PROCRIS. 261 



Fore wings marked with spots or blotches. 



Head and face pilose ; without ocelli. Eyes rather large, round. 

 Antennas claviform, one-third less long than the fore wings, the 

 tip without hairs or seta. Palpi short, scarcely ascending beyond 

 the front, cylindrico-conical, pilose beneath, acute. Tongue cor- 

 neous, and about as long as the thorax beneath. 



Body moderately stout, hairy ; the fore wings when closed ex- 

 tending beyond the tip of the abdomen. Legs slender; tarsi 

 roughened with spines. The fore tibiae with a rather long inter- 

 nal spine ; the tibiae of the posterior legs with four very small 

 spines. 



Larva fat, contracted, subcylindrical, slightly pubescent. Pupa 

 inclosed in a tough cocoon, pointed at both ends. The larvae feed 

 exclusively on papilionaceous plants. 



1. Z. onobrychis Fabr. Walker 96-7. Var. 1. 



Fore wings shining blue, with six yellow spots margined with 

 white, the posterior one red and semilunar. Hind wings yellow. 

 Georgia. 



WALKEE. 



PROCRIS? FABR. 



Fore wings somewhat fusiform. The subcostal vein with two 

 distinct, rather long marginal nervules, with apical vein simple, 

 with two disco-central nervules. The median 4-branched, the 

 medio-posterior opposite the first marginal nervule and the two 

 upper branches on the line of the discal vein, which is straight. 

 The fold of the wing is thickened from the base to the tip. Sub- 

 median simple. Hind wings not as broad as the fore wings at 

 their broadest part, ovate. The subcostal vein is bifid, the lower 

 branch giving rise to a decided rather oblique discal vein, which is 

 angulated above the medio-superior nervule, where it receives the 

 discal fold. Median vein with four, equidistant nervules. 



Head moderate, advanced, but without decided neck ; with 

 rather large ocelli. Face moderate, oblique and projecting tuber- 

 cularly at the base of the antennae, and in the middle. Eyes small. 

 Antennae incrassated at the tip, as long as the thorax leneath, with 



