766 A, E. Verrill—The Bermuda Islands. 
line. Expanse, 2.65-3.75 inches. It is native of the southern United 
States, especially in the southwest. Florida; Panama; and Cuba, 
(Yale Mus.).: 
Pearly-eye Butterfly. (Enodia portlandia (Fabr.) Hubn.; Scudder 
=Debis portlandia Holland, p. 199, pl. xviii, f. 20, iii, fig. 16, 
larva= Hipparchia andromache Hubn., Say, etc., and in Jones.) 
FiGuReES 126, 127. 
Jones records a specimen taken in 1848 by Canon Tristram. I do 
not know of any record of its recent capture, but that is of no great 
importance as evidence, for the Bermudian insects have been little 
studied in summer. It is native of the middle and southern United 
States. 
126 12 
Figure 126.—Pearly-eye (Enodia portlandia); under side. Figure 127.—The 
same; upper side; about natural size ; phot. by A. H. V. 
This delicate yellowish-brown butterfly has 4 to 6 oval, ocellated 
spots of blackish, bordered with orange or pale yellow, near the mar- 
gin of each wing ; on the under side the spots mostly have a small 
white center. Expanse of wings two inches. The larva feeds on 
grasses ; it is green with two red processes on the head. 
Sweet-potato Sphinx ; Musk ; Morning-glory Sphinx ; Rose-banded 
Sphinx. (Phlegothontius cingulatus*= Protoparce cingulata= 
Macrosila cingulata.) 
Pirate XCVIL; Ficurss 1, 2. 
The only common large sphinx. Its very large larva feeds on 
the leaves of the sweet-potato and other species of Jpomea, and on 
wild jasmine. Geddes says that it feeds also on Asimina triloba. 
* Mr. H. G. Dyar considers this a variety of the European species, convolwuli 
(L.), and writes the name Phlegothontius convolvuli, var. cingulatus. 
