172 . Mr. Butler's Descriptions of 



alternately plum-coloured and yellow: secondaries as in 

 M. Cesonia, excepting that the black l)order is rather 

 broader and the orange disco-cellular spots paler and 

 smaller ; primaries below saffron-yellow, becoming golden- 

 yellow towards apex ; disco-cellular spot black and large as 

 in 3f. Cesonia, otherwise as in 3f. Fhilijjpa : secondaries 

 clear golden-yellow ; general arrangement of markings as 

 in M. rhili2-)pa : secondaries clear golden-yellow ; general 

 arrangement of markings as in M. Fhillippa but the silver 

 spots larger and rounder: expanse of wings, 2 inches, 10 

 lines. 



? . Dull saffron-yellow, somewhat inclining to ochreous ; 

 basal tAvo-iifths of costa and base irrorated with brown ; 

 disco-cellular spot dark-brown, large ; apical costa and outer 

 margins broadly dusted witli brown, the brown border 

 being sinuated internally ; an irregular discal series of six 

 diffused brown spots ; the upper two confounded with the 

 apical border, the third elongated; the fourth and fifth 

 lunate, the sixth oval ; secondaries with costa white ; disco- 

 cellular spots ochreous ; nervures terminating, upon 

 apical half of outer margin, in diffused brown spots : wings 

 below much paler than in the male, otherwise similar : 

 expanse of wings, 1 inch, 11 lines. 



Haiti {Twcedic). 3 specimens. B.M. 



To some extent intermediate between M. Cesonia and M. 

 Philippa, but differing from both in the obtuse apex of the 

 primaries : the female is somewhat similar in appearance 

 to that sex of M. Philippa, but (in addition to the form of 

 its wings) the markings are all more sharply delined, the 

 secondaries paler in colour and with marginal brown dots. 



GENUS TERACOLUS. I^vcdnson. 

 53. Tcracolus Cinercsccns, n. sp. 



Antlioehctris Banae, Trimen (nee. Fabr.) lihop. Air. 

 Austr. 1., p. 44, n. 27 (1862) ; Gen. Diurn. Lep. pi. 7, tig. 3 

 (1847). 



This species has long been confounded with the Indian 

 species, it is however entirely distinct, being quite unlike 

 it in both sexes ; we have it Irom l*ort Natal and Caffraria 

 in the British Museum. 



