THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 239 



Chrysophanus florus, Edws. Male and female. 



Danais plexippus, Linn. One very peculiar looking male expanding 

 only three and one-half inches and having the primaries produced apically 

 in a remarkable manner. 



Euptoieta clafidia, Cram. This has previously been reported from 

 N. W. Terr, by Geddes ; all the books give it a much more southern 

 range, Strecker giving it from Pennsylvania southward and Edwards's 

 northernmost points being Quebec and California. 



Argyiuiis lais, Edws. 



Argy7inis bellona, Fabr. 



Melitea carlota, Reak. 



Grapta progne, Cram. 



Vanessa inilbet'ti, Godt. 



Vanessa antiopa, Linn. The expanse is considerably less than in 

 those found here (Phila.) 



Fyrameis cardui, Linn. 



Pyraineis /iunte?-a, Fabr. 



Livienitis artheniis, Drury. 



Erebia discoidalis, Kirby. 



Erebia sine-ocellata, Nov. var. 



This is a var. of epipsodea, Butler, which, I think, deserves character- 

 ization. It has the bright fulvous patch on the superior wings divided 

 into four sections by the sub-costal and discoidal nervules. Above the 

 third median nervure is a small fulvous patch separated from the rest. 

 There are but two black dots on the fulvous, and the white dots, which 

 in epipsodea make them ocelli, are wanting. The underside of the 

 superior wings is practically the same as the upper. Described from two 

 specimens, one from Fort Qu'Appelle and the other in the Coll. Am. Ent. 

 Soc, locality unknown. The Fort Qu'Appelle specimen is very much 

 darker than epipsodea usually is. Epipsodea is quite a variable species, 

 individuals differing in the size, colour and number of the ocelli, also in 

 the extent and number of the fulvous patches. One marked specimen 

 having four white pupilled ocelli. 



Chionobas vanma, Edws. 



Satyrus, var. boopis, Eehr.- 



Satyrus, form olympus, Edws. Three specimens. They do not 

 agree entirely with olympus, but I did not think they deserved a new 

 name. 



