PIERIDZ.—LEPTALIS. 
LEPTALIS LYSIS. 29, 30, 31. 
L. Lysis, Hewitson. Equatorial Butterflies, p. 6. 
Uprrrsipr. Male, dark brown. Anterior wing oval, with a large white spot 
from the costal margin beyond its middle, and a smaller triangular spot, also white, 
on the inner margin. Posterior wing polished where it meets the anterior wing: 
crossed beyond the middle by a broad longitudinal band of white. 
Unpersipr, ochreous-yellow irrorated with brown. Anterior wing with the 
white spots as above. Posterior wing with the longitudinal band as above, divided 
by the nervures into eight parts: the base of the costal margin and a spot near it 
yellow: a white spot near the costal margin before its middle. 
Female like the male, except that the anterior wing is crossed on both sides by a 
broad white band, and that on the underside from its base to this band and a large 
spot on the opposite margin are brown. 
Exp. 1485 inch. Hab. Ecuador. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson (Buckley). 
LEPTALIS LYGDAMIS. 32, 338, 34. 
L. Lygdamis, Hewitson. Equatorial Lep. p. 7. 
Urrrersipr. Male, dark brown. Anterior wing with a quadrate quinquefid 
spot at the middle of the costal margin, a large bifid spot on the inner margin before 
its middle, and a minute spot on the costal margin beyond its middle all white. 
Posterior wing with the basal half (except the base itself, which is brown) white, 
slightly polished. 
Unpersipr. Anterior wing grey-white, not polished: costal margin and apex 
brown marked by a series of white and yellow spots. Posterior wing dark rufous- 
brown, with four small spots near the base, a large spot within the cell, a transverse 
band of ten spots, and a submarginal band of eight spots all yellow. 
Female white. Anterior wing with the costal margin broadly brown from the 
base to the middle: the apex very broadly brown, dentated inwardly, and marked on 
the costal margin beyond the middle by a white spot. Posterior wing with the outer 
margin dark brown, of unequal breadth, and deeply indented inwardly. Underside 
as in the male, except that the lower spots of the transverse band and some of the 
submarginal spots are so much larger that they touch each other. 
Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Ecuador. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson (Buckley). 
