NO. 3552 GENTJS CALYCOPIS — FIELD 29 



lateral view) terminating abruptly; lateral lobe of uncus with lower 

 and distal margins concave, upper distal angle produced, lower distal 

 angle rounded; inner surface of gnathos arm without carina; harpe in 

 lateral view with apex blunt; harpes in ventral view with apices not 

 widely separated. Eighth tergite (fig. 21a) cordate in shape and simi- 

 lar to that of torqueor except for the posterior concavity being more 

 like that of drusilla. 



Female. — Not illustrated. Similar to bellera on both surfaces of 

 wings, differing only in having the ground color a slightly darker blue 

 above and darker gray below. 



Length of fore wing 11.5 mm. 



Female genitalia, as illustrated by figure 31, with combined length 

 of ductus bursae and biu-sa copulatrix between three and three and 

 one-half times width of ostium bursae; posterior ostium bursae lobes 

 rounded, and thus very similar to drusilla, but with these lobes more 

 flat than in that species. Ductus seminalis from near middle of 

 combined ductus bursae and bursa copulatrix. 



Type locality. — "The Amazon." 



Additional type data. — Partunda was described from two males 

 from Bolivia and the Amazon in the collection of W. C. Hewitson 

 now in the British Museum (Natural History). I designate the male 

 specimen bearing the type label number Rh. 910 as the lectotype. 

 This is the specimen from the Amazon. Mr. D. S. Fletcher, who 

 reports that this specimen lacks its abdomen, has kindly compared 

 with it a specimen labeled "Amazonas" which he found to be identical. 

 This compared specimen is the basis for the identification of the name 

 C. partunda in this paper and is the male illustrated in figures 15, 21 A, 

 95, 96. 



Distribution.^ — French Guiana, BrazU and Bolivia. 



French Guiana: Territory of Guyane, Cayenne. Brazil: State ?, the 

 Amazon; State of Pard,, Pard; State of Paraiba, Joao Pessoa (June). Bolivia: 

 no specific locality. 



Material studied. — Four males and one female, including their 

 genitalia. 



Calycopis amplia (Hewitson), new combination 



Figures 32, 121, 122 



Thecla amplia Hewitson, 1877, Illustrations of diurnal Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae 

 vol. 1, pi. 195; vol. 2, pi. 77, figs. (9) 621, 622.— Godman and Salvin, 1887 

 Biologia Centrali- Americana, Lepidoptera-Rhopalocera, vol. 2, p. 75; ibid., 

 vol. 3, pi. 57, figs, [female not male] 7, 8. 



Male. — Unknown. 



Female (figs. 121, 122). — Wings above most similar to those of 

 bellera and indigo, but with less blue on hindwing than in bellera and 



