8 DR. W. J. HOLLAND ON THE AFRICAN (Jan. 14, 
S. bowvieri, Mab., and S. pertusa, Mab., but upon the underside 
reveals great differences. 
Hab. Togoland (Karsch). 
14. S. pertusa, Mab. 
Sape periusa, Mab. C. R. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1891, p. Ixviii. 
Hab. Transvaal. } 
The type would seem to indicate that this is only a slight variety 
of motozi, Wallgr. 
15. 8. Bouvipri, Mab. 
Pterygospidea bowieri, Mab. Bull. Soc. Zool. France, 1877, 
p. 239. 
Sarangesa motozioides, 6, Holl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6) 
vol. x. p. 288 (1892); Ent. News, Jan. 1894, pl. i. fig. 4, ¢. 
For the determination of this species I am indebted to Dr. 
Staudinger, who has loaned me a male and female determined for 
him by the author of the species. By the description originally 
given by Mons. Mabille, I should not have been able to reach a 
positive conclusion, as the description seems to be somewhat 
inadequate. 
16. S. rHEcta, Ploetz. (Plate V. fig. 14.) 
Antigonus thecla, Ploetz, 8. E. Z. vol. xl. p. 361 (1879). 
Sape semialba, Mab. C. R. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1891, p. Ixvii; 
Karsch, Berl. Ent. Zeit. vol. xxxviii. p. 262. 
By comparison of the type of Mons. Mabille with a figure of 
the type of Ploetz, which is reproduced in the plates accompany- 
ing this article, I am able to positively affirm the identity of the 
two. 
Hab. Aburi (Ploetz); W. Africa (Mabille); Cameroons (Good) ; 
Togoland (Karsch). 
17. S. THECLIDES, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig. 3.) 
¢. Antenne black, slightly ighter on the underside, the upper- 
side of the palpi, thorax, and abdomen is fuscous. The lower side 
of the palpi is yellowish. The lower side of the thorax and abdo- 
men is pure white. The legs are white, narrowly edged with 
blackish upon the anterior margins. The ground-colour of the 
upperside of the primaries and secondaries is fuscous ochraceous. 
The primaries are heavily bordered with black on the outer margin, 
and there is a large irregularly quadrate spot of the same colour 
on the costa near the end of the cell, limited anteriorly by four 
minute white translucent subapical spots and posteriorly by three 
like spots, two of them in the cell near its end and one of them 
above near the costa. The primaries are further ornamented by a 
series of small white translucent spots, bordered inwardly by 
blackish. These spots are arranged in a straight transverse series, 
