HELICONIDH—ITHOMIA. 
ITHOMIA YANINA. 115. 
P. Kuritea. Drury, Vol. VWV., Pi. 13, Figs. 5, 6 
Uprersipg. Female transparent. The basal half of both wings (except the 
costal margin of the anterior, which is brown) light yellow. The rest light semi- 
transparent blue-black ; a scarcely visible band of the same colour, and a short 
curved black line at the end of the cell. 
UnpersIDE as above. 
Expan. 14% m. Hab. Brazil. 
In the Collections of W. W. Saunders and W. C. Hewitson. 
This insect has an unfinished appearance ; it belongs to the same group as the last two, and has 
the nervures of the posterior wing arranged like them. 
Drury’s name of Euritea having been previously used by Cramer, must be dropped for this species. 
ITHOMIA EURITEA. 116, 117 
P. Kuritea. Cramer, Pl. 280, Fig. C. 
Uprrrsipn. Male hlac-white. Both wings yellow from the base to the middle. 
Margins and nervures (except where they cross the yellow) black. Anterior wing 
with an oblique short black band at the end of the cell, followed by a small spot of 
yellow. 
UnpersiDE as above, except that there are two or three mdistinct white spots at 
the apex of both wings. 
The female does “not differ. 
Fig. 117 represents a hght-coloured variety. 
Expan. 149 in. Hab. Brazil. 
In the Collections of W. W. Saunders and W. C. Hewitson. 
ITHOMIA SYLVO. 118. 
H. Sylvo. Hubner, Zutrage, Figs. 767, 768. 
Upprrsipg. Male transparent rufous-white. The margins (except the immer 
margin of the anterior wing, which is broad) narrow black, the nervures black. 
Anterior wing with a curved, somewhat triangular, short band at the end of the cell. 
Unpersipe light rufous where black above; the costal margim of the posterior 
wing yellow. A single minute white spot at the apex of each wing. 
” Phere is a variety of the female which has the wings more tinted with rufous ; 
a spot of yellow at the imner angle of the anterior wing, and a spot of the same 
colour on the costal margin of the posterior wing. 
Expan. 132 in. Hab. Venezuela. 
In the Collections of W. W. Saunders and W. C. Hewitson. 
