AGAPEMA. By Dr. M. Draudt. 
725 
flavescens /. n. (130 d); purely yellow matching it I have not seen. The yellow are mostly extensively flavescens 
dusted with violettish grey or red-brown, especially subterminally and around the cell-apex. rufotincta rufotinda 
Rothsch. (130 e) is in the basal % reddish orange, in the marginal third deep brown. Panama. — rufa /. n. are rufa. 
deep chestnut-red, — olivina f.n. dark olive brown specimens. Mexico-Panama, also from Western Colombia ol " 
before me in the typical form (Coll. Niepelt). 
C. satellitia Wkr. (130 d), described from Brazil, in my opinion is by no means identical with multi - satellitia. 
fenestrata, but a different species; typical multijenestrata I have not seen farther to the south than Panama and 
Western Colombia. From Brazil 2 $$ are before me, which are very closely allied to the said species though 
constantly differentiated. Shape of wings somewhat narrower, distal margin more oblique, position and 
proportion of the hyaline spots to each other different; in multijenestrata the uppermost is relatively large, the 
following small, in satellitia the uppermost the smallest, the 3rd and largest is in the former species bipartite 
by the cross-vein, in satellitia besides divided into 3 parts by the fold, the spots on the hindwing being much 
rounder; the posterior transverse line on both wings hardly notched, broader, more faded and indistinct, outside 
more intensely strewn with whitish-grey. 
C. simson Maass. (105 c) is the largest Gopaxa , dark yellow or orange brownish, strewn with red-brown simson. 
especially in the median area excepting the inner-marginal portion, costal margin and collar intensely strewn 
with white, veins of median area blackened; transverse lines as in the other species, on the hindwing very deeply 
undulate-dentate; hyaline spots large, inside surrounded with grey, then yellow and outside finely with black: 
marginal area lighter. From Panama. 
C. canella Wkr. (104 d $, 105 a $). Light brown with the usual 3 transverse lines, ocellus as in simson ; canella. 
collar and costal margin intensely strewn with white. Brazil, a more common species. — flavina /. n. (105 c) flavina. 
are specimens with a golden yellow ground-colour, in which especially the upper half of the median area and 
the subterminal space behind the line are intensely strewn. 
C. joinvillea Schs. (105 c) is very similar to canella, mostly somewhat smaller and darker, easily joinvillea. 
discernible by the longer and somewhat more narrowly produced, falcate apex of the forewing. — Whether — 
vitellina /. n. (105 c) is a yellow form of it or a distinct species I cannot tell according to the only specimen before vitellina. 
me. Apex of forewing not quite so far produced as in typical joinvillea, the colour is a pure golden yellow without 
strewing, the marking otherwise not different. Southern Brazil. 
C. lavendera Westiv. (= chapata Westiv., plenkeri Fldr.) (104 d) is marked like the preceding species, lavendera. 
but sexually very dimorphous, the A of a most variable colouring; light orange brown, red-brown, dark or olive 
brown, the distal oblique stripe mostly distallv strewn with white, ocelli much larger and more variegated. 
The $ is yellow, in the median area strewn with black, behind the distal oblique line red-brown with black 
strewing, between 2 and 4 with 2 round projections; marginal area loamy brownish. Mexico. 
C. mannasia Dyar (123a) may also belong to this genus. Forewing of with a falcate apex; brown, mannana. 
costal margin and collar grey; forewing with a small slit-shaped hyaline spot, the feeble transverse lines purple 
brownish, the interior line irregular, the exterior one feebly double. Hindwing from the costal margin to beyond 
the cell excepting the margin rosy red; cliscaf ocellus large, black, inside with a light blue dusted crescent with 
a broad reddish-yellow ring and surrounded by black; the two transverse lines disappear in the pink costal- 
marginal area, the exterior line is undulate-dentate. The $ has more quadrangular wings with a straight distal 
margin, yellow, strewn with grey, collar and costal margin grey, the discal hyaline spot tiny, transverse lines 
broader and more distinct, marginal area excepting tornus lined with pink, with a small dark subcostal spot, 
outside dusted with pink and purple. Expanse of wings: A 95, $ 100 mm. Mexico, Hidalgo, 9000 ft. 
C. cydippe Drc. (103 d) has been described as Attacus ; I know it only from the description and figure cydippc. 
in the Biologia and place it here only provisionally, because it neither fits to any other place. Apex of forewing 
very pointedly falcate; colour dark red-brown with transverse lines as in lavendera -$; each wing exhibits a 
small narrow oval discal hyaline spot, and subterminal markings which are very near to the margin and 
composed of small outside rounded spots distally surrounded by light grey. Described from Orizaba (Mexico). 
Packard, in Monograph etc., 1914. p. 164, mentions another C.disjunda without any description, in which vein 
9 o£ the fore wing rises from 8 as a very short branch close before the apex; who is the author? I could not discover 
anything else about it. 
4. Genus: Agapema Neum. d Dyar. 
It represents the palaearctic genus Eudia Jord. (cf. Vol. II, p. 222) in America and, in fact, hardly 
differs anatomically. The antennae especially in the female slightly longer pectinate, likewise with a bare 
ventral stripe. Forewing with exactly the same neuration, though I find 5 and 6 of fore wing to be short-stalked 
in Inomogena, in galbina not so. The costal vein of the forewing terminates into the costal margin, the subcostal 
vein into the apex. Thus it appears hardly necessary to separate it from the genus Eudia. 
Type: A. galbina Clem. 
