TRANSFORMATIONS OF SOME SOUTH-AFRICAN LEPIDOPTERA. 
2 
3) 
19. 
My specimens of the imago were identified as B. acaciaria at the British Museum, 
but they are much paler and have fewer transverse bands than the examples in that 
collection, or the specimen figured by Hampson in ‘Fauna of British India,’ vol. iii. 
p. 265. 
IV. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 
PLATE XLVI. 
Fig. 1. Larva of Acrwa petrwa (Boisd.), p. 294, 
Figs. 2, 3. Pupa of ditto. 
Figs. 4, 5. Larva of Acrea encedon (Linn.), p. 294. 
Fig, 6. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 7. Larva of Acrea rahira (Boisd.), p. 294. 
Figs, 8, 9. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 10. Larva of Acrea buatoni (Butler), p. 295. 
Figs. 11, 12. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 13. Pupa of Junonia cebrene (Trimen), p. 295. 
Fig. 14. Larva of Junonia clelia (Cramer), p. 296. 
Fig. 15. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 16. Larva of Charaxes candiope (Godart), p. 296. 
Fig. 17. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 18. Larva of Pieris severina (Cramer), p. 297. 
Figs. 19, 20. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 21. Larva of Pieris hellica (Linn.), p. 297. 
Fig. 22. Pupa of ditto. 
Fig. 23. Larva of Papilio policenes (Cramer), Ist stage, p. 298. 
Figs. 24, 25. Ditto, 2nd stage (dorsal and lateral views). 
Fig. 26. Ditto, 3rd stage. 
Figs. 27, 28. Ditto, final stage (dorsal and lateral views). 
Figs. 29, 30. Pupa of ditto (dorsal and lateral views). 
Fig. 31. Head of larva with V-shaped tentacles protruded. 
Fig. 32. Larva of Papilio brasidas (Felder), early moults, p. 298. 
