(Ga. ) 
and very varied series of both species, being picked forms from 
several thousands bred from ova. The specimens showed 
extreme light, dark, and intermediate forms and there was one 
very pink Z. pendularia. 
(3) A series of Hybrid Z. pendularia Q and annulata 3; 
specimens showing the markings of pendularia most pro- 
nounced and the coloration of annulata prominent. 
Papers. 
The following papers were read :— 
“New or little-known Heterocera from Madagascar,” by 
Sir G. H. Kenrick, Bart., F.E.S. 
“ The Culicidae of Australia,” by Frank H. Taytor, F.E.S. 
“* Descriptions of New Species of Staphylinidae from India,” 
by Matcotm Cameron, M.B., R.N., F.H.S. 
‘* Pseudacraea eurytus hobleyi, Neave, and its models on 
Bugalla Island, Lake Victoria, with other members of the same 
combination,” by G. D. H. Carpenter, B.A., M.D., F.E.S. 
“* Pseudacraea boisduvali, Doubl., and its models, with special 
reference to Bugalla Island,” by the same. 
“The inheritance of small variations in the pattern of 
Papilio dardanus, Brown,” by the same. 
The following is an abstract of these three papers on the 
bionomics of butterflies on Bugalla Island, L. Victoria. 
The materials on which these papers are based was collected 
during 1912 and Jan.—Feb. 1913, on Bugalla Island, in the 
Sesse Archipelago in the N.W. corner of the great L. Victoria, 
about 25 miles S.W. of Entebbe, and a few miles S. of the 
equator, where I was working for the Royal Society’s Sleeping 
Sickness commission. The specimens have all been presented 
to the Hope Department of the Oxford University Museum. 
The work has been done during the summer of this year while 
I was home on leave. 
The first paper deals with the great Planema-Pseudacreaa 
combination, and with other members of the same mimetic 
association, and a full description is given, for the first time, 
of all the varieties of Pseudacraea eurytus, Linn., so abundant 
on the island. The material on which it is based was collected, 
