29 Dr. A. G. Butler on Butterflies from 
Walker describes the head as unarmed, a statement contra- 
dicted by the spinous antenniferous tubercles. 
Podops conspersus, Walk. Cat. Het. i. p. 71. n. 9 (1867), belongs to gen. 
Crollius, gen. nov. 
Strachia frontalis, Walk. loc. cit. ii, p. 888. n. 80 (1867), belongs to gen. 
Asopus. 
reciproca, Walk. loc. cit. p. 840. n. 84, belongs to gen, Asopus. 
megaspila, Walk. loc. cit. p. 841. n. 85,= Asopus reciprocus, Walk. 
—— hamata, Walk. loc. cit. p. 542. n. 86, belongs to gen. Asopus. 
saturata, Walk. loc, cit. n. 87,= Asopus hamatus, Walk. 
Duadicus telifer, Walk. loc. cit. p. 876. n. 377, belongs to gen. Andriscus. 
Stauralia erassicornis, Walk. loc. cit. p. 877. n. 2 (rightly placed). 
terminalis, Walk. loc, cit. p. 378. n. 3 (rightly placed). 
Microdeuterus equalis, Walk. loc. cit. p. 890. n. 2 (rightly placed). 
Brachystethus piceolus, Walk. loc, cit. p. 456. n. 10 (rightly placed), 
Ii].—An Account of a Collection of Butterflies made by the 
Rev. kK. St. Aulbyn Rogers between Mombasaand the Forests of 
Taveto. By ArtouR G. BuTuer, Ph.D., F.L.S., F.Z.S., 
&e., Senior Assistant-Keeper, Zoological Department, 
British Museum (Nat. Hist.). 
In a letter sent from Mombasa, July 13th, 1900, Mr. Rogers 
writes :—' I have been collecting butterflies here for some 
time, and have been recommended by Mr. R. Crawshay to 
send you some specimens in case any of them may be of 
interest to you. I do not suppose you will find them of any 
great value, as the greater part of them have been taken so 
near the coast, the few from up-country being either from 
Taveta or on the road there. I regret there are so tew, but 1 
have already sent the greater part of my collections there to 
the Royal Institution of Cornwall. 
“‘ Most of the species I send you are common generally, but 
I append a few notes as to those which | have not taken so 
commonly.” Then follow notes upon many of the species. 
In spite of Mr. Rogers’s modest opinion of this collection, I 
have found it of considerable interest ; it consists of ninety- 
seven species, some poorly represented in the Museum collec- 
tion, others quite new to us. One local form I have had to 
name, its differences from its southern representative being 
clearly quite constant. 
The species from Taveta seem all to be referable to dry or 
intermediate phases, those from Mombasa chiefly, if not 
altogether, to the wet phase. 
