114 BULLETIN BROOKLYN ENTOM. SOC. VOL. VI. March 1884. ] 
Var. antonio, Edw. Field & Forest, III, 103 (1877). 
Like ce/#’s but with two extra discal black spots on primaries, which 
are pupilled with white or blue. 
Size of celtts. Hab. Tex., Ariz., Col. 
Var. montis, Edw. Papilio 3, 7. 
Like anfonio but with three ocellate black spots above on primaries; 
four or five below. 
Size of celts, Hab. Col., Ariz. 
Mr. Edwards, Pap. III, 7, gives as a distinctive point between celts 
and anfonzo that in ce/fis there is but a single dd ocellus in the second 
median interspace, while in azfonzo there is asecond, in the upper median 
interspace and both are ocellate. Monts is described as a variety of 
antonio though it has one more ocellate spot above and a variable number 
‘beneath. I have seen in Philadelphia and elsewhere ce/#; with the spot 
very distinctly pupilled, and have seen anfonze, with the pupils reduced 
to mere pale dots; the number of spots seems to afford no safe specific 
character and the insects are therefore placed as varieties of ced/es. 
A. alicia, Edw. Butt. N. A. I, pl. 1. -Apatura (et larva). 
Markings like var. antonio of celtis, but ground color of upper sur- 
face inclined to reddish trawny. ‘The anal angle of the secondaries of 
the f' are more produced, and the specimens are asa rule considerably 
larger than any varieties of cedtzs. 
Expands 2.5—3 inches. Had. So. U.S. 
Var. leilia, Edw. Tr. A. E. 8., V, 103; Butt. N. A. II, pl. 1, Apatura 
f. 6 and 7. 
More reddish in tint on the. upper surface, apical dark space of 
primaries less contrasting, with three ocellate black spots, as in var 
montis of celts. 
Expands 2 inches. Aad. Ariz. 
Alicia and /eilia are probably but dark forms of axz/onio and montis 
and Mr. Strecker in his list catalogues them as varieties of cedfzs. 
A. elyton, Bd. & Lec. Lep. Am, Sep. p. 208, pl. 56, f. 1—4 (3 larva 4 
chrys.) ocellata Edw. Butt. N. A. II, pl. 2, Apatura, f. 1 —4; herse Scud. Syst. Rev. 
Am. Butt. 9 (1872); ? herse Fabr. Ent. Syst. IIT, 1, p. 229. 
