248 . RHOPALOCERA. 
6. Sexes different. 
ce’. Secondaries beneath without ocelli. 
6. Hubagis sosthenes. (Tab. XXIV a. figg. 17,183,199.) 
Eubagis sosthenes, Hew. Trans. Ent. Soc. 1869, p. 34°. 
Alis supra olivaceo-viridibus, anticarum apice, margine externo et angulo anali indentato fusco-nigris, posticis 
angulo anali late ejusdem coloris; subtus anticis maculis sex magnis albis notatis, area angusta inter has 
fusca ochraceo variegata et viridi lineata; posticis sericeo-albis, lineis quinque transversis fulvis bene 
separatis notatis. 
Femina anticarum dimidio apicali fusco maculis sex albis notato, posticis margine externo et linea submarginali 
fusco notatis ; subtus fere ut in mare, maculis anticarum albis minoribus. 
Hab. Nicaraeva, Chontales (Belt!). 
The nearest allies of this species are the Brazilian H. ines and the Colombian 
E. setabis, from both of which it differs in having the outer dark margin of the 
primaries reduced to a narrow border, and in the anal angle of the secondaries being 
broadly blackish. It differs from EF. setabis beneath in having the ultimate and penul- 
timate bands of the secondaries single instead of double. . chryseis is also an allied 
species, but has the apex of the primaries broadly black. So far as we know, 
E. sosthenes is restricted in its range to Nicaragua, where it was obtained by Belt, 
who supplied Hewitson with the specimens he described; and from this same source 
the examples we now figure were obtained. 
7. Eubagis chryseis. (Tab. XXIV a. figg. 15, 16.) 
Eubagis chryseis, Bates, Journ, Ent. ii. p. 822, t. 14. ff. 2, 2a. 
E. sosthent affinis, sed anticarum apicibus late fusco-nigris, posticis margine externo angustissime fusco distin- 
guenda ; subtus quoque maculis albis anticarum minoribus diversa. 
Femina adhuc ignota. 
Hab. Nicaragua, Chontales (Belt).—UPprer AMAZONS. 
In having no ocelli on the secondaries beneath, EL. chryseis shows its relationship to 
Ei. sosthenes and its allies; but the wholly black apex of the primaries at once distin- 
guishes it from all of these. Belt is the only naturalist who met with this species in 
Nicaragua; his specimens differ in no way from Mr. Bates’s previously unique type 
from St. Paulo on the Upper Amazons. 
A Nicaraguan specimen is figured. 
8. Hubagis salpensa, (Tab. XXIV a. figg. 13, 14.) 
Eubagis salpensa, Feld. Wien. ent. Mon. vi. p. 113'; Butl. & Druce, P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 3447. 
Eubagis tithia, Butl. & Druce, P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 344 (nec Hiibner)'*. 
Alis cyaneo-viridibus, anticis dimidio distali fusco-nigro maculis albidis quinque notatis; posticis linea angusta 
submarginali fusca; subtus anticis ad basin et apicibus fulvis, his macula magna alba notatis, maculis alteris 
