PAPLELO NLD. 
PAPILIO IX. 
PAPILIO XENIADES. 26. 
Papilio Xeniades, Hewitson. Trans. Ent. Soc. 3 Ser. Vol. V. p. 561. 
Uprersipe. Male, black. Anterior wing with a white bipartate spot near the 
middle of the inner margin. Posterior wing rounded at the outer margin, dentate, 
crossed beyond the middle by a band of five detached carmine spots, the two outer 
spots smaller than the rest: lunules on the fringe, and three or four minute spots 
near the margin, white. 
UnpersIp£, brown, with the nervures black: the base of the anterior wing and 
three spots at the base of the posterior wing carmine ; the spots of the transverse 
band nearly white. 
Female, like the male, except that the white spot on the anterior wing is larger 
and tripartite. with (outside of it) some irrorations of white ; that the outer margin 
of both wings is straighter, and that the white spots near the outer margin of the 
posterior wing are much larger. 
Exp. 3;inch. Hab. Ecuador. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
Nearly related to P. Euryleon of Hewitson, Exot. Butterflies, Vol. 1, pl. 2, but differs from it in 
having the carmine spots of the posterior wing lower down, forming a macular band instead of a palmate 
spot, and in wanting the two white apical spots. 
PAPILIO HELLANICHUS. 27, 28. 
Upprrsipe, dark brown. Both wings crossed at the middle by a common band 
of yellow, divided into spots by the nervures, each spot (with the exception of 
those nearest the costal margin) marked with orange at its lower extremity: both 
wings with a spot within the cell, the spot on the posterior wing forming part of 
the transverse band: both wings with a submarginal band of yellow spots: both 
with the fringe spotted with white. 
UNDERSIDE, as above, except that the base of the posterior wing to the central 
band nearly is ochreous yellow; that the spots are paler, and those of the band 
much longer, and succeeded by a band of pale blue irorated spots. 
Exp. 333 inch. Hab. Uruguay. 
In the Collection of R. Trimen, and very kindly lent to me by him. 
M 
