500 Dr. A. G. Butler—A Revision 
77. Teracolus tripunctatus. 
¢. Teracolus tripuncta, Butler, P. Z. S. 1868, p. 221, pl. xvii. fig. 9. 
2. Teracolus tripunctatus, Butler, P. Z. S. 1880, p. 149, pl. xv. fig. 4. 
Teracolus surya, Moore, Journ. As, Soc. Beng. lii. p. 45 (1885). 
Probably occurs over the greater part of South India and 
at Trincomali in Ceylon. It is readily separable, both in its 
wet- and dry-season forms, from 7. fulvia by the much 
blacker apical patch on the primaries enclosing three isolated 
spots of the ground-coiour, instead of being divided by a belt 
of spots; the marginal spotting of the secondaries is also 
much heavier than in 7’, fulvia and the under surface of the 
dry-season form yellower and less rosy. We have fifteen 
examples in the Museum from Bombay and the Nilgiris on 
the west and from Ganjam and Ceylon on the east. 
78. Teracolus celimene. 
Anthocharis celimene, Lucas, Rev. et Mag. de Zool. p. 426 (1852). 
Anthocharis amina, Hewitson, Exot. Butt. iii, Anth. pl.i. figs. 1-3 
(1860), 
Appears to range from Abyssinia to Swaziland, whence 
we have a dry-season male obtained by Mr. Buxton. 
I cannot believe that Anthopsyche pholoe of Wallengren is 
identical with 7’. cel’mene; the description reads like that of 
a female, but does not agree with the female in the Hewitson 
collection. We have the typical wet-season form of male 
T. celimene from Lake Nyasa (G. & S. coll.) ; therefore 
Mr. Marshall’s suggestion that the western 7’. pholoe is the 
dry-season form of the eastern 7’. celiémene (ot which we 
already have both wet and dry forms) seems far-fetched. 
79. Teracolus pholoe. 
Anthopsyche pholoe, Wallengren, Wien. ent. Mon. iv. p. 85 (1860). 
Anthocharis phenon, Trimen, Trans. Ent, Soe, ui. 1, p, 522 (1863), 
The range of this species, so far as at present known, is 
from Damaraland eastward to Lake Ngami. It seems 
probable that Wallengren described the female and Trimen 
the male; the two series of red spots upon which my friend 
relies as disproving the female character of 7’. pholoe are the 
chief evidence in its favour, for, as Trimen himself shows, 
the males of this group of Yeracolus have the apical patch 
purplish lake, violet-glossed and intersected by a black streak, 
not, as Wallengren says, black, with violet-glossed red spots tn 
two rows. The female of 7. preclarus gives an indication of 
such a character, but has the marginal spots also red instead 
of yellow. 
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