!*?(> Mr. W, J. Kaye's Catalogue of the 



34. DiONE JUNO. 



Fapiliojuno, Cram., Pap. Exot., iii, t. 215, B. C. (1782). 

 Range. Central America ; Brazil ; St. Lucia. 

 Not very common. 



35. DiONE VANILLA. 



Papilio va7iilL'&, Linn., Mus. Ulr., p. 306 (1764). 



Bange. West Indies ; Guiana ; Southern States ; 

 Argentine. 



An abundant species. The larva chiefly feeds on Guinea 

 grass wherever introduced in preference to the various 

 passiflorx, its native pabula. 



36. Phyciodes liriope. 



Papilio liriope, Cram., Pap. Exot., i, t. 1. C D. (1775). 

 Mange. Tropical America. 

 Kecorded by Crowfoot. 



37. Phyciodes claudina. 



Acri&a claudina, Esch., Kotzeb. Reise, iii, p. 212, t. 8, 

 f. 18, a. b. (1821). 



Bange. Amazons. 



Taken in May 1898 ( W. J. Kaye) ; also in Nat. Coll. 

 {Hart). 



38. Phyciodes leucodesma. 



Eresia leucodesma, Feld., Wien. Ent. Mod., v, p. 103, 

 n. 77 (1861). 



Bange. Venezuela; Colombia. 



A very common species in many parts of the Island. 



39. Chlosyne saundersii. 



ByncMoe, saundersii, Doubl. and Hew,, Gen. D. L., t. 24, 

 f. 2 (1847). 

 Bange. Nicaragua to Paraguay. 



Although a widely-spread and apparently generally 

 common species, there is but a single record of a Trinidad 

 specimen, namely, from Sangre Grande. The insect in 

 question has the submarginal row of large orange spots 

 very conspicuous and well defined. 



