132 Mr. Roland Trimen on some new 
L. Barkeri inhabits the same localities and presents 
the same habits as L. Osiris in Natal, haunting grassy 
spots ; but Mr. Barker observes that the former frequents 
higher ground and shorter grass than the latter, and 
that he has not found the two species flying in company. 
Locauitres oF Lycmna Barxert. — Natal: D’Urban, 
Verulam. Zululand: St. Lucia Bay (the late Colonel U. 
Tower); Etshowe (the late T. Vachell). Transvaal : 
Lydenburg District (7. Ayres); Swaziland: Little 
Usutu River (C. N. Barker). Delagoa Bay: Lorengo 
Marques (Mrs. Monteiro); Rikatla (Rev. U. Junod). 
Southern Ambuella: Otiembora (A. W. Hrihsson). 
Genus Lycmnestues, Moore. 
Lycenesthes neglecta, Trim. (Pl. VIIL, figs. 7 (3d), 
B29). 
3 Lycenesthes neglecta, Trim., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 
T1891, p. Lo. 
9. Lap. al. 1 in. 1 lin. 
Brownish grey, paler on discs, with a moderately wide violaceous 
suffusion (very slightly glossed with cupreous, but at bases more 
distinctly blue) on basal area; hind wing with two rows of 
whitish lunules, the submarginal ones sagittate. Fore wing ; 
Violaceous occupies only basal third or half of discoidal cell, and 
beneath cell extends to about or rather beyond middle of inner 
margin; a moderately distinct rather wide fuscous grey terminal 
disco-cellular lunulate transverse mark. Hind wing: Violaceous 
occupies much the same position as in fore wing, but doe snot 
extend beneath submedian nervure ; six or seven lunules of sub- 
marginal row violaceous whitish, the first on costa, but the second 
widely separate from the first, below 2nd subcostal nervule; 
a very well-defined small black hind-marginal spot between 1st 
and 2nd median nervules, bounded inwardly by an orange-yellow 
lunule ; an indistinct sublinear terminal disco-cellular fuscous grey 
mark. UNDER sSIDE.—As in g', except that ground colour is de- 
cidedly paler, and with scarcely any brownish tinge, and all the 
white edgings of the markings are much more distinct. 
I have mentioned (loc. cit.) the near alliance of the 3 
to L. Liodes, Hewits., and also its points of relationship 
to the larger L. Sylvanus (Drury). The @ differs widely 
from the corresponding sex in both those species (and 
especially from Liodes) in the absence of any dark discal 
