198 Bulletin American Museum of A'afural History [Vol. XLIII 



(273) 11. Cymothoe jodutta (West wood) 

 Harma jodutta Westwood, 1850, Gen. Diurn. Lep., p. 289. 

 Harma cyriades Ward, 1871, Ent. Mo. Mag., VIII, p. 120. 



Cymothoe aralus Mabille, 1890, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, (6) X, p. 22, PL ii, fig. 8. 

 Cymothoe jodutta Aurivillius, 1912, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 152, PI. xxxvc, cf . 



Four males and one female taken at Medje in August and Sep- 

 tember, and one female caught at Niangara in November. 



(274) 12. Cjnnothoe ehmckei Dewitz 



Cymothoe ehmckei Dewitz, 1886, Bed. Ent. Zeit., XXX, p. 302, PI. vii, figs. 3, 4. 

 AuRiviiiLiTJS, 1912, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 1.52, PI. xxxvd, cT, 9 . 



Of this form, which is no doubt merely a local race of C. jodutta, 

 there are twenty-two males and six females. All were captured at Medje 

 from May to September, except one male which was taken at Niangara 

 in November. 



(275) 13. Cymothoe capellides, new species 



Plate VIII: Figure 6, C. capella Ward, cf ," Figure 5, C. capellides Holland, c? 

 Allied to C. capella Ward, but smaller in size, and easily discriminated from the 

 latter species by the paler gray of the basal areas of both wings on the upper side and 

 the outward extension of this darker area on both wings as well as by the presence 

 of the characteristic dark markings of the genus in the cell and beyond it on the 

 upper side of the fore wings, these dark markings being suppressed in C. capella, 

 the end of the cell and the apical third of the fore wing in Ward's species being im- 

 maculate, except for the marginal series of spots. Expanse, cf , 50-55 mm. 



There are four males in the collection, all taken at Medje, one in May, the others 

 in August. They show no variation among themselves. The type is in The American 

 Museum of Natural History. Paratypes are in the Holland Collection in the Carnegie 

 Museum. 



To make the distinction between the two species plain to the student 

 I give a figure of a typical male specimen of C. capella Ward and of the 

 type of the new species. 



(276) 14. Cymothoe caenis (Drury) 



Plate IX: Figure 3, C. conformis Aurivillius, 9 ; Figure 7, C. rubida Holland, 9 



Papilio ccenis Drury, 1773, 111. Exot. Ent., II, p. 33, PI. xix, figs. 1, 2. 



Cymothoe coenis Aurivillius, 1912, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 151, PL xxxvc, 



&, 9. 



There are fifty-six males and three females in the collection. Two 

 of the females belong to the form named conformis by Aurivillius and 

 one to the reddish form which I described man}^ years ago in Psyche, 

 \T, p. 215, without giving it a name. C. ccenis was bred for me in 

 large numbers at Kangve in the valle}' of the Ogove River and later at 



