376 MR. A. G. BUTLER ON [June 29, 
is extremely doubtful, and the genus (in any case) was not described 
in that list of names; if adopted, it should be used in the Stephen- 
sian sense (i. e. either for daplidice,or cardamines), and Westwood’s 
action would fix the type as cardamines. Secondly, the identification 
of Papilio canidia is doubtful, and would probably apply to two 
or three species with equal accuracy, and therefore I prefer to give 
this species the name applied to it by Cramer. 
79. GANORIS NIPALENSIS. 
Pieris brassice, var. nipalensis, Gray, Lep. Ins. Nepal, pl. 6. 
figs. 1 & 3 (1846). 
3, Campbellpore, 22nd and 29th May and 12th June, 1885. 
**Common in May, June, July, October, November, December. 
The cabbages in my garden are covered at the present time (11th 
January, 1886) with the caterpillars of some white butterfly’, and 
there are some half-dozen chrysalides on the walls of the bungalow; 
they all probably belong to this species.” 
80. EvcHLo# LucriLua, sp. nov. (Plate XXXV. fig. 4.) 
Allied to #. charlonia of Algeria, from which, however, the 
following characters readily distinguish it :—Wings above gamboge- 
iustead of lemon-yellow; the discocellular black patch broader, 
regular, and quadrate; the apical area browner, and, instead of 
forming a triangular patch, widely excavated and diffused on its 
inner edge and truncated at its inferior extremity ; the yellow streak 
across it much as in &. charlonia: under surface differing, at a 
glance, in the absence of the apical grey-green patch of primaries, 
the yellow instead of grey-green secondaries, the larger pale costal 
spots, the better marked grey-edged white discocellular spot, and 
the absence of the pale spots on the median interspaces. Expanse 
of wings 35 millim. 
Campbellpore, 27th May, 1885. 
“ Anthocaris charlonia : rare, only three specimens taken—the 
first on the 21st May, the second on the 23rd, and the third 
on the 27th. 
‘© Nos. 1 and 2 were found on the same plant of Stachys parvifiora, 
No. 3 taken on the wing about a mile away.”—J. W. Y. 
I can only suppose that the name A. charlonia was given by 
Mr. de Nicéville ; yet it would seem strange that a gentleman who 
claims to be almost an arbiter in questions relating to geographical 
distribution, should unhesitatingly give the name of an Algerian 
insect to a species obtained in North-western India. 
PaPILIONINZ. 
81. PaprLio CLOANTHUS. 
Papilio cloanthus, Westwood, Arc. Ent. i. pl. 11. fig. 2 (1841). 
Murree, 10th September, 1885 (very ragged). 
‘Black: dorsal line white or yellow, spiral line yellow; yellowish-green 
irregular A-shaped patches speckled with black running up into the black from 
the spiral lines, but never reaching the dorsal lines ; length about two inches.” 
