE PAINTED BEAUTY. (Cynthia liuntera, Pyrameis buntera, Pyrameis virginiensis, Pyrameis terpsicliore.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings much as in T". carduU excepting that the largest pale spot in the apical half of the fore wings is wliite in the male but orange in the female, and that the 86 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. premarginal series of spots on the hind wing becomes a more or less continuous band with the bhie pupil of an ocellus in two of the interspaces. The under surface of the hind wings is smoky brow'n, with a conspicuous tracery of whitish cross lines on the basal half, and a broad, irregular, mesial white band, beyond which are two moderately large, exquisitely formed, round pea- cock-eye spots. Expanse 2-2| inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, without spines on summits. Body spinous, velvety black, with delicate, transverse, yellowish lines next the incisures, and at the front base of the supralateral spines, from the second abdominal segment backward, a con- spicuous, round, silvery- white spot ; spines, including a medio- dorsal one on both first and second abdominal segments, black ; hairs short. Length 1^ inches. Chrysalis. — Didl grayish white marked with brown or oliva- ceous, sometimes golden green marked with purple, the darker markings in part forming an irregular broad band along the sides from one end of the body to the other ; tubercles orange- tipped, the supralateral series, including one on the eighth ab- dominal segment, bluntly conical. Length f inch. The eggs, which are barrel-shaped, slightly liigher than broad, with thirteen to sixteen thin high vertical ribs and yellowish green, are laid singly on the npper surface of the leaves of the food-plant and crowded down between the hairs which cover it; their period has never been re- corded. The caterpillars feed almost exclusively on Gnaphalieae, a group of Composite plants nearly allied to the thistles, and particularly on "everlasting,^^ Gnaphalium, but they have also been found on a number of other j^lants, including thistles. ,0n emerging from the egg, they bur- row beneath the silken hairs of the food-j)lant, bite them off and, miugling them with much silk, form at once a dense Avhite mat; beneath this they devour the j'^aren- chyma and then enlarge the nest, never leaving it for food but enclosing larger and larger areas, until finally many leaves are drawn together, the bitten-oif inflorescence of the Gnaphalium interwoven with the web, and a nest FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 87 formed as large as a pigeon's Qgg] only in the last few days of their life do they leave the nest and devour the entire leaf. The chrysalis, sometimes formed within the final nest, hangs from ten to twelve days. The butterfly is a vigorous flyer and is found in open fields. It is double- brooded in the North, hibernating as a butterfly and also to some extent as a chrysalis. The hibernating butterflies leave their winter quarters about the middle of May and the chrysalids give forth their contents a few weeks later; eggs are laid early in June, and from the middle of July to the end of the first week in August the butterflies of the first brood (proper) of the season make their appear- ance. Eggs are again laid in August, and the second brood of butterflies flies from the middle of September to the end of the season. As the butterfly is long-lived, indi- viduals may be seen on the wing throughout the entire season from the middle of May to the end of October. In the South the number of broods is certainly greater, and the winter is passed in the butterfly state, if not also in the chrysalis. VANESSA ATALANTA— THE RED ADMIRAL. (Cynthia atalanta, Pyrameis atalanta.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings purplish black, the fore wings with white markings at the apex as in other species of Vanessa, but also with a conspicuous, oblique, curved belt of bright orange across the middle of the wing ; hind wings mar- gined with the same. Under surface of hind wings greatly varied with marbling and transverse wavy lineation of pale brown olivaceous gray and black markings of intricate pattern, including a triangular gray patch on the middle of the costal border and a dusting of metallic green on a submargiual series of obscure dark ocelli. Expanse 2^ inches. Caterpillar. — Very similar to that of V. cardtd, including mediodorsal spines on first and second abdominal segments, but perhaps even more variable in coloring ; usually, however, more 88 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. or less of a saffron tint, the distinct light lateral band more com- monly macular than in V. cardui, the hairs notably shorter, be- ing less than half as long as the spines, and the spinules of the apical circlet not one third as long as the spine below the circlet. Length 1^ inches. Chrysalis. — Ashen brown, more or less clouded with blackish fuscous and with a dark stigmatal band, burt enlivened by some brilliant more or less golden spots and dotted with black ; tuber- cles brownish yellow except some golden ones in the constricted base of the abdomen, the supralateral series extending upon the eighth abdominal segment and sharply conical. Length more than f inch. The eggs, which are barrel- shaped with nine thin high vertical ribs and delicate green in color, are laid singly on the npper surface of the food-plant and hatch in five or six days. The caterpillar feeds on Urticaceons plants and almost exclusively on true nettle (Urtica). On quitting the Qgg the caterpillar partially devours it and then gener- ally makes its way to another leaf — by preference one of the half-opened ones at the summit of the plant — and fast- ening together different jooints of the leaf makes a canopy under which it lives, eatinsr onlv the surface of the leaf beneath the web; later it catches the outer edges of a larger leaf together with silk, and lives in the tube thus formed, devouring the lower edges until it has eaten itself out of house and home; it then forms another nest, first Ijiting the stem partly through so as to cause it to droop. The chrysalis often transforms in one of these bowers after hanging for about ten days. This butterfly, again, is an inhabitant of the oj^en field and is found all over Europe as well as North America. Its life-history is much like that of V. Mcntera, it being double-brooded and hi- bernating principally as a butterfly, but also as a chrysalis. About the second week in May the butterfly comes out of winter quarters, and by the first week in June the chrysa- lids begin to disclose their inmates, both sets of butterflies FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTEUFLIES 89 laying eggs at or about the same time, so that caterpillars may be found throughout the whole of June and the first half of July, and butterflies of the new brood emerge from the chrysalis throughout July. Eggs are laid at once, and then a fresh lot of caterpillars may be found directly the old ones have disappeared, or even before that. These develop into butterflies by the very last of August, and continue on the wing until they disappear into their win- ter hiding-places. This they do among the very last of our hibernating butterflies. Further south there are doubtless a greater number of broods. 12. Genus Aglais. AGLAIS MILBERTI— AMERICAN TORTOISE-SHELL. (Vanessa milberti, Nymphalis milberti, Vanessa furcillata.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings blackish brown with two orange fulvous spots in the cell of the fore wings and a very broad premarginal band of the same crossing both wings, on the fore wings divided at its upper extremity; a marginal series of small blue lunnles. Under surface slate-brown, the premarginal band gray-brown, crowded with cross-threads of blackish brown, the basal half with distant black cross-threads. Expanse 2 inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, with white papillae, not spined on summits. Body spinous, the spines shorter than the segments, with a mediodorsal spine on second but not on first abdominal segment ; velvety black above, profusely dotted, except on dorsal line, with whitish papillae, giving a snuff -gray appearance, green- ish yellow beneath. Length nearly 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Pale brown, everywhere creased and flecked with dark fuliginous ; or pale golden green with indistinct ferruginous creases and then marked with salmon and livid tints ; ocellar tubercles pointed, a mediodorsal tubercle on second abdominal segment, the mesothoracic prominence not compressed at tip. Length f inch. The eggs, which are barrel -shaj^ed, as broad as high, with nine or ten thin and high vertical ribs and pale grass-green, 90 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. are laid in masses close together in several superposed layers or heaps to the number of several hundred on the under side of leaves of the food-plant near the summit; they hatch in about six days. The caterpillars feed upon nettles and are social in the first half of their life, at once, without devouring the egg-shell, climbing to the summit of the 2:>lant, lining it with a web beneath which they swarm; when half grown they disperse and live more openly or in partial shelters, as where three or four may be found to- gether in incompletely closed leaves of nettle, open at tip but closed at base, by whicli a reversed pocket is formed within which they live when not feeding. The chrysalids usually hang for ten or twelve days. The butterfly has a lively flight, is found by roadsides in Canada and the North- ern United States as far south as the latitude of New York City, or higher than that in the Mississippi Valley. It is triple-brooded, hibernating in both the butterfly and the chrysalis state, in the former under piled stones. The wintering butterflies come out while the snow still lies on the ground, and in April the wintering chrysalids give birth to the enclosed butterflies which may be found on the wing through May. Eggs are first laid late in April, and by about the middle of June the butterflies from caterjiillars of the same season begin to fly; by the end of July a sec- ond, and by the first of September a third brood of butter- flies appears, though some of the later chrysalids continue ov^r the winter; even as late as November the butterfly may sometimes be seen on the wing. 13. Genus Euvanessa. EUVANESSA ANTIOPA— THE MOURNING CLOAK. (Vanessa aiitiopa.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings rich maroon, deepening into black next the straw yellow, black-dusted, outer margin, and in the black enlivened by small dashes of blue. Under surface FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 91 nearly uniform black-gray through a mingling of crowded trans- verse threads of black and blue (as seen under a lens), the broad outer margin ashen white, much flecked with brown. Expanse 3-3^ inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, not spined on summits. Body spinous, the spines much longer than the segments, but no me- diodorsal spines on either first or second abdominal segments; velvety black, sprinkled with white papillae and with a row of large mediodorsal orange spots; prolegs reddish. Length 2 inches. Chrysalis. — Dark yellow-browni marked with blackish fuscous, often with a pale bloom and tinged with roseate ; larger tubercles red-tipped ; ocellar tubercles pointed; no mediodorsal tubercle on second abdominal segment. Length 1 inch or more. The eggs are barrel-shaped, slightly higher than broad, with seven or eight thin high vertical ribs fading next base and ure of a pale yellow at first, changing to dark brown and then to inky black; they are laid in a single layer in rings encircling or nearly encircling one of the terminal twigs of the food-plant near its tip and hatch in from nine to sixteen days. The caterpillars feed principally npon willows and elm, but also on poplars and to a less extent on a number of allied plants; they are gregarious throughout life, and in feeding at first range themselves side by side in compact columns; they spin, however but little web and this merely to make a track upon the stems of the food- plant, along which they travel in a procession Avhen moving from place to place. The chrysalis state lasts from eight to sixteen days according to the season, and the butterfly is double-bfooded, hibernating in the perfect stage. The butterflies come out the first of the butterfly hibernators — any ,varm winter day may lure them — and lay eggs early in May, from w^hich a first brood of the season's butterflies springs into being very late in June or early in July; by the middle or last of July eggs are again laid, and the sec- ond brood of butterflies is on the wing early in September 92 THE COMMON Ell BUTTERFLIES. and remains on the wing until early in I^ovember. In the northern part of its range, however, as in the White Moun- tains of New Hampshire, the butterfly is single-brooded, appearing early in August. 14. Gknus Eugonia, EUGONIA J-ALBUM— THE COMPTON TORTOISE. (Vanessa j -album, Grapta j -allium, Nymphalis j -album.