1896.] BUTTERFLIES OF THB FAMILY HISPBEIID^E. ,7 



9. 8. MAJOBELLA, Mab. 



Hyda majorella, Mab. C. E. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1891, p. cvii; 

 Novit. Lepidopt. p. 92, pi. xiii. &g. 1 (1893). 



Uretis viotozi, Wallgr. (?), Karsch, Berl. Ent. Zeit. vol. xxxviii. 

 p. 264, pi. vi. %. 11 (1893). 



Hah. Sierra Leone (Mabille) ; Togoland {Karsch). 



**» Safe, Mab. 



10. S. luoidblla, Mab. (Plate II. fig. 22.) 



Bape lucidella, Mab. C. E. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1891, pi. Ixvii. 



The type specimen in the collection of Dr. Staudinger is some- 

 what worn, but shows that the insect is abundantly distinct from 

 the other species herein enumerated. This is brought out clearly 

 in the figure given. 



11. S. MOTOzi, Wallgr. 



$ . Pterygospidea motozi, Wallgr. K. Sv. Vet.-Akad. Handl. 

 1857; Lep. Ehop. Caffr. p. 53 ; ?, Trim. Ebop. Afr. Austr. 

 vol. ii. p. 313, no. 206, pi. vi. fig. 3 ; c? and ? , Trim. S. Afr. 

 Butt. vol. iii. p. 356 (1889). 



2 ■ Nisoniades pato. Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (3) vol. i. 

 p. 404 (1862). 



Hah. South Africa. 



12. 8. MOTOZIOIDES, Holl. 



Sarangesa motozioides, Holl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6) vol. x. 

 p. 288 (1892) ; Ent. News, Jan. 1894, pi. i. fig. 5, ? ; Butl. (?), 

 P. Z. S. 1893, p. 668. 



Bab. TranBYBtal {in Staudinger' s collection) : Gaboon ( (rood). 



The male described by me in the ' Annals and Magazine of 

 Natural History,' and subsequently figured in the ' Entomological 

 News,' turns out to be the male of the species described by Mabille 

 as Pterygospidea bouvieri, if thorough reliance may be placed upon 

 the identification made in the collection of Dr. Staudinger by 

 Mons. Mabille, the author of the species. So far I have not been 

 able to find in any collection a true male of S. motozioides, Holl. 

 The female may be separated at a glance from the female of 

 S. motozi by the absence of the conspicuous translucent spot in 

 the cell of the secondaries, which is characteristic of motozi, 

 Wallgr., and by the fact that the translucent spots in the primaries 

 are much smaller than in typical motozi. 



13. 8. siNESTALMBNUS, Karscb. 



Antigonus synestalmenus, Karsch, Berl. Ent. Zeit. vol. xxxviii. 

 p. 263,pl.vi. fig. 8(1893). 



This species is very closely allied upon the upper surface to 



