ATUYTONK ZAllULON ZABULON. 



PAMPIIILIDI ATUYTONE ZABULOX. 1617 



ATRYTONE ZABULON.— The Mormon. 



[lloboinok skipper (Harris); the Jlonnjii (SciuUier); or;iii,,'e uiul Ijrowii skipper (Mayiuird).] 



Papilio ogeechensis Abb., Draw. ins. Ga. 29, fig. ;i; pi. 31, fig. 6; pi. F, fig. 17, pi. I, fig. 



Brit. Mus., vi: 91, figs. ];!3-134, ined (ca. 1800). 1.5, iiied. 



Hcsperiu zabulon Boisd.-LeC, Li5p. Amiir. 

 sept., pi. 76, figs. 6-7 (1833). 



Pamiihila zabulon Westw.-Hew., Gen. The syiigenic female, 



diurn. Lep., ii : .V23 (1852) ;— Morr., Syii. Lep, Hcsperia zabulon Boisd.-LeC, loc. cit. 



N. A., 116 (1862) ;— Morr., Can. ent.. v: 164 Hesperia hobomok Viavv., Ins. m). veg., 3d 



(1873) ;— Fern., Butt. Me., 9G-97, tigs. 33-34 ed., 313-314, tig. 137 (1862). 

 (1884) ;— French. Butt. east. U. S., 303-305, figs. 



82-83 (1.S86) ;-Mayn., Uutt. N. E., 59-60, pi. 7, atrytone zabulon pocahontas. 



figs. 92, 92a, 92a, 92ab (1886). The melanic female. 



Atrytone zabulon Soudd., Syst. rev. Amer. Hesperia pocahontas Scudd., Proc., Ess. 



butt., 56 (1872); Butt., 1S2-1S3, figs. 8, 30, 154 inst., iii: 171-172 (1863) ;— Strecker, Lep., [7] 



(1881). (1872). 



Isoteinon zabulon Hew., Cat. coll. diurn. Hesperia qriadaquina Scudd., Proc. Bost. 



Lep., 228 (1879). soc. nat. hist., xi : 381 (1868). 



ifes/)eriV( Aofiomot Morr., Syn. Lep. N. A., Pamphila quadraquina Kirb., Syn. cat. 



110 (1862) ;—Saund., Can. ent., i: 66 (1869);— Lep., 603(1871). 



Pack., Guide ins., 269-270 (1869). Figured also by Glover, 111. N. A. Lep., pi. 



Figured also by Glover, 111. N. A. Lep., pi. 6, fig. 15, iued. 



Deft wings, each moment is resigned 

 Some touch of day, some pulse of light, 

 While yet in poised, delicious curve. 

 Ecstatic doublings down the wind. 

 Light dash and dip and sidelong swerve. 

 You try each dainty trick of flight. 



DOWDEN. 



Abide me, if thou darest; for well I wot 

 Thou runu'st before me, shifting every place, 

 And darest not stand, nor look me in the face. 

 "WTiere art thou now 1 



Shakespeare. — Midsummer-NighPs Dream. 



Imago (10:8-10; 13:9). Head covered with olivaceo-tawny hairs, mingled with 

 fewer black ones; behind and beneath the eye are a few tawny yellow scales, with a 

 few intermingled dusky ones beneath ; at the outer base of the antennae a tuft of black 

 bristles. Palpi rather pale lemon yellow, becoming paler toward the base, with infre- 

 quent, slightly longer, black, bristly hairs, intermingled throughout all the denser part, 

 especially conspicuous from above; the apical joint furnished only with appressed 

 black hairs. .Vntennae blackish brown on the upper outer part of the stem, deepeuing 

 into purplish black on the thicker portion of the club above, elsewhere ou the stem 

 very pale, slightly lemon yellow, shading into tawny next the black, from which it Is 

 separated by a zigzag line, composed on each joint of an oblique line running from the 

 inner side at the tip nearly to the middle of the upper surface at the base; apical half 

 of club pale castaneous beneath, clothed only with short pile, the apical joint dusky ; 

 crook dark brown where the club is black. Tongue castaneous, very dark next the 

 base, becoming luteous on apical third. 



Thorax covered with dull olivaceo-tawny hairs above, beneath with mingled ruddy 

 brown and dark greenish yellow hairs; legs covered with tawny yellow scales, becom- 

 ing paler on the tarsi, mingled at the base of the femora beneath with many dark fuli- 

 ginous ones, and marked along the middle of the upper surface of the tibiae and tarsi 

 ■with a line of dusky brown scales, deepening and widening on the tarsi; leaf -like append- 

 age of fore tibiae glossy brown; spurs very pale yellow, minutely tipped with testa- 

 ceous, spines testaceous; claws a little darker; pad dusky. 



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