HETEROCERA. 44] 
3. Sciathos ribbei, sp. n. (Tab. LX XXVIII. fig. 1, ¢.) 
Male. Primaries semihyaline pinkish-red, with the costal and inner margins darker, the veins reddish-brown ; 
secondaries deep pinkish-red, with the veins darker: head, thorax, abdomen, and legs orange-red, the 
antennee black. Expause 14 inch. 
Hab. Panama, Chiriqui (Ribbe, in mus. Staudinger). 
One specimen. 
DALCERA (I. p. 213). 
Dalcera ochracea (I. p. 213). 
Hab. Mexico, Tierra Colorada in Guerrero (H. #. Smith). 
The worn specimen from Costa Rica that I included under D. ochracea belongs to a 
different species, but it is not in a fit condition to describe. 
PINCONIA (to follow the genus Dalcera, I. P. 213). 
Pinconia, Moore, Proc. Lit. Phil. Soc. Liverpool, xxxvi. p. 364 (1882). 
The type of the genus is P. ochracea, Moore, from Brazil. 
1. Pinconia coa. (Tab. LXXXVII. fig. 23, ¢ .) 
Pinconia coa, Schaus, P. Z.S. 1892, p. 822 (3 9)’. 
Hab. Mexico, Jalapa} (M. Trujillo), Coatepec ! (coll. Schau), Orizaba (Boucard, tm 
mus. D.); Brivis Honpuras, Belize (Sir Alfred Moloney, in mus. D.). 
+ The sexes are very similar, except that the female is larger than the male. We 
figure one of the types from Jalapa. 
9. Pinconia melinda, sp. n. (Tab. LXXXVII. fig. 24, 2 .) 
‘Female. Primaries and secondaries uniformly orange-yellow, the primaries slightly darker along the inner 
margin ; the underside as above: head, antenne, thorax, abdomen, and legs orange-yellow. Expanse 
2 inches. 
Hab. Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui (Lrotsch, in mus. Staudinger). 
Differs from P. ochracea and P. coa in having the wings entirely without markings. 
PARASA (I. p. 214), 
Parasa imitata (I. p. 215). 
To the localities given, add:—MeEx1co, Jalapa (i. Trujillo) ; GuaremaLa, in the city 
(Rodriguez) ; Costa Rica, Candelaria Mts. (Underwood). 
The two specimens from the Candelaria Mountains differ from all the others I have 
seen in having the secondaries pale cream-colour, instead of reddish-brown. 
BIOL. CENTR.-AMER., Heter., Vol. I1., January 1898. 3 Ul 
