228 PROCEEDINGS ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



FAMILY FIERI M). 



Pereute charops Boisduval. 



Larva. Head rounded, higher than wide, dull black. Body cylin- 

 drical, uniform, clothed with rather long and coarse white secondary 

 hair, from white tubercles, the hairs scattered sparsely and in groups; 

 general color uniform purplish brown. Thoracic feet black; abdominal 

 ones and anal shield dark brown. 



Feeds on Anona and other plants. 



FAMILY DANID^. 



Lycorea atergatis Doubleday & Hewitson. 



Larva. Bead rounded, higher than wide, shining black, labrum 

 whitish. Body cylindrical, with a pair of long, fleshy black processes 

 subdorsally on joint 3. Colors yellowish white and deep black, trans- 

 versely banded; anterior halves of the segments black above, venter 

 entirely black; joint 2 is all white; on 3 and 4 the black bands run 

 evenly to join the ventral color; on the abdomen the bands divide, the 

 posterior limb is short and covers the spiracle, the anterior one joins 

 the ventral color; on joint 12 the band is narrow and interrupted 

 laterally; on 13 it runs evenly across, covering the anal shield. Feet 



all black. 



FAMILY NYMPHALID^. 



Synchloe janais Drury. 



Larva. Head somewhat squarely angled, distinctly bilobed, rounded, 

 without processes, covered with coarse secondary hairs from distinct 

 tubercles; orange red, the lower half black. Body cylindrical, uni- 

 form, with rows of spine-like processes bearing stiff hairs; dorsal 

 row single, on joints 5 to 12, there being two processes on joint 12; 

 subdorsal row on joints 3 to 13, two on 13; lateral row on joints 2 to 

 12; substigmatal row on joints 2 to 12; subventral row on 2 to 1_, 

 double on the segments with feet. Color whitish with transverse 

 black bands joining the processes; a dorsal black line, broadly broken 

 in the incisures; a lateral black band, narrowly broken; subventral 

 region less distinctly white. 



Synchloe lacania Geyer. 



Larva. Head rounded, bilobed, with coarse black setae from dis- 

 tinct tubercles; black, the apices of the lobes slightly pale. Body 

 cylindrical, with short black spines with stiff hairs; joint 2 with a 

 dorsal shield, a spine below the spiracle and a subventral one; a single 

 dorsal row on joints 5 to 12, two on joint 12, all arranged as in the 

 preceding species. Body red-brown, marked transversely with black 

 lines, two on each segment behind the spines; subventral region ir- 

 regularly and indistinctly marked with black. Feet and leg shields 

 black. There are a few scattered secondary hairs on the body. 



