PAPILIONID.E.-PAPILIONIN.E. 



PAPILIO. YI. 



XL— PAPILIO PEOCLES. Figs. 1, 2. 



Papilio Proch's, Henley Grose Smith, "Annals and Magazine of Natural 

 History," ser. 6, vol. 20, p. 433. 



Exp. 2^ inches. 



Upperside brown with green mai-kings, as in P. Bathjich's, Zinck. Anterior 

 wings with only four spots in the cell, the second and third being almost 

 obsolete ; the three lowest spots of the discal series are confluent, and broader 

 than in P. Baihiiclcs. Posterior wings with the three discal spots larger, and 

 confluent, instead of separated, and the wings are more deeply emarginate. 



Underside : anterior wings nearly as above, but the spots in the cell rather 

 more distinct. On the posterior wings, the concave brown fascia which traverses 

 the centre of the large silvery patch in P. Bathjides is replaced Ijy a short 

 narrow brown fascia, running from the costa nearly as far as the subcostal 

 nervm'e, and almost divided on the costal nervure by a small orange-red spot. 

 A small triangular silvery spot near the cell between the upper and second disco- 

 cellular nervules. The dark lirown area in which the series of oranye-red 

 spots towards the anal angle is situated is broader than in P. Bathydes, and the 

 submarginal row of spots is further from the margin. 



Hab. Kina Balu Mountain, North Borneo (John Whitehead). 



In the Collection of Henlev Grose Smith. 



XII.— PAPILIO ISANDEE. ? . Figs. 3, 4. 



Papilio Isandcr, Godman and Salvin, "Annals and Magazine of Natural 

 History," ser. 6, vol. 1, p. 211 (March, 1888). 



Exp. 3| inches. 



Male. Upperside. Wings black, anterior wings with a curved greenish-blue 

 band extending from the apex to the inner margin, the upper portion broken 



VOL. I., OCTOBER, 1888. M 