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings tawny orange, paling into yellow on the outer half of the wings, marked heavily with black especially on the fore wings, where three large black patches depend from the costal margin, while four smaller patches occur in the middle of the lower half of the wing ; a small white transverse bar near apex of fore wings, repeated nearer the base on the hind wing. Under surface brownish cinereous, darker on basal half, everywhere transversely streaked with dark threads or clouded with fuliginous shades ; an L-shaped white spot at apex of cell of hind wings, the lower limb subobsolete. Expanse nearly 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head lighter or darker, but dark above and crowned with prominent black spines. Body spinous, variable in color but darker above than below, and more or less green, dotted with white and with longitudinal, light-colored, often whitish, maculate stripes ; the upper spines black with rufous base, the lower lighter colored, those of the thoracic segments with no spinules on the basal half. Length l|^-2 inches. Chrysalis.— Green of various shades, often covered with a whitish bloom, sometimes clouded with brown, sometimes roseate, the tubercles in the saddle metallic golden, the meso- thoracic prominence apically compressed, a mediodorsal tubercle on second abdominal segment, the suprastigmatal tubercle on eighth abdominal segment obsolete. Length 1 inch. The eggs are doubtless laid in small clusters on the food- plant, but they have never yet been found. The caterpil- lars feed upon the white birch in company (fifteen have been found together), but no w^eb has been mentioned. The chrysalis hangs for about ten days. The butterfly is FAMILY BRUSH FOOTED BUTTERFLIES, 93 a northern species, having in eastern America ahnost precisely the range of AgJais milherti, and is fonnd in forest roads and open woodhmd. It is probably single- brooded and winters as a bntterfly, ajopearing fresh on the Aving at the very end of June and early in July, but becoming much more numerous later in the season and hibernating in October, appearing again in the early spring and laying eggs early in May. A swarm of this butterfly invaded one of the Nantucket light-houses one September night, perhaps in migration. 15. Genus Poltgonia. The butterflies of this genus may be distinguished al- most at a glance by their greatly angulated and excised wings. All are tawny-colored above, heavily spotted and, especially the hind wings, broadly bordered with black; the dark markings of the fore wings consist mainly of two stout bars depending from the costal margin and, around I he inner bar, of a series of five or six rounded spots arranged in a line bent at right angles, one limb parallel to, the other depending from, the costal margin. The species differ principally in the colorings and markings of the under surface of the hind wings. POLYGONIA PROGNE— THE GRAY COMMA. (Vanessa progne, Grapta progne, Grapta c-argenteum.) Butterfly. — Middle of outer margin of fore wings distinctly crenulate ; tail of hind wings not more than twice as long as broad ; under surface of same wings gray, traversed by trans- verse blackish threads, with sliglit greenish snbmarginal mark- ings, and a central thin silvery L, the upper limb pointed at tip. Expanse fully 2 inches. Caterpillar. — Head brown, crowned by long and slender spines having lateral spinules thrown off from the middle, and not so long as the portion of the central spine beyond them ; 94 THE COMMON Ell BUTTERFLIES. body spinous, yellowish brown, uniformly variegated above with blaekisli olivaceous ; spines mostly black. Length more than 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Greatly variegated with buff, olive-green, brown, white and salmon-red; ocellar tubercles equal on basal half, con- ical beyond, the notch between them broader than deep ; largest abdominal tubercles not very much larger than tlie others. Length nearly 1 inch. Tlie eggs, which are pale green, barrel-shaped and ribbed, are laid singly on the upper surface of the leaves of the food-plant and hatch in four or five days. The caterpillar feeds openly on species of Kibes (currant, gooseberry, etc.) and probably other Grossulaceae and will eat elm. The chrysalis state varies from ten to sixteen days and has been known to be as short as seven. The butterfly is a northern species, hardly occurring south of lat. 40", is fond of lanes and the vicinity of barns, and is greatly ad- dicted to the moisture from drying fruit. It is double- brooded, hibernating as a butterfly, coming out in March, laying eggs about the middle of May, and continuing on the wing into June. At the very eaid of June or early in July the new butterflies begin to appear, lay eggs the same month, and the second brood, which is the more abundant, comes upon the stage in the latter part of August and early in September; very few have not sought their winter quarters by the middle of October. POLYGONIA FAUNUS— THE GREEN COMMA. (Grapta faunus, Vanessa f annus, Nymphalis f annus.) Butterfly. — Middle of outer margin of fore wings conspicuous- ly crenate ; tail of hind wings not more than twice as long as broad ; under surface of same wings dark gray- brown, much enlivened by green and ashen along the outer third, especially in the male, and with a central, heavy, silvery comma with expand- ed tips. Expanse fully 2 inches. Caterpillar.— Head black with a pale W on the front, crowned FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 9.5 by not very long black spines. Body spinous, brownish yellow, with a large dorsal white patch on posterior half of body in strik- ing contrast to the rest ; spines white. Length 1} inches. Clirysalis. — Pale wood-brown, streaked with dusky green ; ocellar tubercles equal on basal half, conical beyond, the notch between them deeper than broad ; largest tubercles of abdominal segments not very much larger than the others. Length nearly 1 inch. The grass-green, barrel-shaped, ribbed eggs are laid singly on the upper surface of the leaves of the food-plant and hatch in one week. The caterpillar feeds principally on willow and black birch, but has also been taken on alder, currant, and wild gooseberry; it does not devour its egg-shell on hatching, but immediately crawls to the under side of the leaf, otherwise living openly and making no sort of nest. The chrysalis state lasts from eight to fifteen days. The butterfly is a northern species, not occurring in the east south of Massachusetts (except along the Ap- palachians), though in the Mississip23i Valley it comes as far south as Iowa and northern Nebraska. It is very active in its movements, partial to roadw^ays, especially through the forest, and although on the wing the entire summer appears to be only single-brooded. It hibernates as a butterfly and lays eggs in the latter half of May and throughout June, and about the middle of July the brood of butterflies of the season appears while some of the hibernators are still on the wing; butterflies continue to emerge from the chrysalis for a month, and it is not until the middle of October that they have all retired to winter quarters. POLYGONIA COMMA— THE HOP MERCHANT. (Vanessa comma, Grapta couiina, Vanessa c-album, Grapta dryas, Nymphalis dryas.) Butterfly. — Middle of the outer margin of fore wings distinctly crenate ; tail of hind wings not more than twice as long as broad; 96 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. under surface of same wings dark brown on basal half, lighter brown (more or less cinereous in the male) on apical half, consider- able variegated (especially in the male) and traversed by short transverse threads of darker brown throughout, with a central lieavy silvery comma expanded at tlie ends. Expanse 2-2^ inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, more or less faced with green, crowned by stout and not very long black spines, the spinules of which, emitted from the middle, are about as long as the part of the spine beyond them. Body spinous, varying in different in- dividuals from green to dark brown, in the latter case light below, and transversely and narrowly lined with lighter colors above ; spines pellucid. Length 1 inch. Chrysalis, — Pale wood-brown, tinged and streaked with pale green ; ocellar tubercles conical throughout, the largest abdominal tubercles strikingly larger than the others, mesothoracic tubercle triangular, on side view. Length nearly 1 inch. The pale green, barrel-shaped, ribbed eggs are laid singly or more commonly in columns of from two to nine upon the under surface or stems of the leaves of the food-plant and hatch in four or five days. The caterpillars feed on Urticaceous plants, particularly on the hop, to which they are sometimes destructive. The top Qgg of the column hatches first and the rest in succession down, or rather up, the column ; the eggs are not eaten and the caterpillar is strictly solitary, two being rarely found on one leaf ; at first it lives openly, but later in life it draws together the edges of the leaf on the under side of which it is living, sufficiently to protect it from sight and the weather, emerging from it at night to feed. The chrysalis generally hangs from seven to eleven days, but late in the season the time is sometimes prolonged to eighteen days. The butterfly is wary and active, inhabits the open country, fields, etc., and is double- brooded. The butterfly hibernates and is on the wing from March to May and sometimes early June, lays eggs on the tender leaves as soon as they burst, and the first fresh but- terflies of the season appear at the end of June and fly through August. Eggs are again laid late in July and FAMILY BRUSn-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 97 iu August and the butterflies of the second brood appear tlie last week in August ; they have all or almost all gone into winter quarters before October. There are two ver}^ distinct forms of this butterfly, one (dryas) with the upper surface of the hind wings much darker than the other (harrisii) ; most of the first brood are of the former, most of the second of the latter, but not in- variably. POLYGONIA INTERROGATIONIS.— THE VIOLET TIP. (Vanessa interrogationis, Grapta interrogationis, Grapta fabricii, Grapta iimbrosa.) Butterfly. — Middle of outer margin of fore wings scarcely crenulate; tail of hind wings several times longer than broad; under surface of same wings highly variegated with patches and transverse stripes of various shades of ferruginous brown and ochraceous in the male, nearly uniform reddish brown in the female, in both with a central silver*reversed semicolon. Ex- panse 2^-3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head lighter or darker brown, crowned by moderately stout spines, the lateral spinules of which are emitted from below the middle. Body spinous, castaneous, uniformly flecked with light dots so distributed as to form longitudinal faintly oblique stripes on each segment ; spines luteous or rufous. Length nearly \^ inches. Chrysalis. — Various shades of w-ood-brown tinged with oliva- ceous, with a fine web of brown in impressed lines, the tubercles of the saddle nacreous; ocellar tubercles conical throughout, the larger abdominal tubercles strikingly larger than the others, mesothoracic tubercle quadrate as seen from the side. Length nearly 1 inch. The bluish-green, barrel-shaped, ribbed eggs are laid on the under surface of the leaves of the food-plant, either singly or in columns of from three to eight, and hatch in from three to eleven days according to the season. The caterpillars feed upon Urticaceous jolants of which hop and elm are the favorites, and also upon linden. They are 98 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. partially gregarious, several being often found in a loose company; they rarely seek concealment, though they some- times do so after the manner of P. comma. The chrysalis hangs from seven to twenty-six days according to the sea- son and locality. The butterfly is a southern species rarely found north of the Canadian border. In the northern part of its range it is double-brooded, but at least triple-brooded in the Southern States, probably everywhere hibernating as a butterfly ; in the region with which w^e are concerned it leaves its winter quarters early in May and flies until the early part or middle of June, laying eggs late in May and early in June. The first brood of the season's butter- flies aj^pears early in July or the last days of June and con- tinues flying until the middle of August ; the second brood appears toward the last of August and continues to emerge from the chrysalis even into October. This butterfly is dimorphic in much the same way as P. co?n7na,one form (umbrosa) having the upjoer surface of the hind wings much darker than the other (fabricii), but differing also in the form of the wings ; as in P. comma the butterflies of the first brood are mostly of the dark type, but those of the second invariably, or with very rare excep. tions, of the lighter type. Other species of this genus occurring- in our district are P. gracili\ at the White Mountains of New Hampshire and northwestward ; an(^ P. satyrus, a Pacific coast species occasionally found in southern Canada. TRIBE SOVEREIGNS. 16. Genus Basilarchia. BASILAECHIA ARTHEMIS— THE BANDED PURPLE. (Limenitis arthemis, Nymphalis arthemis, Nymphalis lamina.