DISTRIBUTION 



377 



The Austral region " covers the whole of the United States 

 and Mexico, except the Boreal mountains and the Tropical 

 lowlands." It comprises three transcontinental belts : (i) the 

 Transition zone, in which the Boreal and the Austral overlap ; 

 (2) the Upper Austral; (3) the Lower Austral. The butter- 



FIG. 292. 



FIG. 293. 



Distribution of Erynnis manitoba, a 

 butterfly restricted to subarctic and sub- 

 alpine regions. After SCUDDER. 



Distribution in the United States of 

 Eudamus proteus, primarily a tropical 

 butterfly. After SCUDDER. 



fly Eudamus proteus (Fig. 293) is restricted, generally speak- 

 ing, to the Tropical region and the warmer and more humid 

 portions of the Austral. 



The Tropical region covers the southern extremity of 

 Florida and of Lower California, most of Central America and 

 a narrow strip along the two coasts of Mexico, the western 

 strip extending up into California and Arizona. 



These divisions are based primarily upon the distribution of 

 mammals, birds and plants, and the three primary divisions 

 serve almost equally well for insects also. In regard to the 

 zones, however, not so much can be said for insects are to a 

 high degree independent of minor differences of climate. 

 Many instances of this are given beyond. 



The insect fauna of the United States is upon the whole a 

 heterogeneous assemblage of species derived from several 

 sources, and the foreign element of this fauna we shall con- 

 sider at some length. 



Paths of Diffusion in North America. It may be laid 

 down as a general rule that every species tends to spread in 



