188 Mr. F. Du Cane Godman on Descriptions of 



to belong to Eu^ptychia. There are, however, several 

 members of that genus similarly coloured on the upper- 

 side, but the present insect differs from all of them in the 

 marking of the under-side of the secondaries. 



Lymanopoda maso, sp. n. (Plate X, fig. 9, <£.) 



£ . Uniform brown ; beneath as above, the primaries at the apex 

 and the secondaries towards the inner margin dusted with lilac 

 scales, the primaries with a submarginal series of minute white dots, 

 the secondaries with a curved series of six or seven whitish pupillated 

 spots running from the apex to the anal angle. Primaries truncate, 

 at the apex, secondaries dentate on the outer margin. 



Hob. Colombia, Frontino in Antioquia (T. K. Salmon). 



Four specimens. The shape of the wings and the 

 conspicuous row of white spots on the secondaries beneath 

 readily distinguish this insect. L. albomaculata, Hew. 

 (= apulia, Hopff.), has a somewhat similar row of white 

 spots on the under-side of the secondaries, but in that 

 insect the wings are differently shaped. 



Lymanopoda malia, sp. n. 



Very similar to L. acreeida, Butl., but the secondaries also with a 

 conspicuous submarginal row of fulvous spots. 



Hah. Peru, Rio Colorado (Wathins and Tomlinson), 

 Pozuzo (Pierce). 



This is a form of L. acrmida, Butl., but as it appears to 

 be restricted to Peru I have ventured to give it a name. 

 L. malia is not uncommon, though hitherto I have not 

 seen a female of it. The Ecuador specimens of L. acr&ida 

 in my collection are much smaller than those from Bolivia, 

 though they do not otherwise differ. 



Lymanopoda levana, sp. n. (Plate X, fig. 10, £.) 



£ . Dark brown, primaries and secondaries each with a small 

 pupillated black spot near the anal angle, and one or two minute 

 white dots above it parallel with the outer margin ; beneath, 

 primaries as above, but with the apex broadly ferruginous, second- 

 aries ferruginous, an ochreous band (outwardly dentate, inwardly 

 evanescent) crossing the wing from about the middle of the costa to 

 the anal angle, the dots as above. 



ffab. Colombia, Bogota {Chapman and Wheeler). 



