1896. ] BUTTERFLIES OF THE FAMILY HESPERIID.¥, 63 
214, P. pourrmrt, Boisd. 
Hesperia poutieri, Boisd. Faune Ent. Madgr. p. 65 (1833). 
Pamphila poutieri, Mab. Grandid. Madagascar, vol. xviii. p. 363. 
Gegenes poutieri, Mab. l.c. pl. lv. figs. 8, 8 a, 9, 9 a (1887). 
Hab. Madagascar ; Seychelles (Abbott). 
215. P. pprncta, Trim. 
Pamphila detecta, Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. vol. xli. p. 141, 
pl. viii. fig. 12 (1893). 
Pamphaila fallatus, Mab. MS. 
Hab. Natal (Trimen) ; Cameroons. 
I have several specimens of this species which were taken at 
Batanga, Cameroons, by the late Dr. A. C. Good. The insect 
laballed Pamphila fallatus in the Staudinger collection by Mons. 
Mabille, of which I can find no published description, is the 
same. 
216. P. SUBOCHRACEA, sp. nov. (Plate LV. fig. 11.) 
3. Head, thorax, and abdomen fuscous, clothed with greenish 
hairs. Underside of palpi, thorax, and abdomen pale greenish 
ochraceous. The primaries and secondaries on the upperside are 
dark brown, with a slightly purplish lustre toward the outer 
margin. The costa and the inner margin near the base of both 
wings are clothed with greenish hairs. There is a minute elongated 
translucent white spot in the cell on its upper margin toward its 
extremity. There are two minute subapical spots beyond the end 
of the cell. There are three discal spots on intervals 2, 3, and 4 
below and beyond the cell, the spot on interval 4 being minute, 
the spots on intervals 3 and 2 being subhastate, the latter the 
largest. All these spots are translucent. On the secondaries 
beyond the end of the cell are three small subhastate semi- 
transparent discal spots, pale in colour. On the lower side the 
primaries are dark brown on the cell and beyond it on the disc on 
intervals 2, 3, and 4. The inner margin is fuscous grey. The 
costa and the apical area are tawny ochraceous. The secondaries 
are uniformly tawny ochraceous, marked with a dark spot at the 
end of the cell and a discal series of dark spots accentuating the 
outer extremity of the three limbal spots beyond the end of the 
cell. The cilia are pale ochraceous both on the upper and under 
side. All the spots of the upper surface reappear on the lower 
side in both wings, but less distinctly defined than on the upper 
surface. Expanse 31 mm. 
Hab. Valley of the Ogové. 
217. P. Micans, sp. nov. (Plate III. fig. 19.) 
6. Head, thorax, and abdomen bright Mars-brown. Underside 
of abdomen pale ochraceous. The primaries aud the secondaries 
are bright Mars-brown, with the costal margin of the secondaries 
dark brown. There are two minute subapical spots in the usual 
