2G9 



55. CHLOSYNE Butler (1870). 



Type : Papilio .(aiiuis Drury. 



181. *Jiiiiais Drury, 111. Nat. Hist., 3, pi. 17, figs. 5-6 {Papilio) ; God., En- 



cycl. Mcth., )Vyi(Nyniphnlis); Doiibl.-Westw., Oen. Diiirn. Lop., 1,S() 

 (Synehloe) ; Kirb. Syn. Cat., 17S {Coatlantoiia). 

 Texas (Mexico). 



182. Mediatrix Feld., lleise Novara, 395 (Synehloe); Kirb., Syii. Cat., 178 



(Coatlantona). 



Saundersii Edw. (nee Doubl.), Syn. X. Am. Butt., 18 {Synehloe). 

 Texas (Xew Grenada). 



183. Adjutrix Scudd. 



Lacinia Edw. (nee Hiibn.), Syn. N. Am. Butt., 18 {Synehloe). 



Texas. 



This species differs from Lacinia of Hiibner (under which name I have 

 received it from Mr. Edwards) in that the mesial band of dull, pale fulvous 

 spots, deepening outwardly into orange fulvous, extends also across the fore 

 wings, forming there an arcuate band broadest on the lower half of the wing, 

 and especially, as a general rule, in the lower median interspace. Beneath, the 

 extramesial spots of the hind wings are wholly white. It is much more 

 closely allied to Mediatrix Feld. , from which it differs principally in that the 

 mesial band of the hind wings is broadest in the middle, and, excepting the 

 anal extension common to both species, narrows decidedly toward either 

 border. 



184. *Erodyle Boisd. MS. in Doubl. Gen. Diurn. Lep., 186 {Synehloe) ; Bates, 



Ent. Month. Mag., 1, Si {Synehloe) ; Kirb., Syn. Cat., 118 {Coatla7itona). 

 Texas. 



185. Crocale Edw., Trans. Am. Ent. Soc, 5, 17 {Synehloe). 

 Arizona. 



IV. Subfcimily HYPATI Iluhn. (1816). 

 [Lybithides Boisd., 1836.] 



56. HYPATUS //;<&/ier(1825). 



Type : Papilio Carinenta Cram. 



186. *Cariiieiita Cram., Pap. Exot., 2, pi. 108, figs. E F {Papilio); God. 



Encycl. Moth., 9, 170 {Libythea) ; Iliibn., Cat. Franck, 85. 

 New Mexico and Arizona (to Surinam). 



187. Baelimauii Kirkl, Sill. Amer. Journ. Sc, [2] 13, 336, fig. {Libythea) ; 



Edw., Butt. N. Am., 2, pi. Libythea 1, figs. 1-4, a-h {Libythea). 

 Food plant : Celtis occidentalis. 

 United States east of the Mississippi. 



The insect figured by Boisduval and Le Conte is a Cuban species, and has 

 never, so far as I am aware, been found in the United States. 



