1894.] rBOM BEITISH EAST APEICA. 563 



Kinani ; Mtoto wa Ande ; Njempo, shores of Lake Baringo, 

 taken at night. 



Evidently a common though somewhat local species. Mr. Trimen 

 says that he recognized it by the help of a coloured drawing of the 

 type. I have only recently recognized it through Mr. Trimen's 

 plate, a coloured proof of which was submitted to me to pass for 

 printing. In the description by Trimen (South Afr. Butt.) this 

 species is clearly compared with my J. calescens, which I find that 

 Staudinger has superseded in his letterpress, though not on his 

 plate, by calling it Precis octavia, var. natalensis. That it is not a 

 variety (as Staudinger imagined from the fact that he had, 

 apparently, only one example from Natal) is certain ; for it occurs 

 in localities where the alhed Junonia octavia is not found, and 

 which it evidently replaces, as J, simia does in the present 

 collection. Whether the names natnlica and natalensis should both 

 stand may be questioned. 



25. Junonia teeea, var. 



Pa^Ko terea, Drury, 111. Exot. Ent. ii. pi. 18. figs. 3, 4 (1773). 

 (S , Gopo lal Mavari, Laitsipia ; 2 , Alng'aria. 

 A very dark suiiused pair with orange band almost as narrow 

 as in J. elfjiva, which it tends to link to J. terea. 



26. JtTNONIA CUAMA. 



Junonia cuama, Hewitson, Exot. Butt. iii. Jan. pi. 1. figs. 4, 5 

 (1864). 



Kinani, afternoon ; Mtoto wa Ande ; steppes of Thika-Shika. 



27. Junonia cloantha. 



Papilio cloantha, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pi. cccxxxviii. A, B 

 (1782). 



Guaso Laschau, Guaso !Jfyiro. 



28. Junonia sesamus. 



Precis sesamus, Trimen, South Afr. Butt. i. p. 231, pi. iv. fig. 3 

 (1887). 

 Maka. 



29. Junonia boopis, 



Junonia hoopis, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1879, p. 331, 

 Witu ; Njempo. 



30. Junonia clelia, 



Papilio clelia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. i. pi. xxi. E, E (1779). 



Witu ; Ngatana, December and January ; Njempo ; Guaso 

 Laschau ; Thagana woods beside Ukikuya ; steppes between Athi 

 and Thika ; Sabaki Valley at Tanganyika. 



In some of Dr. Gregory's examples the blue patch is unusually 



