Butterflies collected in Chili. 451 
Satyrus tristis, Reed, Monogr. Marip. Chil., pl. iii., 
fig. 4 (1877). 
Stibomorpha reedii, Reed (nec Butler), 1. c. explic. de 
las laminas, lam. iii., fig. 4 (1877). 
“Common in marshes in Valdivia, February and 
March.” —T. E. 
EPprInePHeLe, Hiibner. 
5. Epinephele edmondsit, n.s. (Pl. XXI., fig. 2). 
S$. General coloration and pattern above of Elina 
vanessoides ; chocolate-brown, sericeous, and tinted with 
golden towards the base; lower half of discoidal cell, 
base of median interspaces, and basal third of median 
nervules reddish fulvous, separated from the discal band 
by an oblique series of six elongated shining grey-brown 
spots, all notched in front, the two last placed trans- 
versely so as to form an angle at the second median 
branch ; discal band, consisting of a large blind ocellus, 
black, with irregular orange iris confluent with a reddish 
fulvous patch across the median interspaces; fringe 
erey ; secondaries with a large subapical discal fulvous 
patch ; fringe grey ; body smoky grey; primaries below 
fulvous, with cinereous borders mottled and striated with 
black; the discal band only separated from the ground 
colour by a black outline; the ocellus black, with two 
minute white pupils and broad lemon-yellow iris; a 
whitish marginal border, with slender black external 
edge; secondaries greyish brown, densely striated with 
black, the central belt scarcely darker than the ground 
colour, but outlined externally by a black lime bounded 
towards the costa by snow-white scales; its form nearly 
as in Elina flora; a submarginal sinuated black line and 
a very slender black marginal line; pectus grey; palpi 
white; venter pale smoky brown; expanse of wings, 
1 inch 11 lines. 
‘‘Near Baths of Chillan, on slopes of Cordilleras, in 
March.” —T. HE. 
6. Epinephele limonias. 
3, Satyrus imonias, Philippi, Linn. Ent. xiv., p. 268, 
n. 6 (1860) ; Reed, Monogr. Marip. Chil., pl. i1., 
fig. 7 (1877). 