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings velvety chocolate-black, with a broad white bow crossing both wings just beyond the middle. Under surface very dark brown, with a similar bow, a FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 99 few black-bordered orange spots at the base, and a premarginal series of plain orange spots, besides a double series of crenulate blue lines, next outer margin. Expanse nearly 3 inches. Caterpillar. — Head dark drab, tuberculate, the summits crovvjied with a large tubercle, rounded at tip but with raised points ; the principal tubercle behind it tumid, but little higher than broad. Body naked, humped, and irregularly tuberculate, of various shades of green, especially olive, with a dorsal patch of pal 3 butf; a pair of long, clubbed, prickly tubercles on second thoracic segment; not more than about twenty minute smooth warts on any one segment above the spiracles. Length nearly \\ inches. Chrysalis. — Varying from creamy white to silvery gray, the wings margined with greenish brown, the body grotesquely streaked; basal wing-tubercle produced to a minute, backward- directed point; tail-piece, seen from above, less than twice as long as its width at apex. Length nearly 1 inch. The eggs, which are globular, pitted, studded with short filaments, and grayish green, are laid singly on the upper surface of the extreme ti^^s of the pointed leaves of the food-plant, leaves on young plants, only a few feet above the ground, being usually selected; they hatch in from seven to nine days. The caterpillars usually feed upon black and yellow birch, preferably the former, willow and poplar, but have also been found on shadbush and some other plants. As soon as it has hatched the young cater- pillar devours its ^gg, and then begins to feed upon the leaf upon which it was born, beginning at the extreme tip, but always leaving the midrib untouched as it proceeds toward the base; when resting after a meal, it always takes its station on the stripped midrib, to which it fastens with much silk minute bits of leaf to strengthen it; and like all the other species of the genus it makes while young a loose ball of the size of a small pea out of bitten scraps of leaf held together by a few strands of silk and hangs it by a thread or two to the stripped midrib, so that it is moved by every breath of wind — a device, perhaps, to 100 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. distract from itself the attention of an enemy; for, by con- stant removals, it is always kept close to the eaten edge of tlie leaf, while its own perch is as far out on the stripped midrib as it can find a good footing. After the second moult it pays no further attention to this packet, and retires for its siesta to the leaf-stalk or neighboring twig, but it does not quit its feeding spot until the leaf, always excepting the midrib, is almost or quite devoured, when it passes to a neighboring leaf. The chrysalis state lasts from nine to fourteen, usually ten to twelve, days. The butter- fly, one of our most striking species, is a northern form, hardly occurring, except in elevated regions, south of New Hampshire, and frequents shaded roads, particularly in the forest. It is perhaps as a rule single-brooded, though a second brood, feeble in numbers, is known to occur; the first brood appears in the latter half of June and remains upon the wing until early in August; the second brood, when it appears, comes very late in August and early in September. The insect hibernates as a half-grown cater- pillar, and to do this constructs, like all the si^ecies of the genus, a singular hibernaculum : selecting a growing leaf of its food-plant, it eats away the apical third or fourth, excepting the midrib and a narrow flange on each side of it; or it uses the leaf it has been eating, already trimmed in this fashion; it then draws together, above, the outer edges of the uneaten portion to construct a tube, which it lines very heavily with brown silk, within and without; further than this, it binds the leaf-stalk to the stem with repeated windings of silk to prevent its falling to the ground in the winter; by means of the ledge formed by the projecting midrib, it then enters its tube head foremost and com- pletely fills it, so that the 02:)ening is just closed by the roughened end of the body. In the spring it quits its winter home as soon as the first tender leaves have appeared. A form called proserpina, a hybrid between this species FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. lOl and the next, but more nearly resembling the latter with more or less distinct traces of the white bow peculiar to the former, is found at places along the southern limit of B. artliemis; by some it is regarded as a dimorphic form of the present species. BASILARCHIA ASTYANAX— THE RED-SPOTTED PURPLE. (Limenitis astyanax, Nymplialis epliestion, Nymphalis Ursula, Limenitis ursula.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings blackish, the outer third of the hind wings with three series of pale blue or green spots, the inner of variable width and sometimes suffusing nearly the whole wing, at least in some lights. Under surface brown, with a double submarginal series of blue lunulate lines, a submarginal series of orange spots in a black setting, and a few black-edged orange spots at the base. Expanse 3-4 inches. Caterpillar. — Head brownish red, tuberculate, the summits crowned with a large nearly spherical tubercle with small pro- jections. Body naked, humped and irregularly tuberculate, strangely streaked, blotched and mottled with brown, olivaceous, and creamy tints ; a pair of long, clubbed, and prickly blackish tubercles on second thoracic segment ; considerably more than twenty minute smooth warts on most segments above the spiracles. Length \\ inches. Chrysalis. — Grotesquely variegated with patches and streaks of pale salmon, dark olivaceous, inky plumbeous, and yellow- brown, the lighter tints prevailing; basal wing-tubercle rounded or partially suppressed; tail- piece, seen from above, less than twice as long as its width at apex. Length nearly 1 inch. The eggs, which are globular, pitted, briefly filamentous, and bright yellowish green, are laid as in the last species, but their duration has not been definitely ascertained. The caterpillar is polyphagons, but seems to prefer Eosaceons plants, especially Prunus, Crataegus, and Pyrus; its habits are precisely those of the preceding species in every par- ticular mentioned above. The chrysalis hangs for ten or 102 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. twelve days. The butterfly is somewhat of a forest species like the last, but not to so considerable a degree, is often found in orchards, and is strangely attracted by a manure- heap. It is a southern species having its northern limits at just about the southern extension of the preceding species. In the north it appears to be partly single-, joartly double-brooded, some caterpillars from the first eggs of the season going into their hibernacula when half grown, others continuing to feed, changing to chrysalis and pro- ducing a new brood of butterflies late in the season; these lay eggs, the caterpillars from which enter their hiber- nacula and in tlie next season develop into butterflies side by side with those from the first brood. The butterflies of the first brood appear in the northern part of their range, i.e., in our district, about the middle of June, continue to emerge from the chrysalis for a month and are still to be seen early in August, about the middle of which month the second, less abundant brood appears and flies through September. In the South this butterfly is mimicked by the female of Semnopsyclie diana. BASILARCHIA ARCHIPPUS— THE VICEROY. (Limenitis archippus, Limenitis misippus, Limenitis disippus ) Butterfly. — Wings orange with heavy black veins, a broad black outer border enclosing a row of white spots (beneath, a doable series of white lunules), a triangular black spot enclosing two white spots and ending in a streak across the fore wings beyond the middle, and, on tlie hind wings, a heavy, curved, black, extramesial line. Expanse 3-3J inches. Caterpillar. — Head reddish brown, tuberculate, the summits crowned with a large tubercle heavily denticulate at tip, the principal tubercle behind it denticle-shaped, many times higher than broad. Body naked, humped, and irregularly tuberculate, dark olivaceous, often tinged with brownish yellow, and with a cream-colored ragged-edged patch on top of middle abdominal FAMILY BRUSH-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 103 segments ; a pair of long, clubbed, and prickly tubercles on second thoracic segment; not more than about twenty minute, smooth warts on any one segment above the spiracles. Length more than 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Strangely streaked and blotched with blackish green, yellowish brown, pale salmon, and plumbeous, lightest on the abdomen; tail-piece, viewed from above, twice as long as its apical width. Length nearly 1 inch. The eggs, wliicli are globular, pitted, briefly filameutous, and deep green, are laid as in the other species, but occasionally also on the under surface of the leaf, and hatch in from four to eight days. The caterpillar feeds upon various Salicaceae, particularly willow and poplar; its habits are precisely like those of the other species as recorded above, but it is remarkable that, being everywhere at least double-brooded, the caterpillars of the first brood never form hibernacula, so that we have here an instinct inherited only by alternate generations. The chrysalis hangs from seven to ten days. The butterfly lives in the open country and is widespread; as stated above, it is double-brooded, and probably in the Southern States there is a third brood, which may perhaps sometimes appear as a supplementary feeble brood further north. About the latitude of central New England the first butterflies, from the caterpillars which have hibernated in their first or second, rarely their third, stage, appear the first week in June, continue to emerge throughout this month and begin to lay eggs about a fortnight after they first apj)ear; the second brood appears about the middle of July, while many of the butterflies of the first brood are still on the wing; as butterflies are still to be found laying eggs late in August and even in September, there may possibly be a third brood. This butterfly has a special interest from its remarkable departure in coloring and pattern from the other species 104 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. of the genus, thereby mimicking to an extraordinary degree the general appearance of Anosia jjlexipjms. TRIBE EMPERORS. 17. Genus Anaea. ANilA ANDRIA— THE GOAT-WEED BUTTERFLY. (Papliia glycerium, Papliia troglodyta.) Butterfly. — Fore wings falcate, hind wings tailed. Upper sur- face either dark orange, margined feebly with brown (male) or paler orange, heavily margined with brown, and with a very irregular, broad, paler band edged with dark brown crossing both wings (female). Under surface nearly uniform dry-leherical, with twenty- four prominent vertical ribs, are laid singly upon the upper surface of leaves. The caterpillar feeds uj)on various mal- lows : Sida, Malva, Althaea, and Abutilon. In summer the chrysalis state lasts from eight to twelve days. Another species of Hesperia, H. centaureae, a high boreal and cir- cumpolar form, has been taken in one or two instances in the extreme east of our district even as far south as West Virginia. Other genera of Larger Skippers found in our district are Eudamus, with one species, E. proteus, a tropical type occasionally found on the Atlantic border as far north as New York ; Achalarus, represented by A. lycidas, a southern form which has been occasionally taken in Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, and southern New England ; and Rhabdoides, with one species, R. cellus, again a southern type which is, found at least as far north as West Virginia and Kentucky. TRIBE SMALLER SKIPPERS. 54. Genus Ancyloxipha. ANCYLOXIPHA NUMITOR— THE LEAST SKIPPER. (Thymelicus numitor, Heteropterus marginatus.) Butterfly. — Antennal club with no recurved hook at tip Upper surface of wings tawny, very broadly bordered with dark FAMILY SKIPPERS. 167 brown, the fore wings so broadly as to be almost wholly brown ; male with no discal dash. Under surface golden tawny, all but the broad costal and outer margins of fore wings blackish fuligi- nous. Expanse about 1 inch. Caterpillar. — Head blackish brown. Body naked, pale green- ish yellow, dotted with fuscous, the thoracic shield brownish fuscous (immature ; full grown caterpillar unknown). Chrysalis. — Reddish ash color, minutely sprinkled with brown dots, the tongue-case reaching the base of the tail-piece. Known from all but the northernmost portions of our district, northern New England and the Eastern Provinces; it occurs in the vicinity of running water and in marshy meadows and flies in a lancruid leisurelv manner close to the ground. It is triple-brooded and passes the winter either as a mature caterpillar or as a chrysalis; probably the latter. The butterflies come early in June and disap- pear before the end of the month; again late in July, dis- appearing by the middle of August or soon after it; and once more in the last week of xlugust, flying nearly to the end of September. The eggs, which are low hemispheri- cal, smooth and shining yellow, afterward orange-red, are laid singly and hatchi in from five to ten days according to the season. The caterpillar feeds upon common grasses, probably in nature upon some semiaquatic species; when first hatched it makes a nest in a blade of grass by pulling the edges partially together with five or ten strong strands of silk, broadest at their bases, and lives behind the strands; later it fills in the interstices with a finer web. The chrysalis state in summer lasts in Georgia about ten days. 55. Genus Atrytone. ATRYTONE ZABULON— THE MORMON. (Pamphila zabulon, Hesperia hobomok, Hesperia pocahontas.