62 
Psyche 
.[Sept -Dec. 
“some specimens” etc., in conjoint description of henshawi 
Edw., 1887, Butt. N. Am., Ill, N eonympha I; reproduced from 
a female in Edwards’ collection as “ henshawi Edw., male,” 
by Holland, 1898, and later editions, Butt. Book, PL 25, fig. 8, 
upperside.) 
Neonympha maniola n. sp. (presumably figured, as “ hen- 
shawi ,” by Wright, 1905, Butt. W. Coast, PI. 25, fig. 226 a, b, c, 
male, upperside, female, both sides). 
Neonympha pyracmon Butler (1866, Proc. Zool. Soc., Lon- 
don, p. 499, female; 1867, Proc. Zool. Soc., London, PI. 11, 
fig. 11, female, underside; Godman, 1901, Biol. Centr. Am. 
Rhop., II, p. 658; III, PI. 107, figs. 11, 12, male, both sides, 
mislabelled “hilaria”\ Weymer, 1911, in Seitz, Rhop. Am., 
p. 223). 
N eonympha henshawi Edwards (1876, Trans. Am. Ent. Soc., 
p. 205, female; Godman, 1880, Biol. Centr. Am., Rhop., Ill, 
PI. 8, fig. 27, female, underside, mislabelled “pyracmon” ; Ed- 
wards, 1887, Butt. N. Am., Ill, PI. 1, figs. 5-8, both sexes, both 
sides; Maynard, 1891, Mnl. N. Am. Butt., p. 108, female; fig. 
35d, female, hind-wing underside). 
Neonympha dorothea n. sp. 
Sharing with the other three species such upperside charac- 
ters as: brownish ground color in male, with more or less 
diffuse fulvous red; fine fulvous margin, mainly subanal in 
secondaries; androconial mark in male primaries; praeterminal 
dark spots in secondaries of both sexes; and such underside 
characters as: more or less fulvous ground color of primaries; 
small discal button-spot on both wings; four transverse lines, 
to wit: first discal, crossing cell R -j- M; second discal, curving 
round cell (its course in primaries dependent upon specific 
outline of termen); subterminal, mostly striate in primaries 
(less adjusted there to differentiation of termen) and mostly 
incomplete and deformed in secondaries; praeterminal, mostly 
punctate in primaries, and embossed with serrate silver in 
secondaries where it forms a silver W in Cu 1? passes through 
two double ocelli in M 3 and M 2 placed within a cinereous irrora- 
tion, and produces two pairs of V-shaped dashes in Mi and R s . 
Distinguished from its three congeners as follows: Primaries 
apically short and rather bluntly rounded, with straight termen; 
