CATALOGUE OF DIURNAL LEPLDOPTERA. 183 



Genus 6. MYEINA, Fabricius, 

 Illiger's Magaz. vi. p. 286 (1808). 



1. Myrina Phocides. 



. Hesperia (R.) Phocides, Fabricius, " alis caudatis, supra 

 fuscis ; posticis albis, punctis duobus nigris : habitat in Africa." 

 Donovan, Nat. Hep. ii. pi. 44. fig. 1 (1824). 



Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. p. 282. n. 85 (1793). 



3 , Moulmein, E. Indies. (Obtained 1843, from Archdeacon Clerk) 



B.M. 



The type of P. Phocides is in the Banksian Collection ; it is not 

 the insect figured by Mr. Hewitson, which is the true female of 

 Felder's M. Jolcus, but it is the female of an Indian representative 

 of Horsfield's M. Sugriva, of which we have the male. 



2. Myrina Freja. 



Hesperia (E.) Freja,, Fabricius, "alis bicaudatis, fuscis, subtus disco 

 albo, striga undata, anticarum fulva, posticarum atra : habitat Tran- 

 quebariae." M. JafFra, Horsfield, Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. pi. 11. 

 figs. 5, 5a. 



Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. p. 263. n. 19 (1793). 



Moulmein, E. Indies. (Obtained 1843, from Archdeacon Clerk) 



B.M. 

 See Proc. Zool. Soc. pp. 34, 36, figs. l,la (1867). 



3. Myrina Etolus. 



Papilio (P. E.) Etolus, Fabricius, " alis bicaudatis ; anticis nigris, 

 posticis caeralescentibus ; subtus albidis, puncto baseos duabusque 

 apicis atris : habitat in Indiis." 



Fabricius, Mant. Ins. p. 66. n. 620 (1787) ; Ent. Syst. iii. p. 264. 

 n. 20 (1793). 



Java. (Obtained 1835) B.M. 



4. Myrina Timon. 



Papilio (P. E.) Timon, Fabricius, " alis tricaudatis, fuscis, basi 

 virescentibus ; subtus albis, posticis fascia abbreviata sanguinea : 

 habitat in America meridionali." 



Fabricius, Mant. Ins. p. 65. n. 611 (1787); Ent. Syst. iii. 

 p. 260. n. 9 (1793). 



Not in the British-Museum collection, but recently obtained by 

 Mr. Druce from Old Calabar ; allied to M. Mcesa of Hewitson. 



In his * Naturalist's Repository,' iii. pi. 97 (1825), Donovan 

 figures the Maus Silas of Hewitson (Port Natal) as this ' species, 

 and remarks that " Fabricius refers for the specimen he describes to 

 the cabinet of Dr. Hunter, in which there may perhaps be other 

 examples of the same insect ; but we are well assured, from the 

 Fabrician MS., that the description of the species which he has left 



