500 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



Subfamily Papilionin.e. 

 Genus Papilio Linnaeus. 



39. Papilio andraemon Hiibner. 



Papilio andrcemon Hubner, Sammlung Exot. Schmett., II, 1823, Plates 311, 312. 

 There is a series of twenty-five specimens of this species at hand, all 

 taken at Nueva Gerona from June 6 to September 2, 1912. V^ery 

 few of the specimens are in absolutely perfect condition. The females 

 are on the average larger and darker than the males. 



40. Papilio celadon Lucas. 



Papilio celadon Lucas, Revue Zoologique, 1852, p. 130. 



There are thirteen mostly somewhat damaged specimens of this 

 species in the collection, which were taken at Caleta Grande and 

 Nueva Gerona from April 16 to August 30. 



It is remarkable that IVIr. Link only succeeded in obtaining speci- 

 mens of two species of Papilio during his visits to the island. The 

 absence from the collection of some very common and widely dis- 

 tributed species, such as P. polydamas, which we have from almost 

 all the Antillean islands, is singular. Whether the failure to get these 

 species was due to the somewhat desultory collecting done by Mr. 

 Link, or whether they do not occur upon the island, it is impossible 

 for the writer to say. 



Family HESPERIID.-E. 



Subfamily Hesperiin.^. 



Genus Eudamus Swainson. 



41. Eudamus proteus (Linneeus). 



Papilio proteus Linn^us, Mus. Lud. Ulr., 1764, p. 333. 



The collection contains one hundred and twenty-six specimens of 

 this common species, all representing the form in which the internal 

 dark band upon the lower side of the secondaries is broken into two 

 spots near the costa. They were all taken at Nueva Gerona, and the 

 dates of capture range from May 6 to the end of August. 



42. Eudamus Santiago Lucas. (Plate XXXI, fig. 6.) 



Eudamus Santiago (Lekebvre MS.) LUC.A.S, in Sagra's Historia Natural de Cuba, 

 VII, 1857, p. 267. 



Godman in the Biologia Centrali- Americana, RJiopalocera, \'ol. II, 



