IPIIICLIDES. 275 



Papilio celadon^ Lucas, Rev. Zool. 1852, p. 130. 



This Butterlly, which inhabits Jamaica and Cuba, measures 

 a little more than three inches across the wings. It is black, with 

 a row of green sub-marginal spots running round all the wings, 

 and five green bands running from the costa of the fore-wings ; 

 the first three extend to the hind-wdngs ; the first is narrow and 

 basal ; the second is also narrow ; the third is very broad, and 

 bifid above ; and beyond are two short bands, one just before, 

 and the other just after, the end of the cell. There is a con- 

 spicuous red spot on the middle of the inner-margin of the 

 hind-wings ; on the under side the second grccn stripe is 

 bordered outside with red. 



There are several black and green species, much resembling 

 this, both in America and Africa. The breadth of the third 

 green band will distinguish /. celadon from any of the others. 



THE SCARCE SWALLOW-TAIL. IPHICLIDES PODALIRIUS. 

 {Plate LXVII. Fig. 2.) 



Fapilio podalirius^ Linn. Syst. Nat. (ed. x.) i. p. 463, no. 29 

 (1758); id. Mus. Ludov. Ulr. p. 208 (1764); Esper, 

 Schmett. i. (i) p. 36, pi. i, fig. 2 (1777); Hiibner, 

 Exot. Schmett. i. figs. 388, 389 (1803?) ; Godart, Enc. 

 Meth. ix. p. 50, no. 74 (1819); Boisduval, Spec. Gen. 

 Lepid. i. p. 245 (1836); Steph. 111. Brit. Ent. Hauat. i. 

 p. 6 (1827); Curtis, Biit. Ent. xiii. pi. 578 (1836); New- 

 man, Brit. Butterflies, p. 3 (1881); Kirby, Eur. Butter- 

 flies and Moths, p. 2, pi. 2, figs, i, 1(7-^(1878); Lang, 

 Butterflies Eur. p. i, pi. i, fig. i, pi. 5, fig. i (transf.) 

 (1881); Barrett, Lepid. of Brit. Isl. i. p. 16(1892). 



Papilio podalirius^ Cramer, Pap. Exot. ii. pi. 152, fig. B (1777). 



Var. Fapilio feisthamelii^ Duponchel, Lepid. France, Supi)l. i. 

 p. 7, pi. I, fig. i; pi. 2, fig. I (1832); Iierrich-Schiiffer 

 Schmett. Eur. i. Nachtrag, p. 34, figs. 414 416 (1848). 



