GENUS CCENONYMPHA 195 



279. Ccenonympha Inornata. 



Pl.\te XXV ; Figures 279, b. 



Fig. 279, Male, Central Montana, June, 1892; Author. 



b, Female, underside, Central Montana, June, 1892; 

 Author. 

 Inornata is rather a northern species, and is not at present 

 known on the West Coast, south of the Canada line ; it should be 

 found in British Columbia, and thence east through Canada to 

 New Foundland ; is known in our Northern States only in Mon- 

 tana and Minnesota. 



280. Ccenonympha Ampelos. 



Plate XXV ; Figures 280, b. 



Fig. 280, Male, Victoria, Vancouver Island, July, 1891 ; 

 Author, 

 b, Female, underside, Vancouver Island, July, 1891 ; 

 Author. 

 Ampelos is of a bufify color, dusty or sordid, somewhat, and the 

 underside is very dark, the darkest of all the species ; there are no 

 eye-spots on either wing. Ampelos is chiefly from Vancouver 

 Island, and is said to have been taken in Nevada, Montana, Ore- 

 gon and Washington, but I think that some of these localities are 

 theoretical only. 



281. Ccenonympha Ochracea. 

 Pl.\te XXV ; Figures 281, b. 



Fig. 281, Male, Colorado; sent me by Dr. Barnes. 



b. Female, San Francisco Mts. of Arizona, 1892; 

 Stephens. 

 This is the deepest ochre-colored species of all the Coenonym- 

 phas, whence the name. On the underside it is the most orna- 

 mented of any of the species. It is found on the Rocky Mountains, 

 and in Arizona, and perhaps all of the States of the Great Basin, 

 but does not come west of the Sierra Nevadas. 



282. Ccenonympha Brenda. Not elsewhere illustrated. 

 Pl.\te XXV ; Figures 282, a, b. 



Fig. 282, Female, Sisson, Northern California, 1890 ( ?) ; 

 Author. 



a, Male, underside, Greenhorn Mountains, June, 



1888; Author. 



b, Female, underside, Mts. of Southern Cal., 1892 ; 



Author. 



