( xiii) 
captured in August 1910, in forest country (less, and probably 
much less, than 100 ft. elevation) between Jilore and Malindi. 
Jilore is about 70 miles N. of Rabai and 19 W. of Malindi. 
The specimen, which was kindly presented to the Hope 
Department by the Rev. K. St. Aubyn Rogers, M.A., F.E.S., 
had been taken by a native collector. The pattern of the 
fore-wing closely resembles that of the specimen collected by 
Mr. A. Harrison at Nyangori about 1903, and represented on 
Plate XX, fig. 3, of Trans. Ent. Soc. for 1906. It is there 
described as intermediate “between planemoides and hippo- 
coon.’ The exhibited specimen differs from the figure in 
its approach to the pattern of leighi, the spot within the cell 
(undivided) being widely separated from the subapical bar and 
the latter only connected with the greatly enlarged principal 
spot (1) by scattered fulvous scales between veins 3 and 4. 
Below vein 3 the pattern almost precisely reproduces the appear- 
ance represented in Fig. 3, above referred to, the hippocoon- 
and trophonius-like extension of the pale pattern along the 
inner margin towards the base of the wing being slightly more 
evident in the coast specimen. The hind-wing is also hippo- 
coon-like in the great size of the white patch, which is far 
larger than in normal specimens of planemoides. 
The occurrence of planemoides on the E. coast, so far from 
its Planema models, is of high interest, as also is the fact that 
this, the only specimen hitherto recorded from the area in 
question, should not be a typical example but one exhibiting 
several ancestral features. 
The specimen may be compared with another very interest- 
ing example, captured Sept. 22, 1901, in forest country 
about ten miles inland from Mombasa, near Changamwe, 
by Mr. C. A. Wiggins, F.E.S. While the pattern is almost 
precisely as in the exhibited specimen, the colouring is that 
of trophonius, or rather of its modification niobe, Auriv. ; for 
the subapical bar of the fore-wing is fulvous like the other 
markings. The specimen also lacks the scattered scales 
connecting the bar with spot (1). The increasing lightness 
of the markings towards the costa of the fore-wing, spoken 
of on p. xxxix, is well marked. Except for this change the 
fulvous colouring is of a uniform pale shade like that of the 