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings blackish brown, heavily marked centrally with tawny, forming on the hind wings a large, central, more or less angular patch, on the fore wings a number 168 THE COMMONER BUTTEHFLIES. of irregular and very unequal spots in the interspaces ; male with no discal dash. Under surface dark cinnamon-brown, on the outer margin flecked with lilac, and centrally marked heavily with lemon-tawny as above, but the markings on the fore wings are blended with an oblique black line at the end of the cell, and on the hind wings form a definite transverse band abruptly and considerably broadened in the middle. Expanse about If inches. Caterpillar. — Head dark ferruginous, scabrous. Body naked, briefly pilose, yellowish brown, with dark dorsal and lateral lines and dotted with fuscous ; a narrow, interrupted, fuscous thoracic shield, in front of which the segment is greenish. Length f inch. Chrysalis. — Uniformly livid, somewhat infuscated on head and thorax, the appendages with a whitish bloom ; tongue-case ex- tending to the eighth abdominal segment. Length nearly | inch. This butterfly is found throughout our district, in meadows, flying swiftly and abruptly, close to the ground. It is single-brooded and passes the winter sometimes as a full-grown caterpillar, sometimes as a chrysalis. The but- terfly appears the last week in May, becomes abundant early in June, and disappears before the end of that month. The eggs, which are smooth, hemispherical, and of a very pale green color, are laid singly and hatch in from eleven to thirteen days. The caterpillar feeds on grasses; it is a long time, sometimes several days, in making its exit from the shell, which it then devours and next proceeds to make a rude nest near the joint of a blade of grass by drawing the edges nearly together by silken threads; if at any time it is at all disturbed, it quits its habitation and makes a new nest, occupying much time in its construction, the edges of the blade being drawn closer and closer by contiinially shorten- ing threads; when about to change to chrysalis, it forms a tube for its concealment by uniting adjoining grass-blades and lines the cavity closely with silk. The female of this species is dimorphic, one form re- sembling the male in color, the other (pocahontas) melanic, all the darker markings being extended and the briclitor ones obscured. FAMILY SKIPPERS. 169 Another species of this genus, A. lagan, a southern form, is found over nearly the same parts of our district as A. zabulon, but is far less abundant, though it is not uncommon in the West and especially be- yond the Mississippi ; and another species, found in New Jersey and described under the name of Paiiiphila aaroni, is said to be closely allied to these two species and may belong in the same genus. 56. Genus Erynnis. ERYNNIS SASSACUS— THE INDIAN HESPERID. (Hesperia sassacus, Pamphila sassacus.) Butterfly, — Upper surface of wings tawny, the outer margin of the fore wings and all the margins of the hind wings heavily bor- dered with blackish brown, the bordering of the fore wings in- dented beyond the cell as if to receive the dark longitudinal patch lying just outside it ; discal dash of the male velvety black, slender, slightly arcuate, tapering a little at each end. Under surface pale greenish buff, the markings of the fore wings ob- scurely traced, and beyond the middle of the hind wings a faint bent row of five not very large, square, pallid spots. Expanse about If inches. Caterpillar and Chrysalis uudescribed. This butterfly is found everywhere in the southern half of our district in fields and meadows. It is single-brooded and probably winters as a chrysalis. The butterfly appears about the last of May and disappears by the middle of July. The eggs, which are smooth, hemispherical, and almost chalk-white when laid, become dirty yellow afterwards; they are laid singly and hatch in about twelve or fifteen days. The cater2:>illar is very plump at birth and feeds on grasses, — Panicum and doubtless others; it is very sluggish and less cleanly than others of the tribe and makes, at least at first, scarcely an apology for a nest, living near the joints of grasses where the blade embraces the stem. Several other species of this genus are found in our district : E. manitoba, sparingly in its northernmost limits ; E. metea, known only in a few localities in southern New England and in Wisconsin ; E. attains, a southern species occasionally occurring in our southern borders ; and E. uncas, which has been taken in Pennsylvania and extends to Colorado. 170 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. 57. Genus Anthomaster. ANTHOMASTER LEONARDUS— LEONARD'S HESPERID. (Pampliila leonardus.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings dark brown, the fore wings with an extramesial series of tawny spots, all but the uppermost large ; discal dash of male black, largest and arcuate at base, very long and slender ; hind wings with a moderately broad ex- tramesial pale tawny band, crossed by dark nervures. Under surface cinnamoneous, the markings of the upper side repeated but paler, on the hind wings white and the band narrowed, lengthened, and more definite. Expanse more than 1| inches. Caterpillar. — Head black. Body naked, briefly pilose, pale green dotted with black, the thoracic shield fuscous with black margins (immature ; full-grown caterpillar unknown). Chrysalis. — Unknown. Found throughout most or all of our district in open country, but unrecorded from Minnesota and Wisconsin, eastern Maine and eastward. It hibernates as a partly-grown caterpillar, possibly before moulting, and is single-brooded, flying at the end of August and in September. The eggs, which are high hemispherical, smooth and white, are laid upon the blades of the food-plant singly and hatch in from fifteen to twenty days. The caterpillar feeds upon Agrostis and doubtless other grasses, wandering about the blades in the autumn and constructing then no nest of any kind. 58. Genus Polites. POLITES PECKIUS— THE YELLOW-SPOT. (Pamphila peckius, Hesperia wamsutta.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings dark brown, marked with tawny in an extramesial series of elongate spots, reduced to dots and removed outwardly beyond the cell of the fore wings, and crossing but half of the hind wings ; discal dash of male velvety black, sinuous and interrupted before the middle. Under surface cinnamoneous, the markings of the fore wings repeated in yellow, on the hind wings consisting of a very large and very irregular FAMILY SKIPPERS. Ill polypoid patch of lively yellow, made up of an oblique basal and a very broad transverse extramesial band which is abruptly broadened in the middle and thus blends with the basal band. Expanse li inches. Caterpillar. — Head piceous, rugulose. Body naked, briefly pilose, pale brown, thickly dotted with inky black, giving the whole a griseous appearance ; a blackish dorsal line ; thoracic shield broad and black (immature ; full-grown caterpillar un- known). Chrysalis. — Unknown. Found everywhere in our district in open country, and one of our commonest butterflies. It probably hibernates either as a full-grown caterpillar or as a chrysalis; it is single-brooded in the northernmost parts of our district, flying from the last of June to the middle of August, while in the other portions it is double-brooded, flying first from the end of May to the middle of July or later, and again in August and September. The eggs, which are smooth, hemispherical, at first white with a greenish tinge, after- wards decorated with coarse red dendritic markings, are laid singly and hatch in from ten to fifteen days according to the season. The caterjiillar feeds on grasses and is very uneasy, roaming about a great deal, making very slight and delicate nests, otherwise similar to those of its allies, and is easily alarmed. 59. Genus Thymeltcus. THYMELICTJS MYSTIC— THE LONG-DASH. (Hesperia mystic, Pamphila mystic.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of fore wings tawny, brightest in the male, with a very broad outer margin of dark brown and two large dark patches, one just beyond the tip of the cell, the other beneath it at the base ; discal dash of male very slender, slightly arcuate, blackish brown, followed below by a rather large, rounded, soft brown patch ; hind wings dark brown with an equal, sliort, oxtrnmesial tawny band and a tawny spot at base. 172 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. Under surface orange buff (male) or tawny cinnamoneous (female), often infuscated, the brighter markings of the upper surface vaguely repeated and paler, the band of the hind wings generally indistinct in the male. Expanse H inches. Caterpillar. — Head reddish brown. Body naked, briefly pilose, dull brownish green, sprinkled with darker dots and having a dark dorsal line ; thoracic shield brownish black, in front of it dirty white. Length 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Unknown. This butterfly is undoubtedly found over the whole of our district, though it is recorded from few localities in the West; it frequents open grassy fields, and hibernates as a caterj^illar; it appears to be single-brooded ^n the northern- most parts of its range, flying toward the end of June; but over most of our district it is double-brooded, first appear- ing very early in June or even late in May and rarely flying into July, and being again on the wing from the middle of July to September; but probably in somewhat scantier numbers, for some of the caterpillars of the first brood, though full fed, have not changed to chrysalis when winter appears, when the caterpillars of the second brood are partly grown. The eggs are smooth, hemispherical, and very pale green, are laid singly very lightly affixed to grass- blades^ and hatch in from eight to fourteen days, accord- ing to place and season. ' The caterpillar feeds on grasses, does not devour its forsaken egg-shell, and makes a tubular nest of grass-blades, to which it retires on the slightest alarm; it is firmly constructed of many blades and many threads and the interstices covered with a gauze-like open framework. Other species of this genus found in our district are T. aetna, a southern species not very uncommon as far north as Canada ; and T. hrettus, known mostly from the southern coast, but extending northward into Connecticut, and reported also from Wisconsin. FAMILY SKIPPERS. 173 60. Genus Limochores. LIMOCHORES TAUMAS— THE TAWNY-EDGED SKIPPER. (Pamphila cernes, Hesperia aliaton.) Butterfly. — Upper surface of wings dark brown, the fore wings with a large costal bright tawny patch (male), or an obscure tawny streak along outer half of cell (female), the female with an extramesial series of three upper small yellow dashes and two or three lower large squarish yellow spots, sometimes found indi- cated in the male ; discal dash of male black, sinuous, heavy. Under surface rather dark brown, flecked uniformly on hind wings with greenish yellow giving a grayish oli\aceous effect, the lighter markings of fore wings repeated. Expanse scarcely \\ inches. Caterpillar. — Head black, coarsely punctured. Body naked, briefly pilose, rich purplish brown with a green tinge, finely mottled with gray and dark purplish brown ; first thoracic segment milk-white above, the shield piceous. Length 1 inch. Chrysalis. — Light brown with slight and delicate infuscations, the thorax darker, the head black, the whole dotted sparsely with fusco-ferruginous; surface vermiculate; tongue reaching the eighth abdominal segment. Length fully \ inch. EveryAvhere a common insect in open fields. It hiber- nates in the chrysalis and is single-brooded in the north- ernmost parts of our district, flying late in June and in July; but double-brooded over most of it, the first brood ap2:)earing the last week in May, abundant in June, and seen in scanty numbers all through July ; the second brood, less abundant than the first (probably because some chrys- alids of the first brood winter over), appearing pretty early in August and flying through Se23tember. The eggs, which are smooth, hemispherical, and pale green, are attached lightly and singly to grass-blades and hatch in from eleven to fifteen days. The caterpillars feed upon grasses, such as Panicnm and Triticum, and are indolent, passive, and timorous, feeding only by day, rarely leaving their nests and then going but a little distance. For 174 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. change to chrysalis they make a light, nearly erect cocoon about an inch long by catching a few blades of grass together and lining them with silk. Other sjDecies of tliis genus found in our territory are L. himacula and L. manataaqua, both found throughout its southern half and tolerably common; L. pontiac, found in the same places but much rarer, commoner in the West than in the East; and L. palatka, found only in the West — Nebraska, Illinois, and Indiana — and little known. A number of other genera of the Smaller Skippers are found in our district, some of them not uncommonly, but they are mostly obscure forms and their distribution imperfectly known, and they have there- fore been omitted from consideration. Such are Oarisma, with one species, 0. jiowesliiek, a western form found in northern Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, and westward; Potanthus, represented by P. omaTia, known only from West Virginia and Colorado; Pamphila, a highly interesting type with one species, A. man