Pseudacraea eimjtus liohleyi. 87 



The tables on pp. 88-90 give the numbers of the various 

 species which are the subject of the paper, together with 

 others belonging to the same combinations. 



It is hardly necessary again to go through the four 

 combinations of models and their mimics, as these were 

 classified in the former paper. 



Some points especially worthy of notice may, however, 

 be mentioned. 



Combination /.—The chief mimic in this group, Pseuda- 

 craea kuenowi hypoxantha Jord., was not very abundant 

 on Bugalla island, neither is it at Entebbe. But it is 

 quite absent from the collections which are the subject of 

 this paper. The Papilionid mimic, form planemoides of 

 Pa/pilio dardanus, was only taken at Kakindu during the 

 period under discussion, where it was the conmionest form 

 of female. Tliis and other mimetic Papilios from Kakindu 

 will, I hope, form the subject-matter of a future paper. 



Combination I b. — The form hobleyi of Ps. eurytus shows 

 considerable variation in the amount of white and orange 

 on the hind-wing. The model, ^ Planema macarista, usually 

 has some orange bordering the white, and is often copied 

 in this respect by specimens of hobleyi. 



Acraea alciope is scarcer in these collections than in 

 that from Bugalla. 



Combination II. — A new member of this combination 

 was found in abundance directly I arrived on Kome in 

 1914, namely Planema aganice Hew., form montana Butl. 

 The male of this handsome species does not enter into any 

 of the mimetic associations now under consideration, but 

 its female is of the same type as that of Planema macarista 

 E. M. Sharpe, and is figured with it. It is a very remark- 

 able fact that, although so abundant on Kome in 1914, 

 this species was never captured on Damba in 1911, where 

 I spent nine months, and first made the acquaintance of 

 the fascinating Planema-Pseiidacraea combinations. Damba 

 on its western side is only separated from Kome by a nar- 

 row channel of a few hundred yards ! (see map). Equally 

 interesting are the facts that it was never seen on Bugalla 

 during fourteen months' residence in 1912-13, and only owe, 

 a male, appears in the large Wiggins collection made at 

 Entebbe in 1909. But on looking through a collection that 

 I made a little way east of Entebbe on the north shore 

 of the lake in 1910 (Buka bay, see map), I found several 

 examples of Planema axjanice montana. 



