830 DR. A. G, BUTLER ON LEPIDOPTERA [Nov. 17, 
62. ZIZERA GAIKA. 
Lycena gaika, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 3rd ser. vol. i. 
p- 403 (1862), 
3 3, Luvira River, Nyasa to Tanganyika Road, August 23rd, 
1895. 
63. ZizBRA LUCIDA. 
Lycena lucida, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1883, p. 348. 
3, Virauli Hill, Nyasa to Tanganyika Road, August 22nd ; 
2 2, Chuona River (Mwewe’s town), Unyika, Sept. 15th, 1895; 
Deep Bay, Feb. 11th and 24th, 1896. 
64, PLEBEIUS TROCHILUS. 
Lycena trochilus, Freyer, Neuere Beitr. v. pl. 440. fig. 1 (1844). 
Deep Bay, Feb. 6th, 14th, and 24th, 1896. 
65. SCOLITANTIDES STELLATA. 
Lycena stellata, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1883, p. 349. 
Kasungu Mountain, 5400 feet alt., Nyika, March 5th, 1896. 
CYCLYRIUS, gen. noy. 
Nearly allied to Hyrius, but with rounded wings; the second- 
aries without tails; neuration as in Hyreus. Type, Polyommatus 
webbianus. This genus will contain the species P. webbianus 
and H. wquatorialis, hitherto referred to Hyreus, as well as the 
following :— 
66. CYCLYRIUS JUNO, sp. n. (Plate XLI. fig. 5.) 
Allied to C. webbianus, the male above lilac, bluer at base, with 
broad cupreous-brown costal and external borders; fringes white, 
spotted with brown at the extremities of the nervures ; secondaries 
with the abdominal area somewhat greyish ; an oval submarginal 
black ocellus with shining lilac iris on first median interspace, and 
indications of a second smaller similar ocellus near anal angle on 
interno-median interspace. Body above black, clothed with silver 
hair; a silvery-white line on each side of the frons, immediately 
in front of the eyes; collar clothed with golden hair: under surface 
of primaries golden brown, the markings not very distinct, but 
consisting of two pale-edged, quadrate, slightly darker spots cross- 
ing the discoidal cell, and a belt of similar character across the disc, 
its uppermost division with white outer edge and followed by a 
creamy white diffused subapical spot ; fringe creamy white, spotted 
with blackish: secondaries white, speckled with blackish at the 
base and mottled and banded with copper-brown almost exactly in 
the pattern of C. equatorialis; a black oval spot, enclosing a metallic 
green dash, representing the ocellus of the upper surface. Body 
below densely covered with white hair or scales, the legs brownish 
above, white below.—Female above cupreous brown, with fringe 
and ocelli as in male; under surface with brown-centred white 
