214 Mr. O. Holmqvist on Fishes collected during 



phase is darker olivaceous below, with a smaller and whito 

 spot crossed by vein 5 ; the intermediate phase does not, 

 however, differ in the same way from the corresponding phase 

 of H. andamana, so that I am not certain of the constancy of 

 this difference. On the upper surface the outer border 

 extends further on to the costal margin of the primaries than 

 in H. andamana and is considerably broader, black, and 

 sharply defined from veins 3 to 7 on the secondaries. 

 Sumatra (Faiocett and Sachs). Two males, B. M. 



58. Huphina remba. 



Pieris remba, Moore, Cat. Lep. E. I. C. i. p. 75 (1857). 

 Huphina liquida, Swiuhoe, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 6, vol. v. p. 361 

 (1890). 



Mussourie,Mahableshwar, Mysore, Canara, Ceylon. B. M. 



H. liquida is a male of the wet phase ; the type is a male 

 of the intermediate phase, rather browner below than 

 Col. Swinhoe's type; and " H. liquida ? " is a male of the 

 dry phase, in which the apex of the primaries and the second- 

 aries become sandy greyish. 



The preceding species lead on naturally to Udaina cynis, 

 in which the wet phase (U. Pryeri, Dist.) has the basal area 

 of the secondaries and a slender bar crossing the cell on the 

 under surface olivaceous. Although hitherto we have not 

 leceived this phase from Malacca, we have the intermediate 

 phase, in which the basal area of the secondaries is grey 

 below, from Malacca, and we have the extreme dry phase 

 (U. cynis) in the Hewitson collection from Borneo. I there- 

 fore have not the least doubt of the specific identity of the 

 two forms. It is possible, as I have already suggested, that 

 this species may be the true Papilio monuste of Linnams ; 

 but, as the type is lost, this point can never be definitely 

 settled. 



XXXIII. — List of Fishes collected during the Peary Auxiliary 

 Expedition, 1894. By Otto Holmqvist, of the Zoolo- 

 gical Institute, Lund, Sweden. 



The Peary Auxiliary Expedition offered but few opportunities 

 for collecting sea-animals. iJr. A. Ohlin, the zoologist 

 of the expedition, mentions * only seven trawling-stations, 



* " Zoological Observations during the Peary Auxiliary Expedition, 



