202 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY 



600. Laogona* 



1836. Boisd., Spec, gen., pi. 6 B. : Hypselis. Sole species, and 

 therefore type. 

 Subsequently used in same sense by Doubleday and Felder, but the 

 name falls before Symbrenthia (q. v.). 



601. Laparus.* 



1820. Billb., Enum. Ins. 77 : Rhea (Sara), Erato (Doris), Phyllis, 

 Melpomene. 

 The name falls before Sicyonia, Migonitis, and Sunias. 



602. Larinopoda. 

 1871. Butl., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 172 : lycsenoides. Sole spe- 

 cies, and therefore type. 



603. Lasaia.* 



1867. Bates, Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond. ix. 397 : Meris, Cleades 



(Cleadas). 

 1871. Kirb., Syn. Cat. 321 : the same. 



But tins name cannot stand, because preoccupied through Lasaea 

 (Brown, Moll. 1827) and Lasia (Wied., Dipt. 1824, and Hope, Col. 

 1840). 



604. Lasiommata. 

 1840. Westw. in Westw.-Humphr., British Butterfi. 65 : ^geria, 



Megsera. 

 1844. Doub!., List Br. Mus. 134: employs it for ^geria, Megrera, 



and other insects not specitied by Westwood. 



1850. Steph., Cat. Brit. Ent. 6, 254: employs it for ^geria, Megajra, 



and Maira only. 



1851. TVestw., Gen. Dlurn. Lep. 385: employs it for the same and 



others. 



As jEgeria is the type of Pararge, Megaera must be taken as the 

 type of this genus. Butler, in his Catalogue of Satyridce and else- 

 where, has sunk this name inider Pararge, apparently on the false 

 principle tiiat tiie first species must be taken as the type ; and he h.as 

 founded on the second species of this list, and on others, a genus 

 Amecera (q. v.), which must certainly fall, unless some of its other 

 species are generically distinct from Megaera. 



605. Lasiophila. 



1859. Feld., Wien. Ent. Monatschr. iii. 325 : Cirta, Circe. Felder 

 remarks that the species resemble, in habitus and coloring, 

 the species of Pronophila of the group of Zapatoza. 



