and on seasonal forms of Belenois. 435 
Belenors leucogyne, Butl. 
This interesting species seems to possess a dry phase 
only. 
Belenois creona, Cramer. 
The wet form of this species seems to be extremely 
rare ; we possess only one pair; above it resembles the 
common intermediate phase, but on the under surface the 
veins are lilacine grey inthe male and black in the female. 
The best characters for distinguishing B. creona from 
B. severina consist in the smallness of the subapical spots 
on the upper surface of the primaries in the males, the 
black and scarcely spotted border of the secondaries in 
this sex and the white ground-colour of the female streaked 
on the under surface with deep ochreous. B. creona is 
essentially a West-African species; B. severina Southern 
and Eastern. 
Belenois johanne, Butl. 
I know this only as a dry-season phase; it is a very 
distinct species. 
Belenois mesentina, Cramer. 
We have a very extensive series of this species, B. 
augusta =agrippina =lordaca being the wet phase, B. me- 
sentina=syrine intermediate, B. auriginea dry, and B. 
taprobana being an insular dry phase differing in the 
blacker outer border to the male primaries, on which the 
subapical spots are less prominent. 
Belenois teutonia, Fabr. 
The wet form is B. clytie = niseia ; the intermediate form 
shows a narrow break between the discocellular bar and 
outer border in both the primaries and secondaries of the 
female, but no noticeable difference in the male; in the 
dry form the discocellular bar is well separated from the 
border, and the white spotting of the border in both sexes 
is clearly defined. 
Belenois peristhene, Boisd. 
The wet form has the secondaries below black with a 
submarginal row of orange spots. We have two examples 
