114 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol.47. 



14. Median area with dark filling between the lines 15 



Median area without dark filling 17 



15. Dark area from inner to outer line and continued in a patch to outer margin 



or a Dyar. 

 Dark area confined between the inner and median lines 16 



16. Hind wing olive yellow with dark brown angled area from base; marginal mark 



large, silvery, with black striae juno Moschler. 



Hing wing brown; marginal mark slight, rather inconspicuous. . volcanica Schaus. 



17. Hing wing with subocellate black spots on outer margin 18 



Hind wing without such spots, all fuscous with a narrow orange terminal edge 



ancea Cramer. 



18. Small; hind wing with single marginal ocellus placida Schaus. 



Large; hind wing with three marginal black ocellate dots dmolia Guenee. 



DYOMYX ALBISTRIGA Schaus. 



Palindia albistriga Schaus, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (8), vol. 7, 1911, p. 58. 



I have the type and two other specimens, all from Costa Kica. 



DYOMYX EGISTA Bar. 



Dyomix egista Bar, Ann. Soc. Ent. France (5), vol. 6, 1876, p. 439. 

 I have six from British Guiana,Veneziiela, Panama, and Costa Rica. 



DYOMYX CONSEQUENS Dyar. 



This will be more fully described in my fourth Mexican paper. 

 I have five cotypes from Mexico, Panama, and Venezuela. 



DYOMYX MERRICKI Holland. 



Palindia merricH Holland, Ent. News, vol. 13, 1902, p. 172. 

 Palindia merricki Dyar, Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., vol. 14, 1912, p. 194. 

 Nine specimens are before me, all from Venezuela. The species 

 was described from Pennsylvania, presumably from a stray specimen. 



DYOMYX FUMATA Felder and Rogenhofer. 

 Palindia fumata Felder and Rogenhofer, Reise Novara, Lep., 1872, pi. Ill, 



fig. 17. 

 Eulepidotis mabis Butler (not Guenee), Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1879, p. 29. 

 Palindia mabis Druce (part, not Guen6e), Biol. Cent.-Amer., Lep. Het., vol. 1, 

 1889, p. 317. 

 This is not before me. Butler misidentified Guenee's 7naUs, 

 apparently by following Walker's arrangement in the British Museum. 

 Druce quoted the synonymy from Butler, though he probably had 

 the true mabis before him. 



DYOMYX INFERIOR Herrich-Schaffer. 

 PaZmtf ia m/mor Herrich-Schaffer, Corr. Bl., zool.-min. Ver. Regensb., vol. 22, 



1869, p. 153. 

 Dyomyx lineata Druce, Biol. Cent.-Amer., Lep. Het., vol. 1, 1889, p. 320 (female). 



Seven specimens are before me from Brazil, Panama, Costa Rica, 

 and Mexico. Druce figures as male and female two different species. 

 I restrict the name to the female figured in the Biologia, plate 29, 

 fig. 25. 



