112 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES. 



with a point below this. Hind wings have a more or less complete sub- 

 marginal row of black dots. Expands 1.40 to 1..50. Habitat, Los An- 

 gelos, California. 



268. COENONYMPHA PAMPHILOIDES Reak. 

 White-dotted Quaker. 

 Above yellowish. Hind wings beneath, mottled with greenish; 

 brown from base to middle. Outer half of wings same color as above. 

 There is a sub-marginal row of six white dots, each encircled with a 

 brownish green ring. Expands 1.30. Habitat, California and British 

 America. 



GELUS XL. EREBIA. DUSKEY BUTTERFLIES 

 Size, small to medium. Colors, dark brown, or red- 

 dish brown, often unspotted, sonetimes with a reddish patch 

 on fore wings which may enclose black dots. Difiers main- 

 ly from the last genus in not havingthe veins of fore wings 

 much swollen at base, and in the prevailing dark color. 

 Type, E. epipsodea. ( Plate, VIII, 4. ) 



260. EREBIA FASCIATA Butl; 



Fasciated Butterfly. 

 Dark brown above without markings. Beneath, lighter brown with 

 a wide band of grayish on outer portion of both wings, not quite crossing 

 to lower border of fore pair, when it becomes reddish, but reaches quite 

 across the hind pair, Fig. 27, c, and there is an indication of a second 

 bar near base of both wings; the bands are bordered with black. Fe- 

 male has a reddish patch on outer portion of fore, and band on hind wing 

 above. Expands 1.80 to 2.00. Habitat, Alaska and Arctic America. 



270. EREBIA DISCOID ALIS Kirby. 

 Discal Dusky Butterfly. 



Reddish brown above, with the upper border mottled with white 

 and a large patch of reddish in middle of wing. Beneath similar, with 

 the outer half of hind wing grayish, and some grayish markings in the 

 middle of inner half. Fig. 37, d. 



