350 HETEROCERA. 
3. Conipeta bibitrix. 
Helia bibitriz, Hibn. Zutr. Samml. exot. Schmett. ii. p. 26, ff. 343, 344. 
Cenipeta bibitriz, Guén. Sp. gén. des. Lép. vii. p. 31"; Walk. Cat. xiii. p. 1092 ?. 
Cenipeta glaucescens, Walk. Cat. xxxv. p. 1967’. 
Hab. Mexico, State of Durango (forrer), Tierra Colorada in Guerrero 2000 feet 
(H. H. Smith), Jalapa (Schaus), Cordova (Hége); Guatemaua, San Gerénimo, Capetillo 
(Champion), Costa Rica, Irazu 6000 to 7000 feet (Rogers); Panama, Volcan de Chi- 
riqui below 4000 feet (Champion), Obispo (Salvin).—CotomBia, Bogota?; GuraNa, 
Surinam ! ?, 
This is a common species in our region and a very variable one, hardly two specimens 
from either of the localities being exactly alike. Canipeta glaucescens, Walk., the type 
of which is now in my own collection, is, without doubt, not distinct from C. bibitrir. 
I have not seen a specimen so bright in colour as Hiibner’s figure. 
4. Cenipeta polynoe. | 
Cenipeta polynoe, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vii. p. 317; Walk. Cat. xiii. p. 10932; Butl. Trans. Ent. 
Soc. Lond. 1879, p. 43°. 
Hab. Mexico, Cordova (Riimeli), Jalapa (Schaus); Centra AMERICA?; GUATEMALA, 
San Isidro 1000 feet (Champion); Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet 
(Champion).—Ecvapor; Gutana, Cayenne!?; Amazons?; Waust Coast or AMERICA 2, 
We have only received four specimens of this well-marked species from Central 
America. 
5. Cenipeta feronia. 
Canipeta feronia, Feld. & Rogenh. Reise der Novara, Lep. t. 112. £. 7, Erkl. der Taf. 112. no. 77. 
Hab. Mexico, Paso de San Juan (Schaus); Panama, Bugaba 800 to 1000 feet 
(Champion), Chiriqui (Ribbe, in mus. Staudinger).—Ecuapor; Amazons 1, Santarem. 
Our Central-American specimens of this species are all males, and they are con- 
siderably darker in colour than the female represented by Felder and Rogenhofer ; but 
they have similarly placed black lines on the primaries. Other examples, hcwever, 
from Santarem in my own collection agree perfectly with those from Central America. 
C. feronia is allied to C. polynoe, but is very differently marked beneath. 
6. Conipeta eolia, sp.n. (Tab. XXXI. fig. 9.) 
Primaries pale greyish-brown, crossed from the costal to the inner margin by two waved black lines, between 
which are two very distinct blackish-brown patches—the first at the end of the cell, the other below it 
and nearer the base on the inner margin, which it does not quite reach,—the outer margin clouded with 
dark brown; secondaries pale brown, broadly bordered with blackish-brown, with a pale yellowish-brown 
line extending from the inner margin close to the anal angle almost to the apex but not. quite reaching it; 
the underside of both wings pale yellowish-brown, the outer margins clouded with darker brown, the 
secondaries crossed by two narrow waved lines which extend from the middle of the costal to the inner 
