Papilionidse, Pieridse, and Lycsenidae. 363 



Larinopoda varipes. 



Expands 1^ in. 



White : fore wings, with the costa, tip, and hind margin 

 blackish brown ; costal border with a rounded projection just 

 above the cell, and shortly afterwards passing into the mar- 

 ginal border, which occupies the apical tliird of the wing, 

 but rapidly narrows, becoming very narrow and ceasing at 

 the anal angle ; its inner edge is a little irregular, especially 

 towards the costa and anal angle : hind wings with a narrow, 

 ill-defined, blackish hind-marginal border, commencing below 

 the tip. Underside : fore wings with a black basal streak on 

 the costa, projecting downwards above the extremity of the 

 cell, where it ceases ; apical and hind-marginal border ashy 

 grey rather than black, and narrower than above, hardly 

 reaching the anal angle : hind wings with a narrow ashy-grey 

 border, longer and better defined than above, and with three 

 conspicuous round black spots — one near the end of the cell, 

 one between this and the inner margin below the origin of the 

 lower branch of the submedian nervure, and a third near the 

 tip between the first two branches of the median nervure. 

 Legs reddish, the tips of the tibise, and the greater part of the 

 tarsi, black. 



Hah. Ashanti. 



Tingra maculata. 



Exp. al. ll-H in- 

 White, tinged with tawny yellow at the base : fore wings 

 with the tip ashy, marked with three white spots on the costal 

 margin and three on the hind margin, and followed by three 

 ashy spots (nearly confluent with the dark tip in the male) 

 before the anal angle ; four dark spots in the cell, the second 

 transverse, the fourth at the end of the cell, ratiier widely 

 separated from the others ; above the cell are two or three 

 more spots, alternating with those in it, and below the cell is 

 a large spot near its extremity and sometimes a smaller one 

 nearer the base : hind wings with seven submarginal spots — 

 a spot at the end of the cell, and sometimes another obliquely 

 below it, and a third above the middle of the cell. Under 

 surface similar, with a double row of submarginal spots on 

 the fore wings, and in the male on the hind wings also. 

 Bab. Cameroons. 



Differs from T. abraxas in the double submarginal row of 

 spots on the underside of the fore wings. 



The insect figured by Hewitson (Ex. Butt, iii., Pentila and 

 Lij)tena^ f. 1) as a variety of the female of Pentila {Tingra) 



