some new species of Satyridie from South America. 187 



Hab. Upper Amazons. 



Dr. Staudinger has sent me a single male example of 

 this insect, which for some time has been placed with the 

 preceding species in my collection. Although very like 

 E. penicillata it differs considerably on the under-side. 



Euptychia mimas, sp. n. (Plate X, fig. 6, £.) 



£ . Uniform dark-brown ; beneath paler, crossed by two dark-brown 

 lines and with a narrow, wavy, similarly coloured submarginal line, 

 the primaries with a series of two or three small ocelli, that nearest 

 the apex the most distinct, the secondaries dusted with ochreous 

 scales and with a series of five bipupillate ocelli, the second and fifth 

 black within. 



Hah. Bolivia, Coroico, 6500 ft. (G-arlcpp). 



Three examples. Near E.phineus, But!., from Venezuela. 



Euptychia boliviana, sp. n. (Plate X, fig. 7, £.) 



£ . Bright-brown ; beneath paler, primaries with a broad ochra- 

 ceous band extending from the anal angle and becoming less distinct 

 towards the apex, a wavy submarginal dark line, and two or three 

 very minute white spots towards the apex ; secondaries, except at the 

 base and outer margin, thickly covered with whitish scales, crossed 

 by two irregular ochraceous submarginal bands, three strongly 

 angulate dark lines (two crossing the disc, the third submarginal), 

 and a series of minute white dots. 



Hob. Bolivia, San Jacinto, 6000-8000 ft. (GarleiJp). 

 Two specimens. This is a species of large size, uniform 

 bright brown above, and peculiarly marked beneath. 



Euptychia (?) bioccllata, sp. n. (Plate X, fig. 8, $.) 



£ . Uniform brown, the primaries with a double black ocellus to- 

 wards the apex enclosed in an ochreous ring ; beneath paler, the 

 ocellus more conspicuous aud surrounded by a dark line, which 

 becomes faint at the apex and forms an angle towards the inner 

 margin, the space between it and the outer margin marked with grey ; 

 secondaries with two broad grey bands crossing the wing, one just 

 beyond the cell (bordered internally by a dark line), the other close 

 to the margin and extending along the inner margin to the base, the 

 cell also crossed bj a faint dark line about the middle. 



Hab. Bolivia, Tanampaya, 6000-8000 ft. (Garlepp). 

 Three specimens of this small species have been sent 

 me by Dr. Staudinger. It will perhaps prove not really 



