﻿35 2 LEPIDOPTERA 



every few hundred miles, the distances being shorter near the 

 eastern slopes of the Andes than nearer the Atlantic. 80 close 

 is the accord of sonic half-dozen species (of widely different genera) 

 in each change, that he had seen them in large collections classed 

 and named respectively as one species." ' Many of them are 

 believed to be permeated by nauseous fluids, or to possess glands 

 producing ill-smelling secretions. 



Sub-Fam. 8. Nymphalides. — Cells, of loth front and hind 

 wing, either closed only by imperfect transverse nervules or entirely 

 open. Front tarsus of the mole unjointed and without spines, 

 of the female four- or five-jointed. Caterpillar either spined 

 or smooth ; in the latter ease the head more or less strain//// 

 horned or spined, and the apex of the bod// bifid. This sub- 

 family is specially characterised by the open cells of the 

 wings ; the discocellulars, even when present, being frequently 

 so imperfect as to escape all but the most careful observa- 

 tion. The Nymphalides include upwards of 150 genera and 

 2000 species. The divisions having smooth larvae are separated 

 by Kirby " 2 and others as a distinct sub-family (Apaturides). In 

 Britain, as in most other parts of the world, Nymphalides is the 

 predominant group of butterflies. We have eighteen species, among 

 which are included the Fritillaries, Admirals, Purple Emperor, and 

 the various Vanessa — Peacock, Camberwell Beauty, Red Admiral, 

 Tortoise-shells, and Painted Lady. All have spined caterpillars 

 except the Emperor. In the temperate regions of the northern 

 hemisphere Vanessa may be considered the dominant butter- 

 flies, they being very numerous in individuals, though not in 

 species, and being, many of them, in no wise discomfited by 

 the neighbourhood of our own species. Several of them are 

 capable of prolonging and interrupting their lives in the winged 

 condition to suit our climate; and this in a manner that can 

 scarcely be called hibernation, for they frequently take up the 

 position of repose when the weather is still warm, and on the 

 other hand recommence their activity in the spring at a very 

 early period. This phenomenon may frequently lie noticed in 

 the Tortoise-shell butterfly; it is as if the creature knew that 

 however warm it may be in the autumn there will be no more 

 growth of food for its young, and that in the spring vegetation 



1 P. cut. S'oc. London, 1879, p. xxix. 

 2 Allen's Naturalists' Library, Butterflies, i. 1896. 



