. The butterfly book [microform] : a popular guide to a knowledge of the butterflies of North America. Butterflies; Papillons. Oenu* Satjrraa Early Stages.âThese have been described and figured by Edwards in " The Butterflies of North America," vol. iii. The caterpillar is green, marked by paler stripes and lozenge-shaped spots of pale green on the side. The chrysalis is pale green. The egg is pale saffron. The caterpillars feed on grass. Mead's Satyr ranges through Colorado, Montana, Utah, and Arizona. (5) Satyrus paulua, Edwards, Plate XXVI, Fig. 19, $, under side (The Small Wood-n


. The butterfly book [microform] : a popular guide to a knowledge of the butterflies of North America. Butterflies; Papillons. Oenu* Satjrraa Early Stages.âThese have been described and figured by Edwards in " The Butterflies of North America," vol. iii. The caterpillar is green, marked by paler stripes and lozenge-shaped spots of pale green on the side. The chrysalis is pale green. The egg is pale saffron. The caterpillars feed on grass. Mead's Satyr ranges through Colorado, Montana, Utah, and Arizona. (5) Satyrus paulua, Edwards, Plate XXVI, Fig. 19, $, under side (The Small Wood-nymph). Butterfly.âk little smaller than S. nepbele, dark brown above in both sexes, the fore wings always with two pupilate ocelli, one near the apex, the other near the inner angle, most conspicu- ously developed in the female. The secondaries have one or two spots of the same kind near the anal angle. On the under side the wings are pale reddish-brown, abundantly marked by transverse striae. The primaries are marked with gray at the apex and on the outer margin, and have a submarginal and sub- median transverse ferruginous line, between which the ocelli are located. The secondaries are crossed by a broad darker median band defined inwardly and outwardly by narrow dark lines. The outer third is pale gray, mottled with darker spots and lines, and traversed by a dark ferruginous submarginal line. Expanse, inches. Early S/fl^«.âUnknown. Paulus occurs in California and Nevada. It has been regarded as a variety of stbenele by some writers; but I am convinced of its distinctness, though there is considerable resemblance. (6) Satyrus charon, Edwards, Plate XXVI, Fig. 11, 3 ; Fig. \2, ? (The Dark Wood-nymph). Butterfly.âThe male is dark in color; the female is paler. There are two eye-spots on the fore wings in the usual location, indistinct on the upper, distinct on the lower side of the wings. The under sides of the wings are variable. In the type they are dark; in


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Keywords: ., bookauth, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbutterflies