PHLEBODES. — LEEEMA. 553 



the lower angle of the cell. The secondaries are produced at the anal angle ; the 

 discocellulars are faint. The body is moderately robust. The middle tibiae are 

 furnished with very long spines ; the hind tibiae have two pairs of spurs. The brand 

 on the primaries of the male extends from the base of the second median branch 

 almost to the middle of the submedian nervure, and it is interrupted towards its 

 lower end. 



The genitalia of the males of P. tiberius, of which we have dissected specimens from 

 Mexico, Guatemala, and Guiana, are very remarkably formed, the harpes terminating 

 in a very long hook. 



l. Phlebodes tiberius. (Tab. xcix. fi gg . 40-43, a .) 



Apaustus tiberius, Mosclil. Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, 1882, p. 329 \ 

 Phlebodes pertinax, Wats. P. Z. S. 1893, p. 110 (nee Cramer) 2 . 



Alis obscure fuscis, stigmate grisescente, supra et ad marginem internum ejus nigrescente, anticis maculis 

 quatuor in serie curvata obliqua infra et ultra cellulam, ea ad apieem minuta (interdum absente), punctis 

 tribus minutissimis subapicalibus in linea transversa, ochraceis : subtus pallidioribus, anticis costa et apice 

 obscure ochraceis, maculis paginae superioris indistincte indicatis, ea ad venam submedianam obsoleta ; 

 posticis area marginis costalis late et linea transversa maculosa ultra cellulam flavescentibus. 

 $ nobis ignota. 



Hab. Mexico, Teapa (H. H. Smith); Guatemala, Panima in Vera Paz {Champion), 

 Polochic Valley (F. D. G. & 0. S.) ; Panama, Chiriqui (mus. Staudinger). — Colombia ; 

 Guiana 1 . 



Of this species we have seen ten examples, all males, six of them being from our 

 region. Dr. Staudinger has lent us the type of Apaustus tiberius for examination. In 

 the male of this insect the secondaries are clothed with very long hairs along the inner 

 edge of the abdominal fold. For the genitalia, see Tab. XCIX. rig. 43. 



LEREMA. 



Lerema, Scudder, Kep. Peabody Ac. Sci. iv. p. 82 (1872) ; Watson, P. Z. S. 1893, p. 118. 



To this genus we assign Papilio accius, Smith & Abbot, which is taken as the type 

 by both Scudder and Watson, Pamphila bipunetata, Mab., and a new species described 

 below. Hesperia Manna, Scudd., is also included in Lerema by Watson, but we have 

 placed it with others under a separate genus, Atrytonopsis. 



The antennas are less than half the length of the costa, and have a moderately stout 

 club, terminating in a long crook. The palpi have the third joint short, stout, and 

 bluntly conical. The primaries are somewhat pointed at the apex in the males, blunter 

 in the females ; the cell is considerably less than two-thirds the length of the costa ; 

 the discocellulars are moderately oblique, the lower one being a little shorter than the 

 upper ; the lower radial is slightly depressed at the base ; the first branch arises from 



