African Species of the Genus Neptis. 553 
6, subquadrate, the third in 8, very small. Three small dots beyond 
cell. (One example in the Hope Dept. has an additional discal 
spot in area 4.) 
H.-w. with a discal band of white spots about 3 mm. wide at 
broadest part extending from inner margin to area 6, the spots 
progressively more separated, that in 6 being small and rounded. 
Fringes of both wings white between nervules. 
Underside chestnut brown. F.-w. without spots in cell, but with 
three small dots beyond it. Spots as on upperside but less separated, 
the two upper spots of subapical row fused together with an addi- 
tional streak in 9. In male a pearly inner marginal area extending 
to nervule 2. 
H.-w. with discal band as above, but more continuous and edged 
with sepia. Extreme margins and all nervures especially in h.-w. 
black. No internervular rays. 
incongrua occidentalis. 
Ground-colour greyer than in the type form. All the spots of 
f.-w. discal band wanting except those on each side of 1, 3, and 6, 
and these are much smaller. H.-w. band narrower. Both above 
and below there are dark internervular rays. Beneath the disc of 
f.-w. and outer fifth of h.-w. much deeper rufous. 
Neptis incongrua is quite unlike any other species except 
swynnertoni, from which it differs in having smaller white 
marks and no spots in f.-w. cell. 
I have examined the type of «ncongrua occidentalis, and 
though the great reduction of the white spots gives it a 
characteristic appearance, the male armature seems to 
resemble that of the type form within the limits of individual 
variation. 
10. Neptis woopwarp1. Pl. XX, fig. 10; Pl. XXIV, fig. 9. 
Sharpe, Ann. Nat. Hist., (7) III, p. 243 (1899); Poulton, 
Trans. Ent. Soc., p. 512, pl. xxix, ff. 1,.2,°3, 4 (1908); 
Auriv., in Seitz, Macrolep., p. 203 (1913). 
UGANDA. 
Expanse about 45 mm. Sepia brown with yellow and white mark- 
ings. F.-w. with two spots in 2 and 3 which may be ochre yellow 
or white, and small subapical spots in 5, 6, and 8, the last very small. 
These are generally white. 
H.-w. with a discal band of ochre yellow 3-4 mm. wide, rarely 
white, beginning just below nervule 2 and ending in 6. Fringes of 
both wings white between nervules. 
