ILLUSTRATIONS 



FACING PAGE 



IX. Nest and egg of the Bornean Frog-Mouth, Batracho- 

 stomus auritus. (From a photograph taken by J. C. 

 Moulton in the Sarawak Museum, Kuching) . 52 



X. The nest of Arachnothera longirostris, one of the 

 Sunbirds, with the leaf from which it is hung. (From 

 a drawing by Edwin Wilson of a specimen from the 

 Sarawak Museum. About of the natural size) . 54 



fXI. The Bornean Owl, Photodilus badius. (Photographed 

 from life) 



69 



fXII. The two Bornean Pythons, Python rcticulatus and 



P. curtus. (Photographed from .life) . . 87 



XIII. The Bornean Flying Frog, Rhacophorns nigropalmatus, 



with the tadpoles of some tree-haunting frog 

 which, like Rhacophorus, surrounds its eggs with 

 a mass of froth enclosed between leaves. (From 

 drawings found among the author's papers) . 105 



XIV. "Trilobite- Larva" and an allied form. (From 



photographs of living Bornean examples brought 

 to England by J. C. Moulton. Reproduced by 

 kind permission from Plate VII of Proc. South 

 London Ent. and Nat. Hist. Soc., 1912-13) . . 169 



XV. The larvae of the Cassidid beetles " Tortoise-Beetles," 

 Aspidomorpha miliaris (Fig. i) and Metriona 

 trivitata (Fig. 2) with their chains of moults 

 attached. The pupa of the Cassidid, Laccoptera 

 sp. ? (Fig. 3) retaining the larval shield. (Figs, 

 i and 2 after W. Schultze) . . . .181 



XVI. Spider, Amycixa lineatipes, Keringa Ant, (Ecophylla 

 smaragdina, and Caterpillar. The posterior ends 

 of spider and caterpillar resemble the head of 

 the ant. The latter is shown using one of its 

 larva? to spin together the leaves of its nest. 

 (The ant after D. Sharp) . . . .230 



XVII. The start of a Head-hunting Expedition 



253 



*XVIII. Awat-Awat, a Malay Fishing Village at the mouth 



of the Trusan River . . 280 



