68 SOUTH-AFKICAN BUTTERFLIES. 



E. Natal. 



h. Upper Districts. — Greytown. 'Ks,icoViVt{J.M. H^dc^linson). Colenso 

 ( W. Morant). Ladysmith, Biggarsberg, and Eorke's Drift (/. 

 H. Boivker). 



F. Zululand. — Isandlhwana and Napoleon Valley (/. H. Boioker). St. 



Lucia Bay {Colonel H. Toioer). 



G. Swaziland {E. C. Buxton). 



H. Delagoa Bay. — Lourengo Marques {Mrs. Monteiro). 



K. Transvaal {T. Ayres). 



L. Bechuanaland. — Motito {Rev. J. Fredoux). 



11. Other African Regions. 



A. South Tropical. 



a. Western Coast. — " Damaraland (R, Swakop : WaJdberg)." — 



Aurivillius. "Angola {Pogge)." — Dewitz. 



b. Eastern Coast. — " Querimba {Peters)." — Hopffer. Zanzibar (/. 



R. Botvker). " Mombas {Kersten)." — Gerstaecker. 

 bi. Eastern Interior. — Between Limpopo and Zambesi River {T. 

 Ayres). Shashani River {F. C. Selous). Zambesi {F. C. Selous). 



B. North Tropical. 



a. West Coast. — " Calabar." — Hewitson. Cape Coast Castle (/. M. 



Pask). 



b. East Coast. — Red Sea : " Harkeko and Hor Tamanib (/. K. 



Lord)."— Walkev. 

 bi. Eastern Interior. — Abyssinia: " Atbara." — Butler. 



IV. Asia. 



A. Southern Region. — "Arabia and Syria." — Klug, et auct. "Aden 

 (/. W. Yerbury):'—QM.i\Qi. "Java and China (Coll. Brit. 

 Mus.)"— Butler. 



Genus CCENYRA. 

 Coemjra, Hewits., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 3rd Ser., ii. p. 281 (1865). 



Imago. — Closely allied to Ypthima. Antennm rather longer, the 

 club less distinct, more gradually thickened. Palpi with shorter, less 

 bristly hair beneath ; terminal joint shorter, not so acute. Fore-wings 

 with costa much arched ; apex not pronounced ; hind-margin decidedly 

 convex ; costal nervure much swollen, but median simple ; first sub- 

 costal nervule arising considerably, second a little, before extremity 

 of discoidal cell ; in ^, on submedian nervure, before middle, a large, 

 elongate, darker patch or badge, set with scattered hairs ; discoidal cell 

 a little longer than in Ypthima, the middle and lower disco-cellular ner- 

 vules of about equal length, and together forming a strong inward curve. 

 Hind-wings much rounder, especially at base of costa and at anal angle. 



Abdomen considerably longer than in Ypthima. 



Mr. Hewitson founded this genus on a beautiful South-African 

 Satyrine, described by me in 1862 as Yplithima Hebe. The characters 

 given rightly distinguish this butterfly from the genus Ypthima, and 

 the curious marking, exhibiting rufous transverse streaks on both sur- 

 faces, and in the fore-wings two unipupillate ocelli of equal size, instead 

 of the single bipupillate one of Ypthima, renders the species easy of 



