278 HETEROCERA. 
British Honpuras, Belize (Blancaneaur) ; Honpuras®; Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 
4000 to 6000 feet (Champion).—ANTILLES, Guadaloupe}, San Domingo **; Brazin}?. 
This most variable insect is found over a very extended range of country, and with 
a large series of specimens before me I am quite unable to separate the specimens 
named by Walker as distinct species. In no locality do they appear constant. Our 
examples vary from light orange-brown to dark mouse-colour; in some the white discal 
spot is almost obsolete and in others it is much larger. Specimens from South-east 
Brazil in my own collection are more brightly-coloured than any from Central America. 
P. subaurea may be synonymous with P. hylea, Cram. (Pap. Exot. iv. p. 48, t. 312. f. E), 
from Surinam ; but the figure of the latter is so bad that without specimens from that 
locality it is impossible to decide with certainty. The habitat of Celena plagiata is 
not stated by Walker °. 
8. Perigea albolabes. 
Perigea albolabes, Grote, Canad. Ent. xii. p. 216°; List of North-American Moths, p. 28 (1882). 
Hab. Norta America, Arizona !.—GuatemaLa, Volcan de Atitlan 2500 to 3500 feet 
(Champion); Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet (Champion).—CoLomBIA. 
This species is closely allied to P. stelligera, Guén., from South-east Brazil. 
9. Perigea sutor. 
Perigea sutor, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. v. p. 281°; Walk. Cat. x. p. 274’. 
Hab. Mexico, Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith, February 1888); Panama, Volcan de 
Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet (Champion).—Braztu}?, Rio Janeiro. 
Central-American specimens agree perfectly with those from Rio Janeiro in my own 
collection. 
10. Perigea fidelia, sp.n. (Tab. XXVII. fig. 4.) 
Primaries dark brown, mottled with pale brown close to the base and along the inner margin, and with several 
white dots at the end of the cell, beyond which is a row of indistinct black spots crossing the wing from 
the costal margin to the inner margin ; secondaries dark blackish-brown, the fringe pale brown: head, 
thorax, and abdomen dark brown; antenna, palpi, and legs brown. Expanse, g 1} inch; Q 14 inch. 
Hab. Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet (Champion). 
This species is allied to P. sutor, Guén., but it is altogether a smaller insect. The 
female is larger than the male, and has the white discal spots more distinct. 
11. Perigea berinda, sp.n. (Tab. XXVII. fig. 5.) 
Primaries pale brown, mottled with darker brown, with a round indistinct discal spot, a dark brown mark 
below this and nearer the base, another close to the anal angle, and a row of very minute white dots 
crossing the wing beyond the middle from the costal margin to the inner margin, the fringe dark brown ; 
secondaries blackish-brown, the fringe much paler: head, thorax, and antenne pale brown; the abdomen 
greyish-brown. Expanse 13 inch. 
Hab. Mexico, State of Durango (Forrer), Jalapa (Hage, M. Trujillo), Teapa in 
Tabasco (H. H. Smith, March 1888); Guatsmata, San Isidro 1600 feet, Cerro Zunil 
