824 DR. A. G. BUTLER ON LEPIDOPTERA [Nov. 17, 
22, JUNONIA TRIMENI. 
Junonia trimenit, Butler, P. Z. 8. 1893, p. 651, pl. Ix. fig. 4. 
3, 2, Kondowi, 4000 feet alt., Nyika, Feb. 21st, 1896. 
Said to be the form occurring between the wet and dry seasons ; 
but, from what Mr. Crawshay says of Nyika, there ought to be no 
dry-season forms there. At Zomba it occurs (in company with 
J. sumia) in July and (in company with both J. simia and 
J. cwama) in December: indeed, if we had a larger series of each 
of these species, I believe it would be possible to prove that they 
always fly simultaneously. The female of J. trimeni noted above 
has dry-season characters on the under surface.’ 
23. JUNONIA SIMIA. 
Precis simia, Wallengren, Kongl. Svenska Vetensk.-Akad. 
Handl. 1857, p. 26. 
Deep Bay, Feb. 13th and 23rd, 1896. 
24, JUNONIA TUGELA. 
Precis tugela, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1879, p 334; 
South Afr. Butt. vol. i. p. 241, pl. iv. fig. 5 (1887). 
3, Mtambwi Hill, Deep Bay, July Ist, 1895. 
This makes the second dated example which we have received, 
the first dated specimen having been obtained in September: on 
the other hand, J. aurorina (which might well be the wet-season 
form of J. tugela) appears, from our dated specimens, to fly from 
December to April. In South Africa Mr. Trimen records 
specimens of J. tugela as taken in March and May; whether the 
dry season commences so early as March on the Tugela River I do 
not know. 
25. JUNONIA CLELIA. 
Papilio clelia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. i. pl. xxi. E, F (1779). 
Deep Bay, February Ist, 1296. 
26. JUNONIA BOOPIS. 
Junonia bodpis, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1879, p. 331. 
2, Luvira River, Nyasa to Tanganyika Road, August 23rd, 1895. 
27. JUNONIA CEBRENE. 
Junonia cebrene, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1870, p. 353. 
Deep Bay, Feb. 5th, 8th, and 15th, 1896. 
28. JUNONIA NATALICA. 
Precis natalica, Felder, Wien. ent. Monatschr. iv. p. 106 (1860). 
2, Deep Bay, March 10th, 1896. 
“ Bright green ova” (Zt. C.). 
* Why a pair taken on the same day should differ in the features supposed 
to characterize the two seasons, and in a country where it is never really dry, 
is a riddle which I do not pretend to solve.—A. G. B. 
