416 DB. A. G. BUTLER ON LEPIDOPTEBA [May 17, 



120. BAORIS FATUELLUS. 



Pamphila fatuellus, Hopffer, Monatsber. k. Akad. Wissensch. 

 Berl. 1855, p. 643; Peters's Reise n. Mossainb., Ins. p. 417, 

 pi. xxvii. figs. 3, 4 (1862). 



Mwachi River, 7th June, 1896. 



121. BAORIS ATJBITINCTUS, sp. n. (Plate XXXII. fig. 2.) 



Form of B.fatuellus, primaries with exactly similar transparent 

 white spots ; an elliptical patch below the median vein and the 

 commencement of its first branch, a small spot above the submedian 

 vein (representing the white spot frequently present in B.fatuellus), 

 and a pilose internal streak bronzy ochraceous, the whole wing- 

 surface also glossed with golden bronze : secondaries more distinctly 

 glossed with golden, the long hair clothing the discoidal and 

 internal areas to the centre of the disc being bronzy ochraceous ; 

 two unequal subapical transparent yellowish spots placed obliquely ; 

 fringes of all the wings smoky brown, tipped with bone-white 

 excepting towards apex of primaries. Body of the ordinary type, 

 blackish with bronzy green reflections on head and thorax and 

 golden cupreous reflections on abdomen ; a shoulder-spot and a 

 spot on each side of the head, close to the eyes, ochreous ; antennae 

 bronze tipped with purplish black. Under surface brownish grey, 

 densely irrorated with ochraceous excepting on the internal areas : 

 otherwise very like B. fatuellus. Expanse of wings 34 millim. 



Taru, 20th December, 1896. 



Only one example obtained. 



122. CERATRICHIA STELLATA. 



Ceratrichia stellata, Mabille, C.R. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1891, p. Ixv. 



Mgana, 13th & 28th August, 1896. 



I quite agree with Dr. Holland that this species differs from 

 typical Ceratrichia in its shorter antennae, &c., but I do not like it a 

 bit better in Cydopides (which it is not half so much like in pattern). 

 As Dr. Holland has not proposed a new generic location for it, I 

 Drefer, for the present, to let the species rest where M. Mabille 

 placed it. 



123. RHOPALOCAMPTA FORESTAN. 



Papilio forestan, Cramer, Pap. Exot, iv. pi. cccxci. E, F (1782). 

 Ndara Hills, 7th April, 1897. 



The Moths in the collection are not in such good condition as 

 the Butterflies, but most of them are recognizable ; some are of 

 great beauty and quite new to the Museum collection ; others we 

 had previously only received from South Africa or from the 

 W<- Bt coast. As might be expected, not a few are new to science. 

 Thi following is as complete an account of them as could be made. 



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