( 463 ) 

 213. Papilio encelades Boisd. [cJ]. 



Pupilici encdudfs Boisduval, Upec. (rt'ii. L'p. I. p. 37G. n. 222 (183G) ("Moluques" I'ic. frv.) ; Hew., 

 Ex. Biilt. II. Pap. t. 4. f. 10 (1859) (Celebes) ; Feld., Verh. z. b. Grx. Wleii p. 307. n. 2.53. & 

 p. 353. n. 148 (18l!4) : Wall., Tr. L'niii. Soc. Loml. XXV. p. 62. n. 90 (18G5) (Macassar) : Piepevs 

 A Snellen, Tijdschi: v. Eiit. XXI. p. 39. n. 1.54 (1878) (Bonthain ; Celebes) ; Standing. & Schatz, 

 Exot. Schniflt. I. p. fi. t. 3 (cJ) (1884) ; Rothsch., Trh V. p. 442 (1892) (S.E. Celebes) ; Haase, 

 U?iters. lib. Mini. p. 35 (1893). 



Female still uiiknoivn. 



My .serie.s does not exliibit any remarkable variation. 



//((/). Celebes (W. Doherty : August to September 1891) (1.5 c?). 



Note. — To the list of Papilios (p. 170) of which we have not seen specimens 

 add :— 



18. r. llri.s senescens Eober; known from the description, and some notes from 



the author in lift. 



19. P. semperi melmiotus Standing. ; known from the descrij)tion. 



Too late for me to inckide in the body of this revision, Mr. S. Alpheraky 

 describes in the Iris for July 15th, 1895, under the name of Papilio daemonias, 

 a form of P. alcinous Khig with silky-white male scent-organs (see p. 269). I ha\e 

 too few .specimens of this form to say anything about it at present, but from what 

 Mr. Oberthilr tells me, and what I have seen from Dr. Jordan's examination of the 

 harpes (vide Plate VI.), I think P. alcinmis will have to be thoroughly discussed 

 again. Further, in the same number of the Iris, Mr. Carl Kibbe figures and 

 describes the larvae and pupae of the following species of Papilios : — 



Troides prianviis ^irvilleanus, Papjilio b)^idr/ei, P. euchenor, P. idysses 



autolycus, P. codrus medon, P. jjohjdm'us polydaemon, P. aegeus 



ormenus, and P. amhrnx. 



These will be fully discussed in my future articles, but I here mention tliat Mr. Ribbe 



confounded P. polypemon and P. phestiis, for P. piolypemon and P. polydaemon 



are tlie same species, while Mr. Ribbe's P. polydaemon = P. phestus. 



In the present paper are enumerated 213 species, 215 subspecies, and 130 named 

 aberrations, which makes a total of 55S different forms. 



