HELICONID®—ITHOMIA. 
the middle. The apex with four distinct white spots. Posterior wing, from the 
base to beyond the middle, orange; the rest black, with three oblong spots (two 
transparent), and a submar ginal row of bifid white spots. 
Unprrsipr as above, “except that the black at the end of the cell of the anterior 
wing is intersected with a ‘rufous line. 
The male differs only in having the posterior wing so much more narrow, that 
it is without the oblong spot near the costal margin, and the single white spot at the 
apex. 
: Expan. 2375 m. Hab. New Granada. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
ITHOMIA OCALEA. 99. 
Ithomia Ocalea. Doubleday and Hewitson. Gen. Diur. Lep. Plate 18. 
Upprrsipr. Female semi-transparent. Anterior wing, from the base to beyond 
the middle (except the margins, which are black) rufous ; “the rest black, crossed by 
a curved band of five unequal oblong spots of light yellow. The third spot shorter 
than the rest; the fourth and fifth joined to the rufous space. Apex with three 
indistinct white spots. Posterior wing rufous, with the outer margin black. 
UnpersIDE as above, except that the posterior wing has a line of black near 
and parallel to the costal margm, and a row of bifid white spots near the outer 
margin. 
The male does not differ. 
Expan. 2345 in. Hab. Venezuela. 
In the Collections of W. W. Saunders and W. C. Hewitson. 
ITHOMIA GONUSSA. 100. 
Uprrrsipr. Female. Anterior wing (partly semi-transparent) black. The cell 
(which has an indistinct band across the middle), and a spot between it and the 
imner angle, hight orange; a triangular spot near the middle of the costal margin ; 
a small spot below it, and a row of irregular-shaped spots parallel to the outer 
margin, yellow-white. A submarginal row “of distinct white spots. Posterior wing, 
with the basal half orange, the rest black, with a submarginal row of large distinct 
white spots. 
UNDERSIDE as above. 
Expan. 27/9 in. Hab. New Granada. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
This beautiful Butterfly is very distinct from any of the numerous species figured hitherto. In 
form only it somewhat resembles Fig. 49. 
