418 SUPPLEMENT. 
Mr. Godman sent me some pupe of this species from Puebla, and the moths emerged 
some weeks afterwards. 
Automeris montezuma (I. p. 178). 
Automeris crudelis, antea, i. p. 181 (no. 20). 
To the localities given, add:—Mexico, Coatepec (Brooks), Orizaba (Boucard, in 
mus. D.), Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith); Panama, Chiriqui (Trdtsch, a mus. 
Staudinger). 
The name A. crudelis (Maass. & Weym.) must be sunk as a synonym of A. montezuma, 
Boisd. ' 
Automeris boucardi (I. p. 178). 
To the locality given, add:—Mexico, Jalapa (M. Trujillo), Coatepec (Brooks) ; 
Costa Rica, Candelaria Mts. (Underwood). 
Automeris zozine (I. p. 179). 
To the locality given, add:—Mexico, Coatepec (Brooks); GUATEMALA (mus. 
Staudinger). 
14(a). Automeris daudiana, (Tab. LXXXI. fig. 8, ¢.) 
Automeris daudiana, Druce, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6) xii. p. 179 (1894) °*. 
Male. Primaries pale greyish-brown, dark brown at the base, with four small spots at the end of the cell and 
a narrow curved line extending from the costal to the inner margin dark brown, the veins yellow, the 
fringe greyish-brown; secondaries bright yellow, the costal and outer margins broadly bordered with 
greyish-brown, the inner margins thickly clothed from the base almost to the anal angle with reddish 
hairs, a large black ocellus with a bluish-white centre at the end of the cell, and two rather wide black 
submarginal lines extending from near the apex to the inner margin, the fringe pinkish-brown; the 
‘underside pale pinkish-brown, the costal margin of the primaries and the veins yellow, the primaries 
with a large black spot at the end of the cell: head and thorax dark brown, the head in front and the 
antennz and palpi reddish-brown, the abdomen bright red. Expanse 23 inches. 
Hab. GuaTEMALA, in the city (Rodriguez '). 
One specimen. 
19 (a). Automeris iris. (Tab. LXXXI. fig. 6, 3.) 
Automeris hebe, antea, i. p. 181 (part.). 
Hab. Mexico, Durango city (Becker), Oaxaca (Sal/é). 
In the National Collection A. hebe and A. tris (Walk.) are placed as sexes of the 
same species. We now have a male of A. iris (Walk.), which proves it to be distinct. 
Walker's types of both insects were from Oaxaca (Sa//é). 
Automeris eogena (I. p. 182). 
To the locality Mexico, add :—Durango city (Becker). 
One specimen, almost identical with Felder’s figure. 
