The BiUterfiies of Chile. 297 



small species which I took on the edge of fche forest at 

 Lake Quillen, and which is distinguished from the others 

 by the spots of the under-side being yellow and not white 

 or silvery. This is in Mr. Godman's collection from 

 Staudinger as -paniscoicles, Blanch. The description of 

 this is not sufficient in my opinion to identify it by, or to 

 separate it from Jlavomaculatus on the material before me. 



6C. B'ldleria valdivianus. (Plate XIII, figs. 15 ^, 16 ^, 



Syrichthus valdivianus, Philippi, Linn. Ent., xiv, p. 



272 (1860). 

 ? Carteroc&phalus exornatus, Felder, Reise Nov. Lep., 



p. 521, PI. LXXIV, figs. 18, 19 (1867). 

 ? Butleria 'paniscoides, Reed, t. c, p. 82. 



I found this species common both in the Pemehue range 

 at about 3000 feet, and in the marshy places on the edge 

 of the forest at Quillen, from which locality I figure a pair 

 (figs. 15 and 16). The original of fig. 17 is from Lolco. 

 It varies extremely in the spots of the hind-wing below, 

 which, however, seem to me to distinguish it from the 

 last species by their silvery white colour, and from the 

 next by the irregularity of the marginal series, which are 

 sometimes faint or absent. On the inner and costal 

 margins of the hind-wing below, these spots often coalesce 

 into a streak ; as is also sometimes the case in the next 

 species. Uxornahts is described as from Valparaiso. 



67. Butleria polyspihis. (Plate XIII, fig. 18 $.) 



? Carterocephalus polyspilus, Felder, Verb. Z. B. Wien., 

 xii, p. 495 (1862). 



I identify this with great doubt. In Mr. Godman's 

 collection there are three" specimens named G. co:ornatus, 

 Feld. I am not certain whether it is distinct from the last, 

 but have found it in much more open grassy places, and 

 took it in the valley of the Traful river in Argentine 

 territory as well as at Quillen. The specimen figured is 

 from the Traful Valley. 



68. Butleria hissexguttatus. (Plate XIII, figs. 13 ^, 14 $.) 

 ? Stcopes (sic) hissexguttatus, Philippi, Linn. Ent., xiv, 



p. 272 (1860). 



I found this first in the forest at Temuco on January 

 3rd, and afterwards at several places in the Pemehue range 



