E 
Secondly, intermediate varieties occur between the pattern of 
the male Ps. hodleyi and that of terra. Thus, in three males of 
hobleyi, taken respectively on June 13th, June 29th, and August 4th 
(Table I), the bar of the hind wing is fulvous and not white. 
The specimen of June 29th is especially remarkable in this respect, 
the bar of the hind wing being of a tint very nearly as deep as that 
of the fore wing. The costal end of the hind wing bar is often 
fulvous in hodleyz, although this feature is probably not transitional 
towards terra, but mimetic of a common variety of the male PZ. 
macarista. 
A far more remarkable and significant form was captured on 
August 24th. Although intermediate, it is much nearer to Ps. 
terra than to the male Lobleyi, and is therefore placed in Table III. 
On the upper surface, the hind wing is that of terra, while the fore 
wing bears a pattern representing the fusion of the inner marginal 
fulvous area of terra with the V-shaped fulvous bar of the male 
hobleyi. Its colour is the paler tint of terra rather than the richer 
fulvous of the male hobley?. The under surface reproduces the pat- 
tern of the upper except for one important feature — the appear- 
ance of a reddish tint at the base of the hind wing — clearly trans- 
itional towards the reddish brown triangle of hobley?. 
A very slight trace of this reddish tinge can generally be detected, 
especially in the costal region, at the base of the hind wing under 
side of Ps. terra in both sexes. 
Furthermore, Dr. WIGGINS' series of captures between May 23rd 
and August 31st, 1909, not only exhibits transition between 
Ps. hobleyi and terra, but also between terra and obscura NEAVE, 
the rarest of these mimetic forms of the Lobleyi-group at Entebbe, 
and a mimic of the rarest Planema-model, Pl. epwa paragea 
GROSE-SMITH. The specimen of Ps. terra taken August 14th 
(Table III) is beautifully transitional towards obscura(1). The upper 
surface colour and pattern of this intermediate specimen bear a 
close resemblance to those specimens of the carmentis female of 

(1) About a year later, on September 8th, 1910, an intermediate form between 
Ps. terra and the female Ps. hobleyi was taken by Dr. WIGGINS' native collector. 
The specimen. which has not yet been set, and cannot therefore be thoroughly 
examined, apparently possesses the white fore wing bar of the female /o00/ey2 
combined with the hind wing pattern of terra. 
32 
