1943] 
New Calisto 
29 
between the discal and the above-mentioned line; the last on 
the discal line itself.) This line outwardly limits, near the anal 
angle, the discal fulvous area, but towards the costa it is set off 
only by a dull basal fulvous shading. The anal angle is black, 
basally capped by a curved white bar. A submarginal line is 
faintly represented, usually only towards the anal angle. The 
margin, at the anal angle, is irrorated with pale scales. 
Length of fore wing , 19-20 mm. 
Holotype , male, Constanza, Republica Dominicana, His- 
paniola, 3-4000 feet, Aug. 1938 (P. J. Darlington). 
Paratypes , two males, same data as holotype; one male, foot- 
hills of the Cordillera Central, South of Santiago, Rep. Dom., 
June 1938 (P. J. Darlington). 
Holotype and two paratypes, M. C. Z. no. 25918. One para- 
type in the author’s collection. 
Remarks. This subspecies differs quite noticeably from typi- 
cal pulchella in the more extensive and more golden fulvous 
area beneath (on the secondaries). The discal and median lines 
that cross this fulvous area are thinner than in the typical race. 
The subanal ocellus of the hind wing is also much smaller, as 
is the subapical one on the fore wing. This subspecies has been 
compared with examples from Camp Perrin, Haiti (± 5000 ft.), 
and “Hayti, P. R. Uhler,” that all agree well with Lathy’s fig- 
ures of pulchella . 9 Incidentally, one of the museum’s females 
of typical pulchella corresponds to the female form named 
tenebrosa (loc. cit. p. 225) by Lathy, and figured by him (fig. 7). 
It would appear to be only a minor variant, hardly worthy of 
a name. 
This subspecies is named for Dr. P. J. Darlington, Curator 
of Coleoptera at the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 
9 Lathy, 1899, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1899, p. 225, pi. 4, figs. 5, 6, 7. 
