108 



MAY 22ud, 1913. 



Mr. Stanley Edwards exhibited an FJpinephele jurtina with ir- 

 regularly placed pale blotches. 



Mr. West (Ashtead) exhibited another pale blotched E. jurtina. 



Mr. Main exhibited photographs in colour of Tephrosia erepus- 

 i^ularia in sitii. on an oak-trunk on which a green alga was growing, 

 half natural size. 



Mr. R. Adkin exhibited a series of E. jurtina from various British 

 localities, including a very fine race from the Scilly Islands with 

 forms approaching the southern race var. hispulla, and a specimen 

 of very varied coloration, comparable with the var. splendida of 

 Buchanan- White. 



Mr. Carr exhibited an almost symmetrically pale-blotched example 

 of E. jurtina ; it was in excellent condition. 



Mr, A. E. Tonge exhibited a short series of Lobophora carpinata 

 (lobulata), bred from ova laid by a female in 1912 in Tilgate Forest. 

 Two specimens showed a green ground tint, otherwise the series 

 was remarkably constant in marking. 



Mr. A. E. Gibbs exhibited a long series of E.pinepluie jurtina, 

 including a number of pale blotched British specimens and some 

 particularly bright forms hardly separable from the south European 

 form var. hispulla, from Cornwall ; a series from the Vosges, Swiss 

 and French Jura ; fine forms of var. hispulla from Corsica, some of 

 them with very large apical ocelli and others with extra ocelli ; var. 

 hispulla from the Balkans; var. taurica from the Taurus mountains, 

 Asia Minor ; var. fortunata from Algeria, a long and strongly 

 marked series ; the same form from Teneriffe. He also showed other 

 species of Epincjihde, including E.janiroides from Tunis; E. pasipha'e 

 from the Pyrenees, and var. philipidna from Algeria ; a short series 

 of E. lycaon, with very uniformly dark undersides to the hindwings, 

 from Hercegovina ; a number of English specimens of E. tithonus, 

 including one curiously and uniformly blotched, from the New 

 Forest, a fine female from the same locality with remarkably large 

 extra spots, specimens from Polzeath, N. Cornwall, with extra spots, 

 and a light straw-coloured male from the New Forest ; E. ida from 

 Corsica, var. dalmatina from Dalmatia, var. neapolitajia from Italy, 

 and a specimen from Brussa, Asia Minor. One specimen of the 

 pale-marked form was a most remarkably radiated example. 



Mr. Hy. J. Turner exhibited a large number of specimens of E. 

 jurtina from various parts of England and Ireland with examples 

 from many Continental localities, including Turkey, Corsica, Crete, 



