524 
w 
long and straight, directed outwards, and the upper straight, nearly reaching the apex 
of the wing. In the female, the lower disco-cellular forms a less obtuse angle with the 
median ; the recurrent nervule is emitted either close to the junction of the lower radial 
or from the middle disco-cellular ; the latter is directed across the wing, joining the sub- 
costal ; the upper radial, is either emitted close to this junction, or is situated as a branch 
of the subcostal, after the cell. The male fore tibiae and tarsi are reduced to a small 
knob ; the femur is not notably abbreviated. The female fore tarsi have the j oint s 
slender and filiform. 
This genus is interesting as exhibiting the wing-neuration in a vacillating state. Not 
only do the sexes show an important difference in the position of the angle and recur- 
rent nervule of the hind wing disco-cellulars, but individuals of the same species 
vary in the position of certain nervures. Those parts of structure which form fixed 
generic characters in other groups are here variable in the sexes and in individuals 
of the same sex. Ceratmia is nearly allied to Mechanitis (as defined in this me- 
moir), on the one hand, and to Ithomia, through such species as I. Iphianassa, on 
the other. 
1. Ceratinia Ninonia, Hiibner. 
Ceratinia Ninonia, Hiibn. Exot. Schmett. 
Hiibner's figures represent an insect with rather broad fore and hind wings, and with 
two large yellow spots across the middle of the fore wing, besides a crooked yellow belt 
across the black apical part. I found a species extremely common at different stations 
on the Amazons, which was evidently the same as Ninonia, but very variable in shape 
and colours, and presenting very few examples which agreed exactly with Hiibner's figures. 
The species, however, evidently varies in different ways in different localities ; yet the 
local varieties are not definite, the segregation of the races is not complete ; so that it 
is embarrassing to decide whether to treat the form as one polymorphic species, in- 
cluding the variations under one and the same definition, or to describe separately the 
type and the local varieties. Besides these incomplete local modifications, easily trace- 
able to the type, there are, as often happens in the case of prolific, widely distributed, 
and variable species, a number of other forms rather more strongly marked and better 
defined, which inhabit regions rather more distant from the locality of the type than 
those which the mere varieties inhabit. These are admitted on aU hands to be distinct 
species ; but I think it would be difficult to prove that these were not also varieties of C. 
Ninonia, which have become more completely segregated from the parent form. Such are, 
amongst others, C. Thea (Hewits.), Rio Negro ; C. Leprieurii (Feisthamel), Cayenne ; 
aFenestella (Hewits.), Venezuela; C. Melphis (Hiibn.), S.E. Brazil; and C. Fimbria 
(Hewits.), New Granada. 
The following are the chief varieties of Ceratinia Ninonia occurring in the Amazon 
region 
Var. 1. C. Barii (Boisduval's Coll.). 
Expanse 2" 1'" to 2" 3'". Hing wings in both sexes much narrower than in the typ 
