( »■• ) 



l".'f5. p. deiphobus Liiinaens, l.c. p. 450. ii. (i (17.3s). 

 Oue male. 



I"^T. P. sarpedon anthedon Felder, IV//. Zoal. JJot. Ge-s. XIV. p. r.oa. u. 217. 



p. 350. 11. 124(1804). 



A good set of M/ili'.s ; no fern lies. 



128. P. eurypylus Linuaens, Si/.-st. Nat. ed. X. [>. 464. u. 37 (1758). 

 A few specimens. 



129. P. macfarlainei Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lon'h \: 471. u. 30 (1877). 

 PupUio ceyi.itii.'i Cramer (a/o;* Liniie), I'aji. Krof. III. p. si. t. 241. f. C. D (17sv;). 



Apparently iiol very common. 



1*1. P. ag'amemnon plisthenes Folder, Rei-te Noo'xra, Lep. p. 70. n. 53 (ISfio). 

 Comiuon. 



l;'.l. P. codrus (Irrtmer, Pap. Kr. t. 17'.t. f. A. B (1779). 

 Two speciiiifiis. 



Family HrCSPETUI 1>AE Leach. 



Genus CASYAPA Kirby. 



132. C. corvus (Felder), Sitzher. Alt. Wis.iensch. Wun, Math. Nat. CI. 

 XL. p. 40O (1860) : id, Unsfl Korara, Lrp. t. 73. f. 2 (1867). 



ClmetocM'mf <-erint,lius Felder, l.f. ? . 



This species seems to be very comniou iu Burn. There is some variation 

 among the nutles in the length and distinctness of the pale yellow sabapieal band, 

 ;ind in one specimen it is almost obsolete. The same remark holds trne of the band 

 in tlie female, whicli in several specimens is somewhat reduced, and in one or two 

 instances has the outer extremity near the outer margin sei)arated from the remainder 

 •of tlie band, and set off as a triangular spot. 



Gen-US TAGIADES Hiilmer. 

 13 ;. T. japetus (Cramer), Pap. E.v. IV. t. 365. f. E. F (17S-i). 

 A few specimens. 



134. T. martinus I'lutz, Jahrh. Nass. Ver. Nat. XXXVIl. p. 47 (1834). 

 One specimen, whicli is a male. 



Genus SEPA Nic6viile. 

 135. S. noctis (Staudinger), [ri-i II. p. 143 (1889). 

 A single imile specimen. 



