LITOPROSOPUS.—CALLOPISTRIA. 323 
1. Litoprosopus hatuey. 
Noctua hatuey, Poey, Cent. Lép. Cuba, decade 1, tab. (1832) *. 
Dyops hatuey, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p. 284°; Walk. Cat. xii. p. 855°. 
Litoprosopus hatuey, Grote, Trans. Am. Ent. Soe. ii. p. 309‘. 
Dyops hautuey, Herr.-Schiff. Corr.-Blatt zool-min. Ver. Regensb. 1868, p. 188 (sep. copy, p. 26)’. 
Dyops confligens, Walk. Cat. xii. p. 856°. 
Litoprosopus confligens, Grote, List of North-American Moths, p. 33 (1882)". 
Hab. NortH AmeERiIcA’.—Mexico, Misantla (fF. D. G., March 1888), Cuesta de 
Misantla (M. Trujillo), Coatepec (Brooks), Jalapa (Hége), Cordova (Riimeli); Brivisu 
Howpuras (Blancaneaux); Guaremata, Las Mercedes 3000 feet (Champion) ; 
Honpuras?3%; Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 3000 feet (Champion, Arcé, Ribbe).— 
West Coast or America®; ANTILLES, Cuba! 235, San Domingo 8, 
Specimens before me from Cuba agree perfectly with those from the other above- 
mentioned localities. D. conjfligens, Walk., cannot be separated from the species 
described by Poey; Grote* has recorded his opinion that Noctua hatuey, Poey, and 
Dyops hatuey, Guén., are distinct species, but for what reason I know not. 
Subfam. ERIOPINA. 
CALLOPISTRIA. 
Callopistria, Hubner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 216 (1816); Walker, Cat. xii. p. 861. 
Eriopus, Treitschke, Schmett. Europ. v. 1, p. 865 (1825); Guénée, Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p- 291. 
This genus is represented in our country by three species, all of them being rare. 
1. Callopistria floridensis, 
Eriopus floridensis, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p. 292*; Méschler, Beitr. Schmett.-Fauna von 
Jamaica, p. 52°. 
Callopistria floridensis, Walk. Cat. xii. p. 862°. 
Hab. Norta America, Florida’ *.—Guatemana, San Isidro 1600 feet ( Champion) ; 
Panama (mus. Staudinger).—Braziu*, Rio Janeiro; ANTILLES, Jamaica 2, Dominica. 
Specimens from Guatemala agree perfectly with others from Rio Janeiro in my 
collection; but one from Dominica, captured by the late Mr. Angus, is darker than 
any of them. 
2. Callopistria mexicana, sp.n. (Tab. XXX. fig. 1.) 
Primaries reddish-brown, crossed by many faint lines, with a marginal row of black dots, edged with white 
on the inner side, and a small white elongate spot at the end of the cell, the outer margin bordered from 
the apex to the anal angle with purplish-white, the fringe reddish-brown ; secondaries dark brown, 
palest at the base, the fringe pale brown: head, thorax, and tegule reddish-brown ; abdomen dark brown, 
paler beneath, the anal tuft yellowish ; legs brown. Expanse 1,), inch. 
Hab. MeExico, Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith, Feb. 1888). 
A single example. 
2 ss 2 