dan, found in the high north and invading our northern border; Amblyscirtes, with two species, A. vialis, found sparingly over all our region, and A. samosei, known mostly from New England but also from as far west as Iowa and south as Georgia; Poanes, with a single conspicuously marked species, P. massasoit, occurring here and there in the southern half of our district; Phycanassa, with one species, P. mator, a southern form which has once or twice occurred far north at widely separated local- ities; Hylephila, represented by H. phylaeus, a very abundant south- ern type which occasionally invades our southern borders, even as far as southern New England; Atalopedes, with one species, A. huron, a southern form reaching northward over half of our district; Euphyes, with three species : E. metacomet, found over all but the extreme east- ern part of our district and sometimes pretty common; E. mrna, which ranges nearly as far and is rarer; and E. osyka, a southern species which has been taken in northern Indiana; Lerodea, one species of which, L.. fusca, a southern form, is said to be common about Phil- adelphia, Penn. ; Prenes, with two species, P. ocola and P. panoquin, both southern types but occasionally taken in our district, the former in Indiana and Pennsylvania, the latter in New Jersey; Calpodes, with one species, C etliliits, a tropical form which has been once taken in New York; Oligoria, represented by 0. maculata, a southern type also once taken in New York; and finally Lerema, represented by two species, L. accius, a southern coast species occurring rarely as far north as Massachusetts, and L Jdanna, which has been found in scanty numbers from Massachusetts to Nebraska. EXPLANATION OF SOME TERMS. ' 175 EXPLANATION OF SOME TERMS. Other words are explained by the context. Acutangulate: forming less than a right angle. \nal angle (of the wing) : see Figure, p. 60. Antennae (of the butterfly) : the two long slender rods pro- jecting from the top of the head. Armature (of the legs) : the corneous attachments or ap- pendages, spines, claws, etc. iVtavistic : pointing backward to ancestry. Bifurcate : with two prongs. Blind (said of ocelli on wings) : with no pupil. Border and Margin are used interchangeably. Cell, or Discoidal cell: see Figure, p. 60. Coronal: at the summit. Corneous : of a horny texture. Costa or Costal margin : see Figure, p. 60. Costal vein : see Figure, p. 60. Crenate : wavy or scalloped. Crenulate : the same, but to a less degree. Cycle : regularly recurring series. Denticulate: covered with tooth-like points, or with a toothed margin. Dimorphic : appearing under two distinct forms. Discal dash or stigma: a small spot (peculiar to the male of some Hair-Streaks and Skippers) on the fore wings, at the end of the cell. Discoidal cell : see Figure, p. 60. Disk : central portion of the wing. Dorsal shield (of the caterpillar) : the thickened plate on top of first thoracic segment. Emargination : a notch or rounded excision. 176 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. Entire (of a margin) : whole and even. Environment : surroundings and their influence. Eversible : capable of being turned inside out. Extramesial : beyond the middle. Falcate : sickle-shaped, convex on one side, concave on the other. Fenestrate: resembling a window or opening. Frontal triangle (of the caterpillar) : the large triangular piece on the face. Granulated : covered with small, grain-like elevations. Hemisphere (of the caterpillar): one lateral half of the head. Hibernaculum : wintering nest of the caterpillar. Incisures : impressed lines, separating the segments of the body. Infralateral: just below the lateral line or a line midway between the middle of the back and the spiracles. Infrastigmatal : just below the spiracles, or the spiracle- line. Inner margin (of the wing) : see Figure, p. 60. Intergrades : forms intermediate between others. Internal vein : see Figure, p. 60. Interspace : space between two adjoining nervules. Intramesial: before the middle. Irrorate: bedewed or uniformly sprinkled. Isotherm: line of equal temperature. Lateral (of the caterpillar) : along a line midway between the middle of the back and the spiracles. Sometimes applied loosely to the sides in general. Laterodorsal : situated midway between the lateral and mediodorsal (which see). Lunulate : in the form of lunules or moon-shaped crescents. Mandibles (of the caterpillar) : the biting jaws. Margin and Border are used interchangeably. Median vein : see Figure, p. 60. EXPLANATION OF SOME TERMS. 177 Mediodorsal : lying along the middle line of the back. Mesial (of the wing) : along the middle. Obsolete: very nearly or quite wanting. Ocellar tubercles (of the chrysalis) : the prominences aris- ing from the region of the e3'es. Ocelli (of the caterpillar) : the simple eyes, each composed of a single facet. Ocelli (of the wing) : eye-like spots. Onisciform : shaped like a wood-louse (Oniscus), or slug- shaped, i.e., flattened beneath and more or less ovate in outline. Outer angle (of the fore w'ing) : the angle at the lower limit of the outer margin. Outer margin: see Figure, p. 60. Papillae : small, pimple-like elevations. Papillate : covered with papillae. Parenchyma : the softer cellular tissue of a leaf. Pilose: covered with a nap of short hairs. Polymorphic : appearing under many different forms. Polyphagous: feeding on many different plants, omnivo- rous. Prebasal (of the wing) : next but not at the base. Precostal vein : see Figure, p. 60. Premarginal: just before the margin (especially outer margin). Process : any projecting appendage or part. Produced: extended. Kectangulate : forming a right angle. Saddle (of the chrysalis) : the depressed part of the back at the base of the abdomen. Shield: see Dorsal shield. Stigma: see Discal dash or stigma. Stigmata: spiracles or breathing-pores. Stigmatal : along the line of the spiracles. Sub- (as a prefix) signifies nearly, as subglobular = nearly globular. 178 THE COMMONER BUTTERFLIES. Subcostal vein : see Figure^ p. GO. Submarginal : next to but not on the margin; usually ap- plied to the outer margin. Submedian vein : see Figure, p. GO. Subobsolete: present, but faint, nearly obsolete. Snpralateral : just above the lateral line, or a line midway between the middle of the back and the spiracles. Tectate: inclined obliquely on opposite sides, like the roof of a tent. Thoracic sliield: see Dorsal shield. Tiarate: shaped like a turban. Trimorphic: appearing under three distinct forms. Tubercles: see Wing-tubercles. Vermiculate: resembling interlacing worm-tracks. AVing-tubercles (of the clirysalis) : elevations at the base of the wing-cases; the front one, when there are two, is distinguished as the basal wing-tubercle. APPENDIX. INSTRUCTIONS FOR COLLECTING, REARING, PRESERVING, AND STUDYING. (From the author's " Butterflies, their Structure," etc. ; with slight clianges.) Happily the time is past Avhen butterfly-collectors de- vote their entire attention to the perfect insect. They at least rear them from the caterpillar or chrysalis to obtain fresher and more beautiful specimens for their cabinets ; and it is to be hoped that any young enthusiasts who may use this book will be quite as ready to collect, preserve, and study the earlier stages as the full-grown insect. It therefore needs no apology from me in giving here more space to instructions concerning the pursuit of the imma- ture than of the mature form. The best method of raising butterflies is to obtain eggs from the parent and rear them to maturity. This is by no means difiicult and is full of interest ; it is only neces- sary to know the food -plant of the caterpillar — and that of nearly all our northern species is ascertained; or if it is not known, it may often be inferred from that of neigh- boring species, or discovered by patiently following the female as she flits from leaf to leaf, and noticing the plants she chooses Avhereon to lay her eggs. The butterfly generally selects the middle of the day for this duty, but 179 180 APPENDIX. the eager youth must uot exj^ect at once to obtain her secret, for he will find himself only too often foiled. Once known, the way is comparatively easy ; catch a female, selecting for the purpose one which has evidently been fly- ing for at least a few days, and which is gravid with eggs, and inclose her beneath a gauze covering upon the grow- ing plant. If it be a tree or bush, tie a bag of mosquito- netting over a bough, taking care that there are some tender leaves upon it (and no ants), and so arrange the bag that the butterfly may rest naturally upon them ; in- close the butterfly and she will pretty certainly deposit eggs in the course of a day or two. Or, if the plant be one of small size, use a headless keg, covered at one end with gauze ; even a discarded vegetable-can will serve the purpose ; or again, a canopy can be made over a plant by thrusting the ends of a couple of bent twigs into the ground and covering with gauze. A bit of sugared apple or other fruit should be inclosed as food. After a few days' confinement the prisoner should be set free. If she has not then laid eggs, she probably can- not, and she should be released. If she has yielded the desired harvest, she should be rewarded with liberty. When obtained, the leaves or twigs upon which the eggs are found may either be left where they are or carried home to more convenient quarters. It is not easy to preserve eggs entire. If they do not hatch they are apt to shrivel, excepting such as have a dense pellicle, like the hemispherical eggs of the smaller skippers or the tiarate eggs of the blues and cop|)ers; it is nearly impossible, too, to prick the egg and save its form. The best way is to watch for the egress of the caterpillar and the moment it is free separate it from the shell, which it will otlierwise devour; in that way I have ob- tained a considerable collection of these little gems. Or they may be obtained from the plants on which they have APPENDIX. 181 been laid naturally, by searching the food-plants care- fully ; they are not so difficult to detect as might be sup- posed ; many of these will be found attacked by minute parasites, which generally make their exit through a single minute hole, leaving the Qgg in an admirable condition for the cabinet. The eggs can then be gummed, with or without the leaf on which they are laid, upon triangular bits of card-board, pinned and transferred to the cabinet. Inspissated ox-gall, diluted with an equal quantity of tliick gum arable, makes the best material for attachment to the card. In rearing from the Qgg the greatest difficulty is during early life ; young cater2:)illars must have the freshest and tenderest food and not too much confinement. With all precautions many will be lost, for they are so small that it is difficult to keep track of them, and some are very prone to wander when their food does not suit them. Some open vessel Avitli the growing plant is the best re- ce2)tacle ; in place of this a similar vessel (the larger the better) holding moist sand in which a sprig of the food- plant is plunged may be used — covered if convenient with gauze to prevent the escape of the caterpillar. The vessel should be placed in the light, but not in the sun, and for many kinds it is well to lay chips or bits of bark upon the ground, beneath which the caterpillars may hide. At each moult the caterpillar remains motionless, refusing to feed for twenty-four hours or more, and at such times it should not be disturbed. It is best never to touch them, and, when necessary to change the food, the old leaf with the caterpillar upon it should be put aside or upon the fresh food, and only removed when deserted by the caterpillar. When older the creature Avill bear rougher treatment and may often be confined in a nearly tight tin or earthen vessel with freshly-plucked leaves; but all caterpillars will not bear this treatment, and care should 182 APPENDIX. always he taken that their quarters do not become in the least foul. A very convenient form of breeding-cage or vivarium is shown in Fig. 2, and is thus described by Mr. Riley: Fig. 2.— Breeding-cage, described in the text. "It comprises three distinct parts: first the bottom board {a), consisting of a square piece of inch-thick walnut with a rectangular zinc pan (//') four inches deep fastened to it above, to prevent cracking or warping, facilitate lift- ing, and allow the air to pass underneath the cage. Second, a box (/;), with three glass sides and a glass door in front, to fit over the zinc pan. Third, a cap (c) which fits closely to the box, and has a top of fine wire gauze. APPENDIX. 