JUNONIA. 



211 



Section III. Salamzs. 



Club of antenna gradually incrassate. Wings angular, the pos- 

 terior mostly produced at the anal angle. Cell of the Anterior 

 Wings closed. Anterior Tarsi of the males short. 



36. Jun. ? Sabina. 



P. Sab. Cram. t. 289. f. A— D. (1781). 



Fab. Ent. Syst. m. i. 68. n. 211. (1793). 

 Van. Sab. Godt. Enc. M. ix. 209. n. 9. (1819). 

 Java, Amboyna. B. M. 



37. Jun ? Augustina. 



Salamis Aug. Boisd. Faune Ent. de Madag. t. 8. 

 f. I. (1S33). 

 Madagascar, Bourbon, Mauritius. 



38. Jin. ? Cacta. 



P. Ca. Fab. Ent. Syst. in. i. 116. n. 356. 

 (1793). 

 Jones, Icon. v. t. 34. f. 1. (ined.). 

 Donovan, Ins. of India (1800). 

 Van. Ca. Godt. Enc. M. ix. 309. n. 29. 

 Sierra Leone. B. M. 



39- Jun. ? Cvtora. 



Salamis Cyt. Boisd. MS. 



Doubleday Sf Hewitson, t.25. f. 5. (1847). 

 Ashanti. B. M. 



10. Jun.? Jucunda. 



Hamadryas undata Jucunda Hiibn. Samrnl. Exot. 



Schmelt. (1806). 

 Apatura Juc. Hiibn. Vera. bek. Schmett. 35. 

 (1816). 



41. Jun.? Anacardii. 



P. An. Linn. Mus. Lud. Ulr. 236. (1764). 

 Clerk, t. 28. f. 3. (1764). 

 Linn. Syst. Nat. 11. 758. n. 74. (1767). 

 Fab. Ent. Syst. in. i. 183. n. 567. (1793). 

 P. Parrhasus Drury, in. t. 4. f. 1, 2. (1782). 

 P. iEthiops Pal. de Beauv. Ins. Lcp. t. 3. f. 1, 2. 



(1805). 

 P. Opale Pal. de Beauv. Ins. Lep. texte, 32. 



(1805). 

 Van. Aglatonice Godt. Enc. M. ix. 299. n. 8. 

 (1819). 

 W. Africa, Cape of Good Hope. B. M. 



Note The butterfly figured by Petiver under the name of Papilio oculatus Hampstediensis , ex aureo fuscus, undoubtedly is a species 



of this genus, and, as Mr. Stephens long since suggested to me, one of the species allied to Junonia Orithyia. Mr. Stephens's sugges- 

 tion has received a remarkable confirmation from a very remarkable painting of innumerable species of our British Lepidoptera exe- 

 cuted about a century since, in which are four very accurate figures representing both surfaces of Junonia Vellida, the species which we 

 had considered most to resemble Petiver's figure. The minute accuracy of the figures, worthy of Sepp or Curtis, leaves no doubt of the 

 identity of the insect. How an insect now only known as an Australian species could then, exist in a collection uf purely British insects, 

 and how Petiver, Albin, and others, came to believe that it had been captured at Hampstead, I cannot explain. The only other exotic 

 insect in the painting referred to is Deiopeia Cribaria, and is precisely that variety which is found in the easternmost islands of the Indian 

 Ocean. 



