﻿16 
  LYC^NIDiE 
  (AFRICAN).— 
  LUCIA. 
  

  

  GENUS 
  LUCIA. 
  

  

  Lucia, 
  Swainson, 
  " 
  Zoological 
  Illustrations," 
  ii. 
  p. 
  185 
  (1833) 
  ; 
  Westwood, 
  

   "Genera 
  of 
  Diurnal 
  Lepidoptera," 
  p. 
  501 
  (1852). 
  

  

  I.-LUCIA 
  (?) 
  BKUNNEA. 
  Figs. 
  5, 
  6. 
  

  

  Lucia 
  (?) 
  Bnnmca, 
  Kirby, 
  " 
  Annals 
  and 
  Magazine 
  of 
  Natural 
  History," 
  

   ser. 
  5, 
  vol. 
  19, 
  p. 
  3G8 
  (1887). 
  

  

  Exp. 
  1 
  inch. 
  

  

  Female. 
  Upperside 
  " 
  brown, 
  an 
  obsolete 
  pale 
  curved 
  stripe 
  running 
  across 
  

   both 
  wings 
  at 
  two-thirds 
  of 
  their 
  length, 
  and 
  expanding 
  on 
  the 
  inner 
  margin 
  

   into 
  a 
  large 
  yellow 
  spot. 
  

  

  " 
  Underside 
  much 
  paler, 
  the 
  band 
  yellowish-grey, 
  narrow 
  and 
  curved 
  on 
  the 
  

   fore 
  wings, 
  nearly 
  straight 
  and 
  uniformly 
  broad 
  on 
  the 
  hind 
  wings 
  ; 
  there 
  is 
  

   also 
  a 
  submarginal 
  row 
  of 
  obsolete 
  blackish 
  spots 
  indistinctly 
  bordered 
  with 
  

   yellowish-grey 
  on 
  both 
  sides 
  on 
  all 
  the 
  wings 
  beneath." 
  (W. 
  F. 
  K., 
  he. 
  cit.) 
  

  

  In 
  the 
  Collection 
  of 
  Henley 
  Grose 
  Smitli, 
  from 
  West 
  Africa. 
  

  

  GENUS 
  TEEIOMIMA. 
  

   Teriomivia, 
  Kirby 
  {antea, 
  p. 
  11). 
  

  

  v.— 
  TEEIOMIMA 
  (?) 
  HILDEGAEDA. 
  Figs. 
  7, 
  8. 
  

  

  Tcriomima 
  (?) 
  Hildegarda, 
  Kirby, 
  "Annals 
  and 
  Magazine 
  of 
  Natural 
  His- 
  

   tory," 
  ser. 
  5, 
  vol. 
  19, 
  p. 
  367 
  (1887). 
  

  

  Exp. 
  1 
  inch. 
  

  

  Upperside 
  "tawny, 
  hind 
  margins 
  and 
  tip 
  of 
  fore 
  wings 
  rather 
  broadly 
  

   brown, 
  between 
  which 
  and 
  the 
  cell 
  are 
  four 
  brown 
  transverse 
  stripes 
  on 
  the 
  

   costa 
  ; 
  they 
  are 
  partly 
  connected, 
  and 
  below 
  the 
  third 
  is 
  a 
  black 
  spot 
  at 
  the 
  end 
  

   of 
  the 
  short 
  cell. 
  

  

  " 
  Underside 
  of 
  fore 
  wings 
  reddish 
  (paler 
  on 
  the 
  inner 
  margin), 
  with 
  four 
  

   anastomosing 
  leaden-brown 
  bands 
  running 
  from 
  the 
  costa 
  near 
  the 
  base, 
  not 
  

   extending 
  much 
  below 
  the 
  cell 
  ; 
  towards 
  the 
  tips 
  are 
  two 
  oblique 
  anastomosing 
  

  

  