E. B. WILLIAMSON 
241 
edges of tergites of 1-8 pale green. Hind part of 10 transversely 
pale brown or 10 all black. 
‘‘ 9 . — Eyes greenish-gray with 1 or more black pseudopniiillae; 
darker in upper half. Body generally olive-gray, paler on clypeus 
and labriim. All regions of body with narrow black markings. 
Hind fourth of 3-6 and most of dorsum of 7-10 reddish brown, 
or olive-brown tinted lightly with red on 3 and 4.” 
Neoneura aaroni Calvert (Figs. 27, 2S, 29, 66, 1)7, 9.5 and 96.) 
The great variation in color due to age has been fully de- 
scribed by Dr. C'alvert.^^ In addition to the original material, 
I have collected the species at Black Bayou, Texas. In the 
left hind wing of one male the descending cross-vein from the 
first postnodal ends on Chu, just before the termination of the 
latter at the wing margin. In the right hind wing of the same 
specimen the terminal triangular cell behind Cip has an added 
transver.se cross-vein. 
Neoneura paya Calvert (Figs. 30, 68, 69, 97 and 106.) 
Guatemala; San Tomas, IMay 29, 1909; Los Amates, June 
19, 1909: a total of eleven males. Unfortunately the unknown 
female was not taken. At the big spring at San Tomas, where 
the washerwomen congregate, and along the Rio San Francisco 
below Los Amates, this species was taken associated with N. 
amelia. 
Neoneura fulvicollis Selys (Figs. 15, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74 and 98.) 
I have seen the two males in the Carnegie Museum.’* 
Some \>national Characters of Fifteen Species of Xeoneura, 
Exju’essed in Percentages. 
(Based on the following material; jonna, lOcf', 29; bilinearis, lOcf, 29; 
fiyh'dlica, 3cf; clhda, Icf; mariana, 5cf, 19; denlicidata, Icf; mijrlhea, 
lOct', 19; rubrivenlris, od'; esthera, lOcf, 59; carnatica, -id, 39; maria, 
5>d, I 9 ; amelia, 5d, 4 9 ; aaroni, 2cf , 1 9 ; paya, od] fulvicollis, 2d-) 
"Biol. Cent.-Ainer., pp. B19 to 140 and 392. 
‘-Ent. News, xxv, p. 446, (Dec., 1914). 
'^Calvert, Ann. Carneg. Mus., vi, p. 212. 
TR.\XS.-.\M. EXT. .SOC., XLIII. 
