166 On Lepidoptera from the Loutstade Archipelago. 
of the black blotch which closes the cell, and the rest of the 
wing within the border, and a row of about six submarginal 
spots, of which the second and third are the largest, are white. 
Hind wings with the apical half and all the nervures broadly 
black ; the cell is filled up nearly to the extremity with pale 
sulphur-yellow ; the costa is of the same colour, faintly marked 
with orange, and within the fork of the median nervure is 
a large pale spot followed by three smaller ones and then by 
longer ones, the two nearest the inner margin extending to 
the anal angle. There is a submarginal row of orange spots, 
partly bordered with white, and the base below the cell and the 
mner margin are likewise marked with orange. 
Underside similar, but the orange at the base of the fore 
wings is more intense and the pale markings on the hind 
wings are smaller, better defined, and therefore wholly 
macular. There is an orange mark at the base of the costa, 
and on the whole the underside hardly differs from that of 
ordinary females of B. niseza. 
P4APILIONINA. 
Genus PAPILIo. 
Papilio, Linn, Syst. Nat. ed. x, i. p. 458 (1758); Doubl. Hl. Diurn. 
Lep. p. 5 (1846). 
18. Papilio pandion. 
Papilio pandion, Wall. Trans. Linn, Soc. Lond. xxv. p. 56 (1865). 
Normunby Island, Oct. 30, 1888. 
A single female, closely resembling Wallace’s figure of 
P. ormenus, Guér. 9 (lc pl. ii. fig. 3), but with light 
orange instead of red spots on the hind wings. — It stands in 
the British-Museum collection as the female of P. pandion. 
19. Papilio ulysses. 
Papilio ulysses, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. i. p. 459. n. 4 (1758). 
A rather small male, without special locality attached. 
HETEROCERA. 
BOMBYCES. 
Nyctemeride. 
Genus LEPTOsOMA. 
Leptosoma, Boisd. Voy. Astr., Lép. p. 197 (1832). 
