25 



1908. Gillmer. — " Ent. Wochenblafc." Describes an ochre yellow 

 form of male jintina. 



1903. Verity. — "Lep. Rhop. scop, recent. Tosc." (Riv. d. Ins. Vol. 

 i.). Fiti;ures symmetrical white -blotch eel aberration of the 

 ab. semialba of Bruand. (Reproduced in "Ent.," 1904, 

 plate 4.) Describes and names the eyeless form of jurtina 

 as ab. anoiiiinata. 



1903. Mousley. — " Ent. Record." Vol. xv. Describes the form 

 with more than a normal number of spots as ab. adihnida, 

 page 168. 



1903. Rev. G. Wheeler. — "Butterflies of Switzerland." Analyses 

 the potential variation (Upperside, underside, ocelli on 

 underside, additional spots on upperside, small spots below 

 the apical ocellus). Describes ab. violacea from Aigle. 



1903. Lambiilion. — "Revue Mensuelle." Namur. Page 66. 



Describes ab. female iiianuorea and ab. male niiiro-ruhra. 



1904. Lambiilion. — "Revue Mensuelle." Namur. Page 66. 



Describes and names (!) a symmetrical malformation as 

 coata-cava. 



1905. Gillmer. — "Notes on Butt. capt. in Switz. by Busack." 



(" Arch. Ver. Fr. Nat. Meckl.") Discusses second genera- 

 tion oi janiia, 



1906. South. — " Butt, of the Brit. Isles." Figures the ovum on 



a blade of grass, absolutely different from Esper and 

 Hoffmann's " illuminative " figure. 

 1908. Seitz.—" Mac. Lep. World., Pal. Rhop." Vol. i. Accepts 

 name jurtina. Calls leuitir and /icniiiilnliis synonyms. 

 Uses the genus EpinepJiele. Introduces ab. rincrea of 

 Cosmov and ab. rufucincta of Fuchs. 



1912. Le Cerf.— " Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr." Page 225. Discusses 



genitalia of Kpincphele jurtina and its supposed races. 

 Separates teluicaua &nd jurtina. Puts kurclistana with the 

 former and fortunata and hispulla with the latter. 

 Describes var. perdca as a new subspecies oi jurtina. 



1913. Bonaparte Wyse. — " Irish Naturalist." Describes a form 



of jurtina with more than one additional spots on the 

 forewings below the apical spot. 



Addenda. 



1793. Fabricius. — Puts janira, etc., in a genus subsequently 



diagnosed and named as Hipparckia in 

 1807. Illiger's Magazine, Vol. vi., page 279, and including 119 



species of satyrids. 



