PIERINAE: CALLIDRYAS EUBULE. 1053 



sible in butterflies ; since, therefore, the males cannot be attractive to their 

 mates by seductive colors, they resort to odors and vie with each other in 

 the production of sweet-smelling garments. 



•.•MUlIer's observations are mostly contained in a paper entitled, Notes on Brazilian ento- 

 mology, in the Transactions of the I.ondon entomological society for 1877. A numlier of in- 

 stances of odoriferous l)uttertlies are mentioned in a paper liy Wood-Mason and de Nic(!ville on 

 the biitterllics of Cachar, in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal for 1886. 



CALLIDRYAS EUBULE.— The cloudless sulphur. 



[The cloudless sulphur (Gosse); the danewort butterlly (French); the citron butterfly 

 (Maynard).] 



Ptipilio eubtile Linn., Syst. nat.. 12th ed., 12-13(1881); Pap., iii : 6 (1883);— Aaron, Pap., 



764 (1767);— Smith-Abb., Lep. Ins. Ga., i: iv : 172-174 (1884);— French, Butt. east. U. S., 



9-10. pi. 5 (1797);— Abb., Draw. ins. Ga. Brit. 119-120 (1886). 



Mus., vi: 11, figs. 60. 61 (ca. 1800). Vatopsilia eiibtite (pars) Kirb., Syn. catal. 



Phoehis eiibule Hiibn., Verz. schmett., 98 Lep., 482 (1871) ;— Gundl., Ent. Cub., 115-117 



(1816). (1881). 



Colias eubule (fays) God., Encyel. m(5th., C'rf/!/(?)'j«s e!«6«Ze Middl., Rep. ins. 111., x: 



i.\:85. 92 (1819). 78(1881). 



CaWirfrv()sei(?<!(/e Boisd.-Lec., L^p. Amer. Calidryas eubtile Mayn., Butt. N. E., 43, 



sept., 74-78, pi. 24, figs. 1-5 (1830) ;— Boisd., pi. 4, figs. 55, 55a (1886). 



Spec. g<;n. L6p., i, pi. 2, figs. 7,7, pi. 6. fig.6 Papilio ebnle Brown, Butt., i, pi. 5 (1832). 



(1836);— Dune., For. butt., 122-123, pi. 8, figs. Callidryas ebiile French, Rep. ins. 111., 



1-3 (1837);- Poey, Mem. Soc. econ. Hab., (2) vli: 147 (1878). 



ii: 300 (1846) ;— Lucas, Sagra Hist. nat. de Papi'KomaroeZKna Cram., Pap. exot.,ii, pi. 



Cuba, 497-498 (1857) ;— Morr., Syn. Lep. N. 163. fig. C [not A, B] (1779). 



Amer., 25 (1862); — Herr.-Schaeft'., Schmett. Colias marcellina (pars) God., Encyel. 



Cuba. 12 (1865) ;-Butl. (pars), Cat. Fabr. Lep., nifith., ix : 85, 92-93 (1819). 



222-223(1869); Cist, entom., i: 36, 46, pi. 2, Papilio Inteus Seligm., Samml. ausl. vog., 



fig. 8(1870); Lep. exot., 58, pi. 22, figs. 7-10 viii. pi. 94 ind. (177.1). 



(1871); — Seudd., Proc. Host. soe. nat. hist.. Figured also by Glover, 111. N. A. Lep., pi. 1, 



xvii: 207-208 (1874);— Murtf., Psyche, iii : 198 fig.6?; pi. 29, figs. 3? 4?; pi. 109, fig. 6?; pi. P, 



(1881) ;— Edw., Trans. Amer. ent. soc, ix ; 9, fig. 4; pi. R, fig. 13 (ined). 



And on the wing, a golden butterfly. 

 The last, the loveliest, is flitting by. 



Edna D. Proctor. — Indian Summer. 



You will see a fellow. 

 Scorched by Hell's hyperequatorial climate 

 Into a kind' of a sulphureous yellow. 



Shelley. 



Imago (15: 14,16). Head covered pretty densely with short, nearly equal, soft 

 slate brown and blackish scale-like hairs, all roseate tipped, clustered to a considera- 

 ble degree in whorled tufts, which are paired to a certain extent upon opposite sides of 

 tlie head. On the sides and beneath covered with canary yellow scales, toward the eye 

 becoming tinged witli roseate and at the upper posterior border of the eye forming a 

 moderately narrow, roseate edging to it. Palpi canary yellow excepting the portion 

 which can be seen from above, which wholly resembles the upper surface of the head. 

 Antennae covered with pale roseate scales with a few scattered darker ones, nearly 

 devoid of scales and p.^le luteous along the inner surface ; the apical portions of the 

 club partially denuded and then dull, yellowish luteous. Tongue luteo-fuscous for 

 a considerable distance at base and also at tip, the middle Ijlackish fuscous. 



Prothorax covered with rather short soft greenish slate brown, scaly hairs. Rest 