183 To the centre of the zinc pan is soldered a zinc tube (d) just large enough to contain an ordinary quinine bottle. The zinc pan is filled with clean sifted earth or sand (f), and the quinine bottle is for the reception of the food- plant. The cage admits of abundant light and air, and also of the easy removal of excrement and frass Avhich falls to the ground; while the insects in transforming attach themselves to the sides or the cap according to their habits. The most convenient dimensions I find to be twelve inches square and eighteen inches high ; the caj) and the door fit closely by means of rabbets, and the former has a depth of about four inches to admit of the largest cocoon being spun in it without touching the box on which it rests. The zinc pan might be made six or eight inches deep, and the lower half filled with sand, so as to keep the whole moist for a greater length of time. A dozen such cages will furnish room for the annual breed- ing of a great number of species, as several having dif- ferent habits and appearance, and which there is no dan- ger of confounding, may be simultaneously fed in the same cage.'' The best success will always attend efforts to place the prisoner in conditions as nearly natural as possible; but in rearing out-of-doors it is more difficult to keep track of your charges, and they are of course more subject to their natural enemies, which are numerous and vigilant. More- over it is then nearly impossible to obtain the cast-off heads of each moult, which are well to preserve for com- parative study at leisure, or to complete the tangible marks of the life-history of the insect. Such caterpillars as construct nests in which to live when not feeding, and especially such as then live a great while in the caterpillar state, as for instance nearly all the skippers, are the hardest to rear satisfactorily apart from their natural homes; they do not like to live in a dried-up 184 APPENDIX. " house, nor to be continually wasting their energies in the construction of new ones, so that one's ingenuity is often taxed to keep them happy; but patience and careful at- tention to their natural conditions Avill reap their reward, and I believe it is possible with care to breed any of our species in confinement. Caterpillars found partly grown in a state of nature may be reared in confinement for the rest of their lives with equal ease ; only one labors then under the disadvantage, if he cares only for the butterfly, of being rewarded for his pains merely by a fine batch of miuute hymenopterous parasites or a bristling fly or two. To one, however, who is interested in the entire history of these creatures, this is not altogether a loss, for he will add perchance to his stock of butterfly parasites, of which for some species many different kinds are already known. The search for caterpillars in their haunts is often very easy, especially if their food plant, habits, and seasons are known ; to search for a caterpillar out of season is an anachronism one will not enjoy. Partly-eaten leaves are one of the best guides to the discovery of caterpillars; while such as construct nests of any sort are very readily detected, especially when the nests are so built as to ex- pose the under surfaces of leaves, where their upper sur- faces would be expected, as in the case of many of the higher skippers. The caterpillars of the blues, coppers, etc., are perhaps the most difficult to find, l)ecause they so nearly resemble in color the surfaces on which they rest ; the same is true of the caterpillar of our common yellow butterfly ; but when one has once discovered them, and knows lioiv tliey looJc in their natural situations, the search becomes much easier. Others again feed mostly by night and retire by day to the covert of dead leaves on the ground or beneath sticks, and must be sought by the aid of the lantern. Such in particular are the caterpillars of our satyrs and fritillaries. APPENDIX. 185 Some caterpillars pass the winter in that state, either just hatched, half groAvn, or nearly mature. To keep these safely through our long winter and 2:)revent their re- covering from their dormancy before food for them can be obtained in the spring is one of the most difficult tasks. It is best, as a general rule, to place them in closed or nearly closed vessels, not too small, in a dry but cool cellar, and not to move them until their food-plant is again in leaf. Mr. Edwards has succeeded well with some of those which have eaten little or nothing before going into winter quarters, by placing them through the winter in an ice-house, which would seem to be rather heroic treatment at first sight ; but in almost any other situa- tion they are liable to rouse from their lethargy too early in the spring, the critical period, no doubt, of their life. For collecting caterpillars, pocket tin boxes are the best receptacles. The satisfactory preservation of the caterpillar for the cabinet is far easier than is generally supposed. For ana- tomical purposes it is much better to dissect fresh speci- mens, but very much may be done with specimens that have been preserved in not too strong alcohol, or in glycerine and carbolic acid. For the study of the mark- ings or of the external features or form, nothing equals the method known as inflation, where only the pellicle and its appendages are preserved, and which has the ad- vantage of allowing the caterpillar to be readily placed in an ordinary cabinet beside the other forms of the creature's life; also of preserving in their natural relations all the spines and hairs which clothe the body, and of allowing these to be studied at pleasure; specimens preserved in any fluid, on the contrary, are difficult to handle con- veniently, and their examination is unsatisfactory from the matting of the hairs and spines. The instruments necessary for inflating are a small tin 186 APPENDIX. oven, a spirit-lamp, forceps, a pair of finely-pointed scis- sors, a bit of rag, a little fine wire, and a wheat straw, or a glass tube drawn to a fine point. The oven is simply an oblong tin box, about 2^ inches high, 2^ inches wide, and 5 inches long; the cover is of glass, and one end of the box is perforated by a circular hole IJ inches in diameter. Fig. 3.— Oven and lamp for preparing caterpillars by inflation. The oven rests upon a wire standard as in the woodcut [Fig. 3]. No soldering should be used upon the oven, as it would soon be melted. The wire for the caterpillar should be very fine and annealed ; the best is that wound with green thread and used for artificial flowers. It should not be more than half a millimetre in diameter. [Fig. 4.] Kill the subject by a drop of ether or by a plunge in spirits. Then placing the caterpillar in the left hand, so as to expose its hinder extremity beyond the gently closed thumb and first two fingers, enlarge the vent slightly at the lower edge by a vertical cut with the scissors; next APPENDIX. 187 lay the larva either 1120011 bibulous paper on the table, or upon soft cotton cloth held in the left hand, and press the extremity of the body with one finger, always with the in- terposition of cloth or paper, so as to force out some of the contents of the body; this process is continued from points successively farther back, a slight addi- tional portion of the contents of the body being gently pressed out with each new movement. Throughout all this process y^^ 4.-\vound great care should be taken lest the skin wire for support- should be abraded by too violent pressure, ^o^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^' ^ and lest any of the contents of the body soil its exterior or become entangled in the hairs or spines; to avoid the latter, the caterpillar should be frequently removed to a clean part of the cloth. When a portion of the intestinal tube itself becomes extruded, it should be gripped with a pair of strong forceps, and, the head re- maining in the secure hold of the left hand, the tube should be forcibly but steadily torn from its attachments; with this most of the contents of the body will be with- drawn, and a delicate pressure passing with a rolling motion from the head toward the tail will reduce the sub- ject to a mere pellicle. The alcohol-lamp is now lighted and placed in position beneath the oven; a wheat straw is selected, of the proper size to enter the enlarged vent, and the tip, after being cut diagonally with sharp scissors or a knife, is moistened a little in the mouth (to prevent too great adhesion of the skin to the straw) and carefully introduced into the open- ing of the caterpillar; the process may be aided by blowing gently through the straw. When the skin is slipped upon all sides of the straw to the distance of about a fifth of an inch, without any folding of the skin and so that both the anal prolegs protrude, a short delicate pin (Edel- ston and Williams, No. 19, is best) is passed through the 188 APPENDIX. anal plate and the straw. If a glass tube is used, the anal plate must be fastened to it by winding with silk. By this time the oven will be sufficiently heated to begin the drying process, which consists simply in keeping the caterpillar in the oven, extended horizontally by blowing gently and steadily through the straw, as one uses a blow- l^ipe. Too forcible inflation will make the caterpillar unsightly by distending unnaturally any spot that may have been weakened or bruised in the previous operation; the caterpillar should be kept slowly but constantly turn- ing, and no harm will result from withdrawing the crea- ture from the oven and allowing it to collapse, to gain breath or rest; only this relaxation should be very brief. The caterjullar should be first introduced into the oven while inflated by the breath, and so placed that the hinder extremity shall be in the hottest part, directly above the flame, for it is essential that the animal should dry from behind forward; yet not altogether, for as soon as the hinder part has begun to stiffen (which can readily be de- tected by withholding the breath for a moment) the por- tion next in front should receive partial attention, and the caterpillar moved backward and forward, round and round over the flame. During this process any tendency of the caterpillar to assume unnatural positions may be corrected — at least in part — by withdrawing it from the oven and manipulating it; during inflation, the parts about the head should be the last to dry and should be kept over the flame until a rather forcible touch will not cause it to bend. To secure the best results, it is essential that the oven should not be too hot; the flame should not be more than an inch high, and its tip should be one or two inches from the bottom of the oven. When the skin of the caterpillar will yield at no point, it is ready for mounting. The pin is taken from the straw, APPENDIX. 189 and the caterpillar skin, which often adheres to the straw, must be gently removed with some delicate, blunt instru- ment, or Avith the finger-nail. A piece of wire a little more than twice the length of the caterpillar is next cut, and, by means of forceps, bent as in Fig. 5, the tips a little incurved, a little shellac* is Fig. 5.— Wire bent into shape to insert into the caterpillar ; not enlarged. placed at the distal extremity of the loop, the wire is held by the forceps so as to prevent the free ends of the wire from spreading, and they are introduced into the empty body of the caterpillar as far as the forceps will allow; holding the loop and removing the forceps, the cater- pillar is now pushed over the wire with extreme care, until the hinder extremity has passed half-way over the loop, and the shellac has smeared the interior sufficiently to hold the caterpillar in place when dry ; the extremities of the parted wires should reach nearly to the head. Nothing remains but to curve the doubled end of the wire tightly around a pin with a pair of strong forceps and to place the specimen, properly labelled, in a place where it can dry thoroughly for several days before removal to the cab- inet. For more careful preservation and readier handling, each specimen may be placed in a glass tube, like the test- tube of the chemist. The wire is then first bent in the middle and the bent end inserted in a hole bored in the smaller end of a cork of suitable size, so as nearly to pass through it; the loops are then formed as above; both ends * To prepare this, tlie sheets of dark shellac should be preferred to the light, and dissolved in forty per cent alcohol. 190 APPENDIX. of the cork are varnished, and a label pasted around the portion of the cork which enters the tube, thus guarding both sjoecimen and label from dust, and the latter from loss or misplacement. After two or three days the cork Avith the caterpillar attached is placed in its corresponding tube, and the tube may be freely handled. Modifications of this system will occur to every one. Dr. Gemminger uses a syringe for the extraction of the contents as well as for the inflation of the emptied skin. For an oven, the Vienna entomologists employ an ordi- nary gas-chimney, open at both ends and inserted in a sand-bath, which prevents, perhaps, the danger of too great heat. In rearing caterpillars for the after-stages, care must always be taken to provide in season a suitable place in the breeding-cage for the chrysalis to suspend itself: a twig for such as prefer such situations; a bit of shingle near the top of the cage for those that suspend themselves by the tail, or fasten themselves preferably to flat surfaces; leaves for those tliat construct some sort of a cocoon. The search for chrysalids in the open air is not likely to meet with great success excepting in a few instances, such as the imported cabbage butterfly, whose chrysalids can be found in only too great abundance beneath palings or on the under edge of clapboards on farm-houses; those of the blues and their allies may often be found beneath stones, but one must be an enthusiast to follow the search at all successfully; such as fall into the hands of the general entomologist must be counted as clear gain; yet these will often repay him who studies also the parasites of butter- flies, so often are they found to be infested. The preservation of chrysalids with their colors is easy for all that are not of some green tint; and these are few. Long-lived chrysalids are not easily killed excepting by extreme dryness. Some will survive a twelve hours^ plunge APPEXDIX. 