Additions: PIERIDAE. By J. Rober. 1021 



Cat. pliilothina Stgr. i. I. (194 o) is aliove much darker than ?nrt».co (104 c) and lienccath quite differently philolhiun. 

 marked and coloured. Ecuador. — • ilicertina snb-'^p. nov. (194 d) from Colombia resembles ■philotliinu (194 e) incniinci. 

 above, but it is marked more grey, whereas the under siu'face is very different. 



Cat. phile Stgr. i. I. (194 f) seems to be allied to 'pinava hopfjeri (22 e), Ixit the iipjier surface is less iihUc. 

 marked yellow and the under surface very different. Peru ((Uianchamayo). 



Cat. zanclides Stgr. has formerly been in the market by the name of pkilonarche. As the figures exhibit, :(incridrs. 

 it differs considerably from the latter. Colombia (Cauca and Aguaca Valleys). 



Cat. zanclidoides Stgr. (194 f) differs from zanclides more above than beneath; the mider smface is ::(incH(!iii- 

 not so distinctly and less marked white, and on the discal band of the hindwing it shows less violet colouring. ^'''*'' 



Peru. Similar to watkinsi. 



Cat. subtoca sp. nov. (194 f) is before us in a female specimen. It is above entiix-ly different from siihioca. 

 toca (22 f), but beneath similar, though it is without the conspicuous yellow s])(jt at the end of the discal cell 

 of the hindwing. Venezuela (Merida). It also resembles seifzi (194 d). 



Cat. scurra Stgr. i. I. (194 e) from Peru resembles leucophaea (194 d), but it is much darker, also in scKnn. 

 the marking, especially beneath, it is very different. 



Cat. chelidonides sp. nov. (194 g). Of this species 1 ,^ from Peru (Chanchamayo) and 1 $ from Venezuela rhriiihini- 

 (Merida) is before us. We have figured the upper surface of the $ and the under surface of the (J. In the ''^■'• 



(J the light markings above are moi'e intensely yellow, also the marginal and submarginal spots more distinct ; 

 in the 9 th^ markings beneath are more blurred and the colouring is paler than in the (^. 



Cat. variabilis sp. nov. (194 g) varies considerably in the extent of the greyish yellow coloiu'ing above, nirhthiHt. 

 and also beneath the markings, particularly the yellow marginal spots, differ in size. Colombia. 



Cat. latipiaga sp. noi\ (194 g). Two <j'3' o^ it are before us; the specimen figiu'cd from beneath has a Uiiiphuja. 

 much narrower and very light yellow basal area of the hindwing; this difference is also present beneath. Colom- 

 bia (Pacho, Eastern Cordilleras — the yellow specimen; the other specimen from Colombia without the exact 

 habitat being mentioned). 



Cat. pallens sp. nov. (194g) resembles zanclidoides (194 f) above, but the yellow discal spots of the jmUins. 

 forewings are shorter, arranged in the shape of a uniform band, the submarginal spots are smaller and in the 

 posterior two areas absent, the hindwing also with a uniformly broad discal band, the marginal and submarginal 

 spots only traceable. Beneath different from all the species known by the pale colouring. Peru. 



Presumably some of the species above mentioned as new species are identical with such that have 

 been described in an irrecognizable way by older authors. As we have now figured them, it will no more be 

 difficult to recognize them from the ,,tyi3es" that may yet be extant. 



Daptonoura daguana Fassl (J. ,,A large florinda-iovm (23 b) with an expanse of 64 mm and a broader dwjuana. 

 black border of all the wings; the hindwing towards the anal margin passing from the bright orange colouring 

 over into an intense chrome-colom-. Beneath with a much broader black cell-end spot of the sulphur-coloured 

 forewings. Hindwing beneath intensely chrome-coloured (not sulphur-coloiired as in the typical form). In 

 the 2 mm broad black distal margin two, likewise deep yellow, long streak-shaped spots." San Jose (180 m 

 above the sea-level) on the Rio Dagua in West Colombia, thus very close at the shore of the Pacific Ocean. 



Dapt. caesarea Fruhst. ,,A distinguished species, allied to florinda Btlr. from ("entral America and mcsarca. 

 to inaequaUs Btlr. fr(jm Peru, above magnificently light yellow with a very narrow black cell-end. Under surface 

 of forewing sulphur-coloured, of hindwing orange. Cell-end broadly encircled with black, distal margin rela- 

 tively narrow and as in polyhymnia Fldr. covered with small, yellowish maculae. West Colombia (Rio Magda- 

 lena). — • Scarcely different from qmlyhyynnia (23 b). 



Dapt. vecticlusa Btlr. = Appias drusilla Cr. (21 f) — according to Kirby, Catal. Diurn. Lejiid. ,vr/(r-/».s-a. 



Dapt. flippantha F. is according to Kirby's Catal. Diurn. Le)ud. = litnnoria Godt. (p. 75). iiijipaiiilia. 



Dapt. lycimnut narmia Fruhst. , .Upper siu-face purely white, by the apical spotting allied to niaeotis uurmia. 

 Fruhst. from Peru. The under surface, however, is absolutely identical with pnntoporia Hhn. from Espiritu 

 Santo and Minas Geraes. Another form, by the distal margin of the hindwing lieing covered with small white 

 dots, somewhat resembles ■phazania Fruhst. from Bahia and forma dnuli.n Fruhst. from Colombia, only the 

 margin is like in pantoporia very narrow, but covered with white not with yellow as in pantoporia (forma othoca uihixu. 

 rioy.)." Patria ? — semiobscurata Weym. from Ecuador (Macas) has very broad black marking above and beneath ; ^:l•<lliob«cll- 

 the larger distal half of the hindwing beneath is dark brown, the proximal bordering of this marking very ''" "■ 



irregular and faded. — lycimnia is said also to occur in Argentina (Missiones). 



Dapt. florinda ab. discocellularis Strand. The original description runs as follows: ,,A ,^ without the dUcocellu- 

 patria being stated, distinguished by the forewing, according to the figure in Biologia Centrali-Americana, ''"■'*'• 



exliibiting also above a black di.scocellular band, which, according to the original description, is in the typical 



