54 



vures, and in mid-cell a fulvous patch; secondaries have a large fulvous 

 patch in cell, with a deep black sinus on posterior side; fringes white, 

 fuscous at ends of the nervules. 



Under side of primaries bright fuhous; along hind margin a row of 

 irregular-sized buff spots, rounded, or partly lanceolate, on anterior 

 side, those next inner angle with a black stripe; through all runs a 

 sub-marginal black line; on the clear extra-discal area is a row of 

 minute white spots from costa to second branch of median; then a row 

 of obscure white spots corresponding to the discal row of upper side, 

 a black mark inside each spot; four curved black lines cross the cell, 

 and between the outer pair is a yellowish space; secondaries have a 

 marginal row like that on primaries, but more regular, cut by a line in 

 same way, and all edged black on anterior side; next above is a clear 

 fulvous band, not macular, and with no black dots in the interspaces 

 (as in the allied species); the disk is crossed by a broad buff band, on 

 both edges of which is a macular black line, and another runs through 

 near the basal side; this buff space is continued up inner margin to 

 base; a band of fulvous next crosses from costa to sub-median, edged 

 black, greatly widened in the middle, and inclosing in cell a buff spot 

 with heavy black edging; then a band made of irregular square spots; 

 a band of fulvous, and finally, the base is buff. 



Body above, black, the abdomen ringed with fulvous; beneath, buff- 

 white, with some fulvous on side of thorax, and the sides of abdomen 

 fulvous, the ventral stripe white; legs fulvous; palpi fulvous above, at 

 base yellow-buff; antennae black above, finely ringed with white, the 

 under side yellowish; club black, fulvous on under side about base, the 

 tip ferruginous. 



9 . — Exp. 1.5 inch. 



Upper side largely pale fulvous, the basal area only black, and spotted 

 fulvous; the light band is yellowish on both wings; the sub-marginal 

 spots are largely lost in the fulvous ground, especially on secondaries. 

 Under side as in the male; the second band on secondaries without 

 black dots. 



On the under side this species closely resembles Miniita, the mark- 

 ings being of same pattern, but there is an absence of black dots on 

 the penultimate fulvous band of secondaries. On upper side the dif- 

 ference is wider, Nympha being black, with a white discal band; 

 Minuta fulvous, with no such band. 



Taken by Mr. Morrison in southern Arizona. 



Pamphila Lasus, n. sp. <? . — Exp. 1.4 inch. 



Allied to P. Ottoe, Edw., which on the upper side it closely resem- 

 bles; color bright fulvous, greenish over apical area of primaries; costal 

 margins of same wings fuscous; the white spots of under side repre- 

 sented on upper by obscure pale fulvous; stigma as in Ottoe, long. 



