198 Mr. A. G. Butler on the 
The single damaged example before me differs slightly from 
the Celebesian type, the white areas on the primaries being 
interrupted by a rather broad and very oblique band of the 
ground-colour ; this may, however, prove to be an individual 
variation. 
Hesperiide. 
49. Hesperia celenus. 
Papilio celenus, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iy. pl. eeexevi. A, B (1782). 
&. Amboina. 
50. Pamphila Moseleyt, sp. n. 
&. Upper surface similar to P. phineus, but larger, blacker, 
the base not streaked with fulvous, the angular discal band of 
the primaries narrower and that of the secondaries nearly twice 
as broad ; below these bands are decidedly yellow ; the apical 
area of the primaries and the whole ground-colour of the 
secondaries are pale olivaceous instead of ochraceous or clay- 
coloured, and there is a large patch of black near the anal 
angle of the latter wings. LExpanse of wings 47 millim. 
Ké Dulan, 25th September, 1874. 
51. Pamphila phineus. 
Papilio phineus, Cramer, Pap. Exot. ii, pl. elxxvi. E (1779). 
¢. Amboina. 
Cramer’s locality ‘‘ Surinam ”’ is here, as in other instances, 
erroneous ; it is evident that some of the insects received by 
him from the two localities got confounded either through his 
own carelessness or that of those from whom he received 
them. 
’ 
52. Pamphila prusias. 
Pamphila prusias, Felder, Sitzb. Ak. Wiss. Wien, math.-nat. Cl. xliii. 
p- 44 (1861). 
Amboina. 
53. Padraona sunias ? 
Pamphila sunias, Felder, Sitzb. Ak, Wiss. Wien, math.-nat. Cl. xl. 
p. 462 (1860). 
Ké Dulan, 25th September, 1874. 
The single example before me is rather aberrant; it is, 
however, somewhat broken, and may be only individually 
separable from the Amboinese form. 
