1896.J FROM NYASA-LAND. 823 



to take : it flies high and fast, and thus is the only specimen I 

 have ever had a chance of taking/' I now have no douht that one 

 of the males recorded in my paper in the ' Annals and Magazine 

 of Natural History,' 1896, xviii. p. 68, as " O. ethalion (Eastern 

 type)," and taken on the Upper Leya, on the same day as the 

 male above noted, belongs to this species ; but when identifying it 

 I had no female for comparison. 



14. CHARAXES LEONINTJS, 



Charaxes leoninus, Butler, P. Z. S. 1895, p. 253, pi. xv. fig. 2. 

 <3 , Lower Nyika, June 14th, 1895. 



15. CHARAXES ZOOLINA. 



Nymphalis zoolina, West wood & Hewitson, Gen. Diurn. Lep. 

 pi. liii. fig. 1 (1850). 



c? , Mpimbi, Upper Shiri Kiver, March 24th, 1896. 



A much-shattered example, but the first we have received from 

 Nyasa-land. 



16. PANOPEA HELIOGENES. (Plate XLI. fig. 2.) 



Panopea Tieliogenes, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 6, 

 vol. xviii. p. 69 (1896). 



$ , Mitanji, W. of Deep Bay, May 19th, 1895. 



17. HYPOLIMNAS MISIPPUS. 



Papilio misippus, Linnaeus, Mus. Lud. Ulr. p. 264 (1764). 

 (?<?,$, Deep Bay, Feb. 5th, 6th, 8th, llth, 27th, and 29th, 

 1896. 



18. JUNONIA PELASGTS. 



Vanessa pelasgis, G-odart, Enc. Meth. ix., Suppl. p. 820 (1823). 

 $ , Kasungu Mountain, 7425 feet alt., Nyika, March 2nd, 1896. 

 " Emerald-green ova " (B. O.). 



19. JUNONIA ARCHESIA. 



Papilio archesia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iii. pi. ccxix. figs. D, E 

 (1782). 



Henga, W. of Lake Nyasa, June 26th, 1895. 



20. JUNONIA CALESCENS. 



Junonia calescens, Butler, P. Z. S. 1893, p. 652. 

 Mtambwi Hill, January 6th; Deep Bay, Feb. 5th, 6th, llth, 

 15th, and 21st, 1896. 



21. JUNONIA CUAMA. 



Junonia cuama, Hewitson, Exot. Butt, iii., Jun. pi. 1. figs. 2, 3 

 (1864). 



Mtambwi Hill, July 1st, 1895. 



Said to be the extreme dry-season form of /. simia, but we have 

 it from Zomba taken in the wet season. 



[7] 



