55 



narrow, bent just above the second branch of median; behind it a 

 large roughened patch, a shade darker than the ground elsewhere; both 

 hind margins very narrowly edged by fuscous; secondaries clear ful- 

 vous, except along costal margin; immaculate; fringes long, white, 

 with a yellow tint towards apex of primaries and at anal angle. 



Under side of secondaries and apex and costa of primaries light yel- 

 low, with a green tint; part of cell of primaries ful\ous, about base and 

 along inner margin black; a large buff patch nearly covers the lower 

 median and sub-median interspaces, and in the former is a brown-ful- 

 vous patch next the margin; on costa three white spots, and an oblique 

 row of similar ones in discoidal and lower interspaces. Secondaries 

 have the costal margin mottled brown; the sub-costal and median ner- 

 vures and branches clear white; across these branches, beyond disk, 

 is a band made up of confluent white spots, bent in the discoidal inter- 

 space at a right angle; most of these spots are slightly edged black on 

 outer side; in cell a small white spot with black scales on the basal 

 side; at the ends of the nervures a brown point. 



Body above covered with yellow-green hairs; beneath, thorax and 

 abdomen green-yellow; legs pale brown, yellow on under side; palpi 

 yellow, greenish above; antennae brown above, yellow below and along 

 base of club; upper side of club brown, tip ferruginous. 



Taken in southern Arizona, by Mr. Doll, and in Mr. Neumoegen's 

 collection. Differs from all the allied species by the ornamenting of 

 under side. 



Pamphila Deva, Edw. — There are two species confounded under 

 name of P. Deva, Edw. The original description of Deva, Trans. 

 Am. Ent. Soc. V. 292, was as follows: 



9 . — Exp. 2 inches. 



Upper side uniform glossy brown, rather light in tint; primaries have 

 three translucent spots, sub-apical, small, round, equal, in a straight 

 line depending from costa; a fourth slightly larger than those near the 

 top of the upper median interspace, and a fifth, an elongated narrow- 

 bar, in the next below, a little nearer base than the fourth; both these 

 completely cross the interspaces; secondaries immaculate; fringes con- 

 colored. Under side slightly paler in tint, darker on the disk of pri- 

 maries and up to base, lighter next inner angle; the spots repeated, 

 secondaries immaculate. 



Body above dark brown; below, the thorax gray buff, the abdomen 

 brown; palpi white; antennae annulated, brown and dull white; club 

 black, reddish at tip. From a single example received from Prescott. 



The description of Deva in Papilio II, 138, is of a different, but 

 closely allied species, to wliich I give the name of Liinns. Deva is 

 redescribed as follows: 



$ . — Exp. 1.6 to 1.8 inch. 