191 in alcohol, and those that could not would generally lose some of their colors by the immersion. Dry heat is the best method, but it should be accompanied after death by further drying after an opening has been made into the body, lest the contents should decay. Parasitized speci- mens form the best material for the cabinet, but even shells from which the inmate has escaped can b}^ careful manipulation and a little glue have their separated parts so joined as to answer fairly the desired purpose. Solid specimens can be pinned through one side of the thorax, but the mere pellicle should have the hooks of the tail securelv fastened to a little ball of cotton wool or bit of felt, through which the pin may be passed. It is not easy to glue empty chrysalids permanenth^ to cards, and these are very apt to hide the i^arts one wishes at some future time to examine. Skilful persons may attain some success with thin-skinned chrvsalids, like that of the milkweed butterfly, for instance, the shape of which is diffictilt to retain, by removing the con- tents through a small opening at one side and stuffing with cotton. The best form of net for the capture of butterflies is a bag fastened to a hoop or ring of some sort, to which a handle ma}' be attached. The hoop should be made of c^~ galvanized iron wire, forming a circle about twelve to fourteen inches in diameter, and the bag, made of double bobbinet and at- ^^^ for'butL^r- t ached to the wire by strong linen or cotton, flies, a, wire ring, should taper res:ularlv, have a rounded ^''^^ f"*^ ^"^, '^° ^ ® " . . insert into the fer- bottom, and be about thirty inches long, rule, fc: c point so as to double over the net and and have ^'^^^^ ^^^^ p'"^ . , and net handle a lew inches to spare. By bending the meet. two ends of the wire as in Fig. 6, they can be dropped into a brass tube and securely fixed in place 192 APPEXDIX. by a tight plug of hard wood, leaving the other end of the tube open for the insertion of a removable handle; or a very convenient form of net can be constructed on the following plan shown in Fig. T and thus described Fig. 7.— Folding net frame, explained in the text. by Mr. Eiley : " Take two pieces of stout wire, each about twenty inches long; bend them half circularly and join at one end bv a foldinsr hinore havinor a check on one side ifi). The other ends are bent and beaten into two square sockets (/), which fit to a nut sunk and soldered into one end of a brass tube {d). When so fitted they are secured by a large-headed screw {e), threaded to fit into the nut-socket, and with a gi'oove wide enough to receive the back of a common pocket-knife blade. The wire hoop is easily detached and folded, as at c, for con- venient carriage; and the handle may be made of any desired length by cutting a stick and fitting it into the APPENDIX. 193 hollow tube a, which should be about six inches long." The stick should be about four feet long. Mr. Lintner makes use of a rod with a head [Fig. 8] screwed to one end, in which to fasten an elastic brass ribbon, on which the net is drawn, but which when not in use may be placed inside the hat, while the stick serves as a cane, and the head and bag may be placed in the pocket. An entomologist becomes a less conspicuous personage with such an outfit. The *'•' chase '' for butterflies should rarely be a question of speed; caution and stratagem are better arts; a butter- fly should rarely be alarmed, or the game is lost; intent upon a flower, one may even be captured with the fingers by slow approach upon the shady side; many have the habit of returning to a twig they have left, and can be captured by lying in wait near the spot; others will course up and down a roadside, a forest lane, or a hedgerow, and may be easily netted by taking advantage of tiiis habit. Xor should it be forgotten that not a few are very limited indeed in the selection of their haunts, and every kind of spot should be visited; some confine their flight to marshy spots and even to particular bogs; some prefer the open fields; pastures where thistles and other weeds are in flower attract a gi'eat crowd ; others may be found in openings in the forest where the fire-weed conceals the charred timber beneath its panicles of blue flowers : one will not look in vain upon the goldenrods and blossomed vines which fringe the roadside or stone walls; the shrub- berv which loves the marsrin of slender streams or the ed2:e of thickets is a favorite haunt of manv; sheltered valleys with their varying verdure are always a choice re- sort of the entomologist; but even the tops of rugged mountains or sandy wastes given to sorrel and feeble grasses Fig. 8 , — Net- head for a remov- able frame. 194 APPENDIX. will yield their quota; the garden too, the vegetable field, and even the roadside puddles must not be neglected. One soon learns to capture with a dexterous turn of the net, and no description of the method is worth anything beside a very little ex23erience; when captured the net should be turned to prevent escape and the butterfly gently seized from outside the net, with the wings back to back to prevent its struggling and so bruising itself; it should then be removed to the cyanide bottle, where, especially if placed in the dark pocket, it will soon be motionless, and speedily dies; this is the quickest and easiest mode of death, besides leaving the insect in the most perfect condition. The '^cyanide bottle '' is simply a phial with a mouth wide enough to readily admit the largest specimens (a smaller size is better for the smaller kinds), into which a little plaster of Paris has been poured over a small lump of cyanide of potassium (a deadly poison, be it noted) ; or, a lump of cyanide may be inclosed in a piece of chamois-skin wrapped around and tied above the cork, leaving the bottle clean. The cork should be re- moved only when necessary and for as little time as pos- sible; a season^s use will exhaust its best strength even when the utmost care is taken. Some butterflies, espe- cially those having yellow colors, should be left in the bottle only a short time, for they are injured by too long exposure to the vapors, the yellow turning reddish. When removed, on reaching home, or sooner if needed, they should be pinned through the thickest part of the thorax, and in an hour or two, when the fixity of the wings which follows their violent death has passed away, removed to the setting-board. The best pins for butterflies are Nos. 2, 3, and 4 of Klaeger's make. The setting-board needs no description apart from the figure given [Fig. 9], more than to say that beneath the groove a strip of cork or pith is attached to APPENDIX. 195 the board. Bits of glass cut to different sizes answer as well as the card braces represented in the illustration and permit one better to see whether the wing is lying perfectly flat. A needle inserted in a handle is required to move the wings into the desired position, and " to set " the antennae and legs in a natural attitude; to secure these in the proper place they are supported by insect pins stuck into the board upon one side or the other of the member, Fig. 9.— Setting-board. as required. The butterflies should remain upon the set- ting-board for a fortnight or longer, and placed where they will dry readily but not be exposed to dust. At the expiration of that time they are ready for the cabinet. When one is away from home conveniences, a very simple device for transportation is to fold oblong bits of paper (rather thin writing-paper is best) into '^ triangles/' as along the dotted lines in this sketch; into this the butterfly is placed, its wings folded back to back and antennae tucked carefully away. The place, date, and circumstances of capture (or a number corresponding to a journal) may be written upon the paper. A great number may thus be packed into a cigar-box or other receptacle, and spread for the cabinet at leisure, months or even years after collection. For this purpose moistening-pans are needed. A glass or 196 APPENDIX. stoneware dish is the best, the top ground so as to allow a sheet of glass to cover it perfectly; ujDon the bottom moistened sand is placed, covered by fine brass wire net- ting. A few papers with their inclosed butterflies are placed in it, and the cover left on for twenty-four hours or thereabouts, when the insects may be handled nearly as if just caught. Damp, grease, and museum pests are the great destroyers of insect collections. To avoid the first, one has only to see that his cabinet is in a dry place, with a play of air around it. To avoid grease, insects should be thoroughly dried before being admitted to the cabinet, and all use of cedar wood in constructing the latter should be avoided; benzine is perhaps the best material for removing it. Against museum pests one can be safe only by a constant, vigilant, searching oversight of his collection, or the use of boxes which they cannot enter; even then care must be taken not to introduce them one's self by placing infested specimens in the collection : for this purpose it is well to establish a safe quarantine. For a permanent cabinet nothing can excel the drawers made after the Deyrolle model, now in use by the Boston Society of Natural History. I have tried them for many years and find them entirely pest-proof. They are made [Fig. 10], with a cover of glass set in a frame which is grooved along the lower edge, and thus fits tightly into a narrow strip of zinc, set edgewise into a corresponding groove in the drawer; the grooves beyond the point of in- tersection of two sides are filled with a bit of wood firmly glued in place. It is hardly necessary to say that the sides of the drawer and the frame of the cover should be made of hard wood ; soft wood would not retain the zinc strip. The zinc should be perfectly straight and the ends well matched ; if this be done, nothing can enter the box when it is closed. The bottom should set in a groove in the APPENDIX. 197 sides and not be fiusli with their lower edge, so that the drawer may slide easily. A similar box with a wooden rabbet is used at the Museum of Comjoarative Zoology at Cambridge; but it cannot possibly be so tight, and re- * 11 i m ! 1 li \ Fig. 10.— Model of the Deyrolle insect-drawer, side view of front end, with the cover raised. D, bottom of drawer ; C, cover of same, raised a little ; /, front piece, with moulding (»0 and handle {h). glued to bottom piece ; sa^ sash ; si, slit in cover into which the zinc strip (z) fits ; sV, slit in bottom, into which it is fastened ; g, bevelled groove, to allow the finger to raise the cover ; i?r, hind view of one end of the bottom to show the insertion of the bottom {b) ; Re. re- verse of one corner of cover to show the grooves filled beyond their junction. All the figures half size. quires hooks on the sides to ke^ the cover down; it has the advantage of greater cheapness, as it can be made of soft wood, but is at the same time clumsier. My own drawers are made of cherry sides, and have also a false front attached to them, furnished with mouldings and handles so as to present a not inelegant appearance; and, exclusive of the cork with which they are lined, cost $2.65 each; they measure inside 18| inches long, 14 inches wide, and 1| inches deep, not including the cork lining. It is best always to cover the bottom of such drawers with cork or pith wood or similar soft substance, as it is difficult both to insert and to withdraw the pins readily in any ordinary wood, however soft; and the sides and bot- tom should afterwards be covered with thin white paper for neatness' sake. 198 APPENDIX. Drawers like these are rather hirge for small collections, but any smaller size is wasteful of sjDace for arranging the larger species of wide expanse of wing. Some, however, still prefer smaller sizes for convenience of study, and use boxes shaped like a quarto volume, the cover hinged and the whole lined with binder's cloth. The volumes can then be lettered on the back and arranged as in a library, and certainly have a neat appearance. Such books can be made safer either by a bevelled wooden rabbet where the top and bottom meet, or by arranging within a second glass cover, but they can never be made so fully proof against pests as an unhinged drawer. A very common box, but unsafe as soon as a collection becomes at all large and cannot be constantly watched in every part, is a simj^le wooden box nine by fourteen inches in size, in which both top and bottom, made separate, are put to use by being lined with cork. In this case the box must, of course, be much deeper. Such cases can be made in numbers for fifty cents each, exclusive of the cork, and answer very well for beginners, but will be discarded after a time if the collection increases, unless the owner has suffi- cient leisure and patience to watch his treasures carefully. The best way to begin the study of butterflies is to attempt to follow out the life-history, write the biog- raphy, in short, of every kind found in one's own neighbor- hood. No one place will yield much above one hundred species, and, if the rarer kinds be omitted, not nearly so many. Yet any one who will accomplish this will add materially to what is known, and he will find his way pleasanter, his occupation more fascinating at every step. He need be provided at the outset with a very moderate stock of the articles mentioned in the preceding pages. He should keep a journal devoted exclusively to a record of his daily notes, which will prove more and more useful in each succeeding year. Beginning with the eggs laid by APPENDIX. 