54 Dr. G. B. Longstaff on sone 
island towards the confines of cultivation, lying about 
550 feet above sea-level. The wooded banks of a small 
river and some swampy hollows clothed with coarse grass 
and thin scrub afforded the best collecting grounds, and 
yielded, as might have been expected, a somewhat different 
fauna from that of the coast. It rained heavily on 
April 8th. 
Anosia archippus, Fabry. 3 2,19. Rather common in 
the outskirts of Scarborough; one specimen at Cocoa 
Wattie. Those taken resemble the specimens from the 
mainland, though one individual, a ¢, approached Jamaican 
specimens in colouring. 
Euptychia hermes, Fabr. (camerta, Cram.). 5. Abundant 
at Cocoa Wattie. 
Euptychia hesione, Sulz. 6. Common at Cocoa Wattie. 
I have taken this species and the following flying during 
rain. 
Feeliconius hydara, Hew. 3 f,2 2. Rather common 
on the river bank at Cocoa Wattie. All the specimens 
are small, three extremely small; four of them have the 
bluish gloss (as in the form guarica, Reak., though that is 
a larger insect) which Mr, W. J. Kaye associates with wet 
conditions. 
Precis lavinia, Cram. (f. zonalis, Feld.). 22. An example 
taken near the coast of the dry form, but with the anterior 
ocellus on the hind-wing very small. (Mr. W. J. Kaye 
has two very dark specimens from Mexico in which this 
ocellus is altogether wanting; in the National Collection 
there is a specimen from Colombia in which there are no 
ocellt on the upper surface, and only faint indications of 
them beneath.) The Cocoa Wattie example is ‘“‘inter- 
mediate,” approaching the ‘‘wet” form. Both the 
specimens would probably be called by Mr. Godman 
cenia, Hiibn., and by West Indian entomologists 
genoveva, Cram.; I follow Mr. Guy A. K. Marshall’s 
recent rearrangement of the splendid series at South 
Kensington. 
Anartia jatrophe, Linn. 3. On the coast, not common. 
Those taken are pale in colour and semi-transparent, of 
the mainland form. 
Anartia amalthea, Linn. One at Cocoa Wattie. Messrs. 
Godman and Salvin* say of this species: “ Barbados, a 
* Godman and Salvin, ‘ Butterflies of St. Vincent, Grenada, 
ete.,” Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 515. 
