290 Dr. A. G. Butler on 



sometimes internally with black-brown, and crossed by a more 

 or less prominent series of sagittate blackish spots : second- 

 aries frequently with black spots, especially towards apex ; 

 the apex of the primaries in the female black-brown, crossed 

 by a more or less broad oblique orange belt, followed by a 

 transverse series of orange spots. 



1. Hehomoia glaucippe. 



Fapilio (ilaucipjje, Linnaeus, Mus. Lud. Uh*. p. 240 (1764). 

 Papilio callirrhoej Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 473 (1775), 



North-eastern India*, Burmah southwards to Malacca, 

 China. 



The dry form differs from the wet in its inferior size, more 

 falcate primaries, and the often browner and always less 

 strongly reticulated character of apex of primaries and the 

 secondaries on the under surface. 



2, Hehomoia australis, sp. n. 



The Southern representative of H. glaucippe. It differs in 

 the feeble indication or entire absence of the black inner 

 edging to the orange apical patch of the males and in the 

 reduction of this edging in the females. In size it corresponds 

 with the more widely distributed form. 



Southern India from Mysore south-eastwards to Ceylon. 



Our series of H. glaucippe consists of forty selected 

 examples in addition to four in the Ilewitson collection. Of 

 H. australis we have fifteen examples. 



3. Hehomoia Javanensis. 

 Iphtas javanensis, Wallace, Journ. Eutom. ii. p. 3 (1863). 



Java. Six examples. B. M. 



A small representative of H. glaucippe in which the under- 

 surface colouring of the secondaries and apex of primaries is 

 slightly more tinted with sienna. 



4. Hehomoia lomhockianaj sp. n. 



Intermediate in character between H. glaucippe and 

 H. timoriensis ; the outer border and transverse spotting of 

 the apical patch of the primaries being similar to that of the 

 former, but the form of the inner edge of this patch irregu- 

 larly zigzag as in the latter, and with a sulphur-yellow border, 



* "We have one example labelled " Malabar," but this locality is 

 vague and perhaps incorrect. 



