PAPILIONID.E.-riERIN/E 



IIUPIIIXA I. 



I.— HUPHINA MENTES. $. Figs. 1, 2. $. Fig. 3. 



r'wris J/i'iUca, male, Wallace, " Transactions of tlic Entomological Society 

 of London," Vol. IV., p. 332 (18th February, 1807.) 



Exp. 2 inches. 



Male. "Above like I\ I'lli/s, Godart, but with an ashy tinge on the fore- 

 wings, and generally two spots at the apex. Beneath, the upper wings are 

 black, with the basal half yellow-tinged, and the inner margin white, a small 

 white mark at the end of the cell, and the apical spots (three or four) yellow ; 

 the hind wings as in P. P/7//.S. 



Female. Upperside witli the black area broader than in the male, the basal 

 area more densely irrorated with black scales, and the white area of the 

 posterior wings more tinged with yellow. 



Underside as above, but, on the anterior wings, with three subapieal 

 yellow spots, and a white spot in the black area above the submedian ncrvure ; 

 the yellow area of the posterior wings is paler than in the male. 



Hab. Lombok, male (Wallace) ; Tambora, _/'(■///<(/< (Doherty). 



In the Collection of Mr. Grose-Smith and others. 



The figure of the male is drawn from a siieeimen formerly iu the Wilson-Saunders Colleftiou 

 referred to in Mr. Wallace's paper. The female has not hitherto been described. 



II.— HUPHINA CONSANGUIS. i . Figs. 4, 5. 



Exp. If inches. 



Male. Upperside. Both wings creamy-white, witli the outer margins 

 very broadly dark brown, the inner edges of the dark areas being irregular. 

 The anterior wings are deeply indented between the two lower median nervules. 



VOL. III., JULY, 1898. >■! 



