( 617) 



margin nearl}' straight ; apex truncate, bearing several long teeth. ?. Edge of 



the circular orifice raised in front to a very short glossy lip, the long process found 

 in P. torquatus being absent ; on each side a little way from the orifice a large, 

 variable, dentate lobe; behind vaginal orifice rather strongly chitinised brown sclerite, 

 this large jilato posteriorly incised in the middle ; anal segment on innerside without 

 the usual curved bristles or bearing only two rather thin ones (accessories in 

 ovipositing). 



Early stages described by Burmeister, l.c.^ and figared by Schroder, I.e. 



Ilab. Brazil ; Paraguay. 



In the Tring Museum 06 cjc?, 45 ??, from: Sapucay, Paraguay, all months 

 from July to February (W. Foster) ; Yhu, Paraguay, September — December 1897 

 (Andeer) ; Bahia ; Minas Geraes, December 1898, February 1901 (A. Kennedy); 

 Espiritu Santo ; Rio de Janeiro ; Gorcovado ; Nova Friburgo ; Petropolis ; Sao 

 Paulo ; Castro, Parana (E. D. Jones) ; S. Catharina ; Blumenau ; Porto Alegre. 



101. Papilio garleppi Stand. (1892). 



$. Papilio garleppi Staudinger, Iris v. p. 427 (1892) (S. Mateo, R. Juntas, Chapare). 



(?. Upperside : yellow band much broader than in P. torquatus, extending 



beyond apex of cell on hindwing. Forewing, the band interrupted or not, the 



spots composing the costal portion large. Hindwing : tooth M' prominent, acute, 

 longer than in P. torquatus; the red anal spot preceded by two or three spots 

 which are composed of dispersed yellowish butf and bluish white scales ; these 

 spots on a level with the red anal one, corresponding to the bluish spots of the 

 underside ; no red spots proximally of them. 



On underside the hindwing bears a row of rufous red discal spots as in 

 P. torquatus, but the spot behind M- is replaced by a tiny bluish dot, and spot 

 M^ — M^ is the largest of the series ; the yellow submarginal spots are more or 

 less luniform. 



? not known. Staudinger, when describing in 1892 a subspecies of P. garleppi, 

 referred to the yellow-spotted female of P. torquatus figured by Gray (P. patros 

 var.) as being possibly the female of P. garleppi. However, Gray's specimen is 

 undoubtedly a female of P. torquatus. 



Genitalia: cj. Very different from those of P. torquatus; tenth tergite very 

 slender, long, curved ; sternite on each side with a curved, smooth ridge which is 

 posteriorly produced into a tapering point, the ridges of the two sides curved 

 towards each other, being hairy on innerside. Clasper emargiuate ventrally at apex ; 

 harpe ending in a long, sharp point, and bearing ventrally beyond middle a long 

 pointed process. 



Ilab. Bolivia to the Upper Amazons. 



Two subspecies. 



a. P. garleppi interruptus Stand. (1892). 



Papilio torquatus, Staudinger (ho//. Cram., 1777, err. det.), Exot. Tug/, t. 11. ^ (1884). 

 (J. Papilio garleppi var. interrupt ux id., Iria v. p. 427 (1892) (.S. Paulo de Olivenfa, Shanusi, 

 Chanchamayo ; ^^ patros Gray perhaps J of this insect ') ; Michael, ibid. vii. p. 209 (1894). 



Baud of forewing interrupted between R- and R^ as in P. torquatus. 

 Hah. Upper Amazons ; Eastern Peru, as far south as Carabaya. 

 In the Tring Museum 3 cJcJ from : La Union, R. Huacamayo, Carabaya, S.E. 

 Peru, 2000 ft., December 1904 and January 1905, wet season (Ockenden). 