199 imprisoned females or found in tlie open field, he should note every change which transpires, describe, and, if pos- sible, draio in detail every stage, giving to each separate lot a distinctive number, which it should keep until its name is known. As his stock enlarges and his knowledge increases, comparative study will supersede many of his earlier descriptions ; but these will not have been without their value ; they will have cost no more than they are worth ; his knowledge will have been gained through, as well as at the expense of, his earlier work, none of which will he regret; he can therefore be neither too minute nor too exact, nor can he afford to relax any endeavor until he has proved it unnecessary. He should preserve in his permanent collection speci- mens to illustrate every condition of the creature's life, as well as all objects which illustrate its habits and vicissi- tudes. Especially should all variations be observed. The ^gg with the leaf upon which it is laid in a state of nature ; not only the caterpillar at every stage, but in all the atti- tudes it assumes, the nests it weaves, the half-devoured leaves to show its manner of feeding, the ejectamenta, the parasites by which it is beset ; not only the chrysalis, but the emptied skin ; the butterflies of each brood, together with some preserved in their natural attitudes when at rest, and when asleep; and such dissections of the external parts as can be separately mounted and cannot otherwise be readily seen ; also the wings and body of the butterfly denuded of their scales, to study the structural framework of the insect ; and, when possible, dissections of the inter- nal parts preserved in alcohol. Every pinned specimen, excepting such as illustrate the anatomy only, should bear upon the pin a label giving the place and date of capture, and, when necessary, a number referring to a catalogue or note-book in which memoranda may be entered to any extent that is desired. The name 200 APPENDIX. of the species may be given on a separate label at the head of each collection of objects which illustrate its history; and the name may, of course, also be added at will to any specimens which, once determined, may require redetermi- nation if misplaced and not specially marked. In rearing it is essential that every breeding cage or pot should be marked with a number or by other means to in- dicate its contents. Nothing should be left to memory in this particular. Nor should caterpillars which are only presumably of the same species be placed in the same cage, as there are many allied kinds which are almost indistin- guishable at sight, and a lack of exactitude here will viti- ate one^s observations. Any one pursuing vigorously such a course of study and collection of native butterflies w411 be enchanted to see how fascinating the study is, how rapidly his collection grows, what an endless source of interest attaches to these humble but exquisite creatures, and into how many lines of real investigation his steps are tending. No one can undertake it without being himself the gainer by it, and without infusing others with his own ever-fresh enthu- siasm. t: INDEX OF NAMES. acadica, Thecla, 122 Achalarus lycidas, 166 Aglais, 86, 47, 54, 89 Aglais milberti, 89 Agraulis vanillae,66 ajax, Iphiclides, 146 alcestis, Argynnis,78 alope, Cercyonis, 110 Amblyscirtes samoset, 174 vialis, 174 Anaea 37, 45, 55, 104 Anaea audria, 104 Aucyloxipha, 43, 53, 166 Ancyloxipha numitor, 166 andria, Anaea, 104 Angle Wings, 36, 47, 54, 82 Anosia, 34, 45, 55, 63 Anosia plexippus, 60, 63 Anthocbaiis, 40, 50, 58,140 Antbocharis genutia, 140 Antboniaster, 44, 170 Antbomaster leonardus, 170 antiopa, Euvanessa, 90 Apatura eel lis, 106 clyton, 105 herse, 105 lycaon, 106 proserpiua, 105 apbrodite, Argynnis, 77 Araschnia piorsa, 16 arcbippus, Basilarcbia, 102 Argus comyntas, 133 eurydice, 108 Argynnis, 35, 46, 54, 76 Argynnis alcestis, 78 apbrodite, 77 atlantis, 76 bellona, 73 columbina, 81 Argynnis cybele, 79 idalia, 80 myrina, 74 artbemis, Basilarcbia, 98 astyanax, Basilarcbia, 101 atalanta, Vanessa, 87 Atalopedes buron, 174 atlantis, Argynnis, 76 Atlides halesus, 133 Atrytone, 44, 167 Atrytone logan, 169 zabulon, 167 augustus, lucisalia, 116 Basilarcbia, 37, 47, 55, 98 Basilarcbia arcbippus, 103 artbemis, 98 astyanax, 101 proserpina, 100 bellona, Brentbis, 73 Blues, 38, 48, 56, 123 Brentbis, 35, 46, 54, 73 Brentbis bellona, 73 cbariclea, 75 freija, 75 montinus, 75 myrina, 74 brizo, Tbanaos, 162 Brusb footed Butterflies, 35, 34, 45, 53, 63 caesonia, Zerene, 133 calauus, Tbecla, 130 Calepbelis borealis, 113 Callicista columella, 133 Callidryas, 40, 49, 57, 133 Callidryas eubule, 133 pbilea, 133 sennae, 133 Calpodes etblius, 174 Calycopis cecrops, 133 201 202 INDEX OF NAMES. cardui, Vanessa, 84 Catullus, Pholisora, 164 celtis, Chlorippe, 106 Cercyonis, 37, 48, 56, 110 Cercyonis alope, 110 nephele, 111 pegala, 112 Charidryas. 35, 46, 53, 69 Charidiyas ismeria, 70 nycteis, 69 Chlorippe, 37, 47, 55, 105 Chlorippe celtis, 106 clyton, 105 Chrysophanus, 39, 49, 57, 127 Chrysophanus americauus, 128 epixanthe, 128 hyllus, 127 hypophlaeas, 128 tarquinius, 130 thoe, 127 Ciuclidia, 35, 46, 53, 68 Cinclidia harrisii, 68 Cissia, 37, 47, 55, 107 Cissia eurytus, 107 sosybius, 108 Claudia, Euptoieta, 81 clytou, Chlorippe, 105 coeuia, Juuonia, 82 Coeuonympha inornata, 112 Colias amphidusa, 135 caesonia, 133 chrysotheme, 135 eur3'theme, 132 keewaydiu, 135 philodice, 134 comma, Polygonia, 95 comyntas, Everes, 123 Coppers. 39, 57, 127 Crescent Spots, 34, 45, 53, 66 cresphontes, Heraclides, 151 Cupido pseudargiolus, 125 Cyaniris, 38, 48, 56, 125 Cyauiris pseudargiolus, 18, 125 cybele. Argynuis, 79 Cynthia atalanta, 87 cardui, 84 huntera, 85 dam on, Mitura, 118 Danaids. 34. 45, 55, 63 Danais archippus, 63 erippus, 63 Pebis portlandia, 109 Doxocopa herse, 105 lycaon, 106 edwardsii, Thecla, 121 Emperors, 37, 55, 104 Enodia, 37, 48, 55, 109 Enodia portlandia, 109 Epargyreus, 43, 51, 59, 155 Epargyreus tityrus, 155 Epidemia, 39, 49, 57, 128 Epidemia dorcas, 128 epixanthe, 128 belloides, 128 epixanthe, Epidemia, 128 Erebia nephele, 111 Erora laeta, 123 Erycinids, 113 Erynnis, 44. 169 Erynnis attains, 169 manitoba, 169 metea, 169 sassacus, 169 uncas, 169 eubule, Callidryas, 132 Eucheira social is, 11 Eudamus proteus, 166 pylades, 156 tityrus, 155 Eugonia, 36, 47, 55. 92 Eugonia j-album, 92 Euphoeades, 42. 51, 58, 150 Euphoeades palamedes, 151 troilus, 150 Euphydryas, 35, 46, 53, 66 Euphydryas phaeton, 66 Euphyes metacomet, 174 verna, 174 Eupsyche m-album, 123 Euptoieta, 36, 46, 54, 81 Euptoieta claudia, 81 Euptychia eurytus, 107 Eurema, 40, 49, 57, 138 Eurema lisa,138 nicippe, 137 eurydice, Satyrodes, 108 Eurymus, 40, 50, 58, 134 Eurymus eurytheme, 19, 135 interior, 186 philodice, 134 eurytheme, Eurymus, 135J eurytus, Cissia, 107 Eu Vanessa, 36, 47, 54, 90 Euvaucssa antiopa, 90 INDEX OF NAMES. 203 Everes, 38, 48, 56, 133 Everes comyntas, 17, 123 fauuus, Polygonia, 94 Feniseca, 39, 49, 57, 130 Feuiseca tarqiiiuius, 130 Fritillaries, 35, 46, 54, 73 Gaeides dione, 131 genutia, Anthocharis, 140 glaiicus, Jasouiades, 148 Goniloba tityrus, 155 Gossamer-winged Butterflies, 35, 37, 48, 56, 113 Grapta c-argenleum, 93 comma, 95 dryas, 95 fabricii, 97 faunus, 94 interrogationis, 97 j-album, 93 progne, 93 umbrosa, 97 Hair Streaks, 38, 48, 56, 113 harrisii, Cinclidia, 68 Heliconians, 66 Heodes, 39, 49, 57, 128 Heodes hypophlaeas, 138 Heraclides, 43, 51, 58, 151 Heraclides cresphoutes, 151 Hesperia, 43, 53, 59, 165 Hesperia ahaton, 173 centaureae, 166 hobomok, 167 montivaga, 165 mystic, 171 pocaboutas, 167 sassacus, 169 tessellata, 165 wamsutta 170 Hesperidae, 35 Heteropterus marginatus, 166 Hipparchia alope, 110 andromacha, 109 boisduvalii, 108 eurytris, 107 nephele, 111 huntera, Vanessa, 85 Hylephila pbylaeus, 174 Hypatus bachmanii, 112 hypophlaeas, Heodes, 128 icelus, Thanaos, 163 idalia, Speyeria, 80 Incisalia, 38, 56, 114 Incisalia augustus, 116 irus, 115 niphon, 114 interrogationis, Polygonia, 97 iole, Nathalis,139 Iphiclides, 41, 51, 58, 146 Iphiclides ajax, 17, 146 irus, Incisalia, 115 j-album, Eugonia, 92 Jasouiades, 42, 51, 58, 148 Jasoniades glaucus, 17, 148 turnus, 148 Juuouia, 36, 47, 54, 82 Junouia coenia, 82 lavinia, 82 juvenalis, Thanaos, 161 Kallima, 24 Laertias, 41, 50, 58, 145 Laeitias philenor, 145 Larger Skippers, 42, 51, 59, 155 leonardus, Authomaster, 170 Lerema accius, 174 hianna, 174 Lerodea fusca, 174 Libytheinae, 26 Limenitis archippus, 103 artherais, 98 astyauax, 101 disippus, 102 misippus, 102 Ursula, 101 Limochores, 44, 173 Limochores bimacula, 174 mauatatiqua, 174 palatka, 174 pontiac, 174 taumas, 173 liparops, Thecla, 119 lisa, Eurema, 138 Long Beaks, 112 lucilius, Thanaos, 158 Lycaena comyntas, 123 epixanthe, 128 neglecta, 125 pseudargiolus, 135 violacea, 125 Lycaenidae, 25 Meadow Browns, 37, 47, 55, 107 Meganostoma caesonia, 133 Megisto eurytus, 107 meliuus, Urauotes, 117 Melitaea harrisii, 68 204 INDEX OF NAMES. Melitaea marcia, 71 uycteis, 69 phaeton, 66 pharos, 71 tharos, 71 milberti, Aglais, 89 Minois alope, 110 nephele, 111 Mitura, 38, 56, 118 Mitina damon, 118 montivaga, Hesperia, 165 myriua, Brenthis, 74 mystic, Thymelicus, 171 Nathalis, 40, 50, 58, 139 Nathalis iole, 139 Irene, 139 Neonympha canthus, 108 Cornelius, 112 eurytris, 107 mitchellii, 113, phocion, 112 nephele, Cercyonis, 111 nicippe, Xanthidia, 137 niphou, lucisalia, 114 Nisoniades brizo, 162 catullus, 164 ennius, 161 icelus, 163 juvenalis, 161 lucilius, 158 persius, 159 Nomiades couperi, 127 lygdamus, 127 Dumitor, Ancyloxipha, 166 uycteis, Charidryas, 69 Nyraphalidae, 25 Nymphalis arthemis, 98 dry as. 95 ephestiou, 101 faunus, 94 j-album, 92 lamina, 98 milberti, 89 Ursula, 101 Nymphs, 34, 45, 53, 66 Oarisma poweshiek, 17^ Oeueis calais, 112 jutta, 112 macounii, 112 semidea, 112 oleracea, Pieris, 143 Oligoria maculata, 174 Orange Tips, 40, 50, 58, 140 Pampliila aaroni, 169 cernes, 173 leouardus, 170 maudau, 174 mystic, 171 peckius, 170 sassacus, 169 zabulon, 167 Paphia glycerium, 104 troglodyta, 104 Papilio, 42, 51, 59, 153 Papilio ajax, 146 asterius, 153 brevicauda, 154 cresphontes, 151 glaucus, 148 marcellus, 146 philenor, 145 polyxenes, 153 telamonides, 146 thoas, 151 troilus, 150 turnus, 148 Papilionidae, 25 Pararge can thus, 108 peckius, Polites, 170 persius, Thauaos, 159 phaeton, Euphydryas, 66 philenor, Laertias, 145 philodice, Eurymus, 134 Phoebis agarithe, 140 Pbolisora, 43, 52, 59, 164 Pholisora catullus, 164 hayhurstii, 165 Phycanassa viator, 174 Phyciodes, 35, 46, 53, 71 Phyciodes batesii, 72 gorgone, 72 harrisii, 68 nycteis, 69 tharos, 17, 71 Pierids, 39, 49, 57, 132 Pieris, 41, 50, 58, 143 Pieris cruciferarum, 143 . frigida, 143 napi, 143 occidentalis, 141 oleracea, 143 protodice, 141 rapae, 144 vernalis, 141 INDEX OF NAMES. 205 plexippus, Anosia, 63 Poaues massasoit, 174 Polites, 44, 170 Polites peckius, 170 Polygonia, 36, 47, 55, 93 Polygouia comma, 95 faun us, 94 gracilis, 98 interrogationis, 16, 97 progue, 93 satyrus, 98 Polyommatus comyntas, 123 crataegi, 130 epixanthe, 128 lucia, 125 porseuna, 130 tarquinius, 130 thoe, 127 polyxeues, Papilio, 153 Pontia, 41, 50, 58, 141 Pontia casta, 143 oleracea, 143 protodice, 141 portlandia, Enodia, 109 Potanthus omaha, 174 Prenes ocola, 174 pauoquin, 174 progue. Polygonia, 93 protodice, Pontia, 141 pseudargiolus, Cyaniris, 125 pylades, Thorybes, 156 Pyrameis atalanta, 87 cardul, 84 huntera, 85 terpsichore, 85 vlrginiensis, 85 Pyrgus montivagus, 165 Pyrisitia mexicana, 140 rapae, Pieris, 144 Red Horns, 39, 49, 57, 132 libabdoides cellus, 166 Rusticus scudderii, 127 striatus, 127 sassacus, Erynnis, 169 Satyrodes, 37, 48, 55, 108 Satyrodes eurydice, 108 Satyrs, 37, 47, 55, 107 Satyrus alope, 110 nephele, 111 portlandia, 109 Semnopsyche diana, 82 Skippers, 25, 42, 51, 59, 155 Smaller Skippers, 43 52 59, 166 Sovereigns, 37, 47 55, 98 Speyeria, 35, 46, 54, 80 Speyeria idalia, 80 Strymon, 38, 56, 113 Strymon melinus, 117 titus, 113 Swallow Tails, 41, 50, 58, 145 Synchloe olympia, 141 Syricbtus communis, 165 tarquiuius, Feniseca, 130 taumas, Limocbores, 173 Terias lisa, 138 uicippe, 137 Tbanaos, 43, 52, 59. 158 Tbanaos ausonius, 164 brizo, 162 horatius, 164 icelus, 163 juvenalis, 161 lucilius, 158 martialis, 164 persius, 159 terentius, 164 tharos, Pbyciodes, 71 Tbecla, 38, 56, 119 Tbecla acadica, 122 arsace, 115 auburniana, 118 augustus, 116 borus, 122 calanus, 120 californica, 123 costalis, 118 cygnus, 122 damon, 118 edwardsii, 121 falacer, 120 favonius, 117 heurici, 115 liumuli, 117 byperici, 117 inorata, 120 irus, 115 liparops, 119 lorata, 123 melinus, 117 mopsus, 113 nipbon, 114 Ontario, 123 smilacis, 118 soubegan, 122 206 INDEX OF NAMES. Thecla strigosa. 119 titus, 113 tboe, CbrysophaDus, 127 Tborybes, 43, 51, 59, 156 Thorybes bathyllus, 158 electra, 158 py lades, 156 Thymele tityrus, 155 Tbymelicus, 44, 171 Tbymelicus aetna, 173 brettiis, 172 mystic, 171 numitor, 166 titus, Strymon, 113 tityrus, Epargyreus, 155 troilus, Eupboeades, 150 Typical Butterflies, 25, 39, 49, 132 Uranotes, 38, 56, 117 Urauotes melinus, 117 Vanessa, 36, 47, 54, 84 Vanessa antiopa, 90 Vanessa atalanta, 87 c-album, 95 cardui, 84 coenia, 82 comma, 95 faun us, 94 furcillata, 89 huntera, 10, 85 iuterrogationis, 97 j-albura, 92 milberti, 89 progue, 93 Wbites, 41, 50, 58, 141 Xautbidia, 40, 49, 57, 137 Xantbidia lisa, 138 nicippe, 137 Yellows, 39, 49, 57,132 zabulon, Atrytoue, 167 Zereue, 40, 50, 58, 133 Zerene autbyale, 134 caesonia, 133 f:hi liSffiffiiSffilifiM SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARIES 3 «=10fia DD12S7S0 0 nhent QL542.S43X Brief guide to the commoner buttertlies