'Challenger* 1 Lepidoptera. 421 



and fringe dotted with black, the margin at the extremities of 

 the veins, and the fringe at the extremities of the internervular 

 folds : primaries with the usual discoidal dark brown markings 

 in outline ; secondaries with the usual squamose brown mark- 

 ings. Expanse of wings 43 millim. 



£ . Pasananca valley, Mindanao. 



In pattern and coloration nearest to Terias Mariesii^ var. e 

 (Trans. Ent Soc. 1880, pi. vi. fig. 5), but with narrower 

 wings, the primaries with straighter costal margin and more 

 rounded apex, the apical area with more angular inner edge, 

 the outer border narrower on all the wings, that of secondaries 

 as in my fig. 6, and that of primaries not produced along the 

 inner border, as in T. Mariesii. 



72. Terias hecabe. 



Papilio hecabe, Linnams, Mus. Lud. Ulr. p. 249 (1764). 



S ■ Am. 



73. Terias puella. 



Xanthidia paella, Boisduval, Voy. Astr. Lep. p. 60, pi. ii. fig. 8 (1832). 

 Terias mrgo, Wallace, Trans. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, vol. iv. p. 328. n. 35 

 (1867). 



c? ? . Aru. 



Boisduval's figure agrees well with Aru specimens of the 

 male. 



74. Appias domttia. 



Pieris domitia, Felder, Wien. ent. Monatechr. vi. p. 285. n. 41 (1862). 



^J . *.SX Xj^ 



$ . Pasananca valley, Mindanao. 



75. Appias mindanensis, sp. n. 



Tackyris domitia (part.), Semper (nee 1 lder), Stett. ent, Ztit. 1876, 

 p. 401. 



cJ . Bright reddish orange, the veins black, the outer mar- 

 gins, the apical border of primaries, and the anal border of 

 secondaries broadly greyish : primaries below deep cadmium- 

 yellow, crossed beyond the middle by a squamose interrupted 

 transverse <rrey streak ; veins beyond the middle black : 

 secondaries bright golden cadmium-yellow, a rather broad 

 discal grey-brown band from the second subcostal to the first 

 median branch , beyond which band the veins arc black ; abdo- 

 minal border at base sulphur-yellow. Expanse of wings 72 



millim. 



S . Pasananca valley, Mindanao. 



I cannot agree with Semper in his belief that tins and the 



