184 Mr. J. 0. Moulton on the Rhopalocera 



7. 3. 26. = 674. " Catombi." Rio de Janeiro. " At 

 Catombi." 



7. 3. 26. = 675. Rio tie Janeiro. " At Catornbf." 



Bz. 7. 3. 2Q. = 676. Another label attached to this speci- 

 men has the words : — " Duplicate Lepidoptera, selected 

 from rny Brazilian collection." Rio de Janeiro. " At 

 Catombi." 



Bz. 9. 3. 26. = 677. Rio de Janeiro. 



16. 3. 26. = 678. „ (As 647.) 



Bz. 16. 3. 26. = 679. „ 



27. 8. 27. = 680. Retiro. Just north of Rio Pardo. 



30. 10. 27. = 681. Sapezal to Conceicao ; near Goyaz. 



Bz. 25. 8. 28. = 682. Retiro to Goyaveira. " On the 

 road." This Retiro is east of Goyaz, and the place 

 mentioned on 514. 

 Westwood had written the name Biblis, and his list adds 



three individuals captured : — 



14. 1. 26. Rio de Janeiro. " Brought from and collected 

 in the Valley of Laranjeiros. Omnia insuper 

 plantas." 



19. 3. 26. Rio de Janeiro. " In the valley of Catornbf." 



20. 3. 26. Rio de Janeiro. " Along the Carioca Aque- 



duct." 



Peridromia arethusa, Cram. 



Bz. 19b- J- [8. 9. 25]. = 683. Rio de Janeiro. Along (he 

 Aqueduct. u Papilio. lnsvlva." 



1068. [3. 4. 26]. =684. Rio de Janeiro. Along the 

 Carioca Aqueduct. " Papilio : totimque nigra supra 

 maculis casruleis, subtus maculis rubris. This settles on 

 the sunny smooth trunks of trees." [Other butterflies 

 bearing the same number are : — Papilio hectorides, Esp., 

 1 ; Papilio torquatus, Or., snbsp. polybius, Swains., 1.] 



1243. 7. 9. 28. 4= 685-688. Rio Maranhao to Fe Guaida 

 Mor. Between Jeragud, and Cavalcanti ; near Rio Ma- 

 ranhao. "2 sp[eciesof] Papiliones caught against sunny 

 side of trunk of a large tree on bank of the Maranhao. 

 Wings expanded flat against the trunk." — " 1 243 conf. 

 Pap. arethusa' 1 [added later in pencil on blank page]. 

 The other species is Ageronia chloe, Stoll. 



Bz.+ 1243. 7. 9. 28. = 689. Rio Maranhao to Fe Gudrda 

 Mor. As above. 

 Westwood's list gives two more specimens captured on 



this date. He gives the name "Any. Arete" to one of the 



two numbers into which he had divided these specimens. 



