60 BUTTERFLIES OF MAINE. 
30. JUNONIA COENIA, Hub. 
Ju-no’-ni-a coe -ni-a. 
Expanse of wings, from two to two and a half inches. 
Upper side of wings, dark brown, each with a large and a 
small eye-like spot on both sides. The fore wings have two 
orange red bars, edged with black, in the cell, and a large 
whitish oblique band across the outer part of the wing, en- 
closing the hinder eye-like spots. This band is broken by 
the brown veins which cross it, and is stained with reddish in 
the females, with a branch extending up towards the apex. 
Hind wings, with a narrow reddish band between the eye 
spots and the outer margin. 
This butterfly, though common in the Southern States, is 
exceedingly rare in Maine; one specimen was taken in the 
summer of 1883, near Bangor. 
The caterpillars feed on plantain, snapdragon and Gerardia. 
They are blackish, pointed with white, and reddish under- 
neath; and have two lateral white lines, of which the upper 
is marked with a row of fulvous spots. 
_ Pupa, like those of P. cardui and huntera, but blackish, 
varied with whitish, without any metallic spot. 
31. LiImMeEnITIsS ARTHEMIS, Drury. 
Li-men-i'-tis ar’-the-mis. 
Expanse of wings, two and one-half to three inches. 
Upper side of wings, brownish black, with a common 
white band a little beyond the middle, and a double series of 
blue crescents along the outer margin of the hind wings, and 
only a single row on the fore wings, inside of which, there is 
sometimes a short row of fulvous spots. Two or three white 
spots before the apex of the fore wings. The males have a 
row of seven round reddish spots between the band and the 
blue crescents on the hind wings. 
