catalogue of Trinidad Lepidoptera Rhopalocera. 549 
[CALIGO SALTUS. |] 
In the Genera Insectorum, Fasc. 20, p. 15, Stichel 
treats this insect as a subspecies of Caligo ilioneus under 
the name polyxenus, a form described by him a year 
previously in the Insecten Bérse, vol. 20, p. 389, 
No. 5, 1903. If his type specimen came from Trinidad 
my name would become a synonym of polyxenus. But 
Fruhstorfer in “Seitz Macrolepidoptera of the World,” 
vol. v, Div. II, p. 319, 1912, treats polyxenus and saltus as 
distinct subspecies. For the present I follow Fruhstorfer, 
and adopting the trinomial system of nomenclature the 
insect would be known as Caligo ilioneus saltus. 
DYNASTOR MACROSIRIS. 
Dynastor macrosiris, Westw., Gen. Diurn. Lep., pl. lix, 
fig. 3: , 
Dynastor macrosvris macrosiris, Stichel, Gen. Ins., Fase. 20, 
p- 10. 
Taken at Government House, Port of Spain, by Sir 
Gilbert Carter in 1907, and by Mr. P. L. Guppy, jun., at 
the same locality. Always a very rare species. 
Range. Guiana; Mexico; Honpuras; CoLompia; 
Bouivia. 
Family NYMPHALIDAE. 
Subfamily ACRAELIN AE. 
[20. ACTINOTE ANTEAS. | 
[21. ACTINOTE ALALIA.] 
These two Actinote species recorded in the catalogue as 
two distinct species are most probably the same. Actinote 
alalia was wrongly identified. Felder’s type at Tring is 
quite another species. Dr. Jordan has recently described 
in Seitz the Trinidad insect hitherto recorded as A. alalia 
as irimitatis, treating it as a subspecies of Actinote pellenia. 
Typical A. pellenia, Hiib., occur with the subspecies, and 
Dr. G. B. Longstaff secured an intermediate form on April 
2, 1907, about four miles from Port of Spain. The 
species seems to be locally quite common. Mr. H. Carac- 
ciolo has secured a long series. Mr. H. A. Trechman, and 
more recently Mr. K. St. A. Rogers, caught a few in January 
1913. 
