924 DE. A. G. BUTLER ON BUTTERFLIES [DeC. 4, 



of strong cyauide, which renders almost every other butterfly and 

 moth seaseless in less than thirty seconds. Acrceliue have this 

 peculiar to them, I have always observed." (R. G.) 



Libythjeid.2:. 



43. LlBYTHEA LABDACA. 



Libythea labdaca, Westwood, Glen. Diurn. Lep. p. 413 note, 

 pi. lxviii. fig. 6 (1851). 



Buarka Biver, 5500 feet, Kikuyu, April 25 ; Nairobi plains on 

 outskirts of forest, April 25, 1900. 



" An insect quite new to me, taken sitting on a rock on the banks 

 of the stream." (B. C.) 



Best known as a West-African species and hitherto unrecorded, 

 I believe, from Eastern Africa. 



Lyc^nid^. 



44. Aloeides taikosama. 



Cigaritis taikosama, Wallengren, Kongl. Svenska Vet.-Akad. 

 Handl., Lep. Ehop. Caffr. p. 43 (1857). 



d 1 , 2 , Nairobi plains, April 1 & 14, 1900. 



Of the female, which was first taken, Mr. Crawshay writes : — 

 " I do not recognize this ' Copper ' as an insect known to me. 

 It was taken when I was out shooting, and I fear became very 

 much knocked about during a long day's tramp." Of the male he 

 says : — " Found on the path on its side almost dead after a shower 

 of rain." 



Although well known as a South African insect, these are the 

 first examples of it I have seen from British East Africa. 



45. Chrysophanus abbottii. 



Chrysophanus abbottii, Holland, Entomologist, xxv. suppl. p. 90 

 (1892) ; Broc. U.S. Nat, Mus. xviii. p. 240, pi. 7. fig. 4 (1895). 



6 , 2 , Eoromo, Kikuyu, Nov. 23 and Dec. 16, 1899. 



On the under surface this bright little species scarcely differs at 

 all from highly coloured examples of C. phlieas. 



46. Teriomima aslauga. 



jD'Urbania aslauga, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1873, 

 p. 117,; S. Afr. Butt. P . 220, pi. ix. figs. 9, 9a (1887). 



6 6 , Kiu, 5200 feet, April 11, 1899; Nairobi forest, 5400 feet, 

 March 18 and Aprd 5, 1900. 



Of those taken at Kiu, Mr. Crawshay says : — " Newly emerged 

 these last two days." Of the later captures, which are more 

 heavily marked and therefore more typical, he says : — " Hardly did 

 I expect to find this species at such an altitude. Hitherto I have 

 not seen it this side of Kiu, where on the flowering Mimosa it 

 abounds." 



