36 Mr. Westwood on new Insects. 



cula slender, slightly conical, obtuse, transparent white with a band 

 of rose-colour. Oral tentacula short, thickish. Branchiae large, 

 ovate, inflated and terminating in a slender white point, transparent, 

 sprinkled with opalte white ; placed in a crowded manner down each 

 side of the back, of various sizes, smallest near the foot, and very 

 large and much inflated towards the back. Foot milk-white, broad 

 and rounded in front, and not much jjroduced behind. Length \ of 

 an inch. 



Among the rocks at low-water mark on the north side of Culler- 

 coats sands ; very rare. 



Remarkable on account of its large central branchiae, which have 

 a leaf- like outline. 



E. MINUTA. 



Body minute, pellucid, of a yellowish white. Dorsal tentacula 

 long, slender, transparent. Oral tentacula very short. Branchiae 

 few, clavate, orange, with white apices of various sizes arranged 

 irregularly down the back, forming about two imperfect clusters, 

 two or three papillae in each cluster being larger than the rest. 

 Foot broad and rounded in front, the angles expanded into curved 

 points. Length not quite 177 ths of an inch. 



One specimen found at Whitley under a stone at the loAvest spring 

 tide. 



E. NANA. 



Body yellowish, rather depressed. Dorsal tentacula linear, smooth, 

 approximating. Oral tentacula shorter than the dorsal ones, linear, 

 transparent. Head produced at the sides beyond their insertion. 

 Branchiae subclavate, rose-coloured, inclining to orange, the central 

 mass of a minute granular appearance ; apices white, disposed in 

 seven or eight close-set rows of seven or eight each down the sides, 

 leaving a broad space on the back. Foot transparent white, short- 

 ish, rounded in front and produced into obtuse angles at the sides. 

 Length j^yths of inch. 



Under stones near low-water mark at CuUercoats and Whitley, 

 rather rare. 



Newcastle, January 20, 1842. 



V. — Insectorum novorum Centuria, auctore 

 J. O. Westwood, F.L.S., &c. 



Decadis quartce, ex ordine Lepidopterorum et genere Papi- 

 lionis, Synopsis. 



Papilio Bootes, W. Alis nigris valde elongatis ; posticis spa- 

 thulato-caudatis, harum disco plaga media alba vena nigra 

 in duas partes divisa, macula ad angulum analem, lunulis tribus 

 submarginalibus rufis ; incisionibus pallide marginatis, cauda- 

 que bimaculata ; alis subtus similibus at pallidioribus ; omnibus 

 plaga magna basali rufa ; maculis lunulisque rufis majoribus, 

 capite, collo et corpore infra rufo. Expans. alar. unc. 5. 

 Hal). Sylhet in the East Indies. Allied to P. Philoxenus. 



