collectedly W. J. Burckell in Brazil. 191 



At the Discoberto do Antonio Velho. Aff. 2§5." By 

 this number Burchell refers to Callicore clymena, Cr. 

 Bz.+ 966. I. 26. 10. 25. = 747. Minas Geraes. "Pap 

 [ilio]. At Discoberto; near Joao Pedro's house." 

 Westwood's list and generic name agree, except for an 

 obvious clerical error in the number of the last specimen, 

 which is given as 996. On 747 he had written " C. Gyllene 

 Gen. D. L. PI. 28 By gas ? teste Hew. Cat. Iconogr." 



Catagramma pygas, Godt., f . thamyras. Men. 



28. 4. 28. = 748. Goyaz. " Papiliones caught by C[ongo] 

 at the Carioca spring/'' Congo was Burchell's native 

 servant. 

 Westwood's list and generic name agree. 

 In the British Museum this is given as the thamyras, 

 Men., form of C. pygas, Godt. Four similar specimens from 

 Chapada are unnamed in the Godman-Salvin Collection. 



Catagramma pyracmon, Godt. 



a. 26. 8. 27. 2 = 749, 750. R. Pardo to Cubatao. (As 734.) 

 Westwood's list adds two more captured on this date, one 



in the morning and the other in the afternoon. 



Bz. 27. 8. 27. = 751. Rio Pardo to Retiio. 



27. 8. 27. = 752. „ „ 



Westwood's list adds an individual captured 25. 8. 27, 



Ollaria to Rio Pardo, and another with a. 29. 8. 27, Cervo. 



(As 527.) He writes against this also the genus Catagramma. 



Catagramma sp. near peristera, Hew. 



3. 3. 28. = 753. Goyaz. " Caught in the town by the rio 

 Vermelho ; by C [ongo] ." 



Westwood's date and generic name agree. 



This specimen bears a Westwood's label which is somewhat 

 difficult to interpret, but almost certainly reads thus : — 

 " Obs.[erve] plaga sang. alar, post.; [or ? " i" for " in "] 

 forma diversa alar. post. An. sign. alb. necnon striola caerul. 

 marg. al. post." It is obvious that a ant." should have been 

 written in place of one "post.," probably the first. The 

 " An " is probably intended for " Ant," Before " An " is a 

 mark which may be Westwood's monogram or, perhaps, an 

 erased letter. 



This is probably a geographical subspecies of C. peristera, 

 and compared with a long series from Bolivia, the Lower 

 Amazon, New Granada, Ecuador, and Eastern Peru in the 



