1896.] FnOM NYASA-LAITD. 823 



to take : it flies high and fast, and thus is the only specimen I 

 have ever had a chance of taking." I now have no doubt that one 

 of the males recorded in my paper in the 'Annals and Magazine 

 of Natural History,' 1896, xviii. p. 68, as " C ethalion (Eastern 

 type)," and taken on the Upper Leya, on the same day as the 

 male above noted, belongs to this species ; but when identifying it 

 I had no female for comparison. 



14. Charaxes lboninus. 



Chnraxes leoninus, Butler, P. Z. S. 1895, p. 253, pi. xv. fig. 2. 

 c?. Lower Nyika, June 14th, 1895. 



15. Charaxes zoouna. 



Niimplmlis zoolina, Wcstwood & Ilewitsou, Gen. Diurn. Lep. 

 pL liii. fig. 1 (1850). 



cT , Mpiinbi, Upper Shiri Eiver, March 24th, 1896. 



A much -shattered example, but the first we have received from 

 Nyasa-land. 



16. Panopea iieliogbnes. (Plate XLI. fig. 2.) 



Panopea heliogenes, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 6, 

 vol. xviii. p. 69 (1896). 



? , Mitanji, W. of Deep Bay, May 19th, 1895. 



17. Htpolimnas misippus. 



Papilio misippus, Linnaeus, Mus. Lud. Ulr. p. 264 (1764). 

 d' cf , ? , Deep Bay, Feb. 5th, 6th, 8th, ] 1th, 27th, and 29th, 

 1896. 



18. JUNONIA PELASGIS. 



Vanessa pelasgis, Grodart, Enc. Meth. ix., Suppl. p. 820 (1823). 

 ? , Kasungu Mountain, 7425 feet alt., Nyika, March 2nd, 1896, 

 " Emerald-green ova " (R. C). 



19. JUNONIA AKCHESIA. 



Papilio arcJiesia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iii. pi. ccxix. figs. D, E 

 (1782). 



Henga, "W. of Lake Nyasa, June 26th, 1895. 



20. JUNONIA OALESOENS. 



Junonia calescens, Butler, P. Z. S. 1893, p. 652. 

 Mtambwi Hill, January 6th ; Deep Bay, Feb. 5th, 6th, 11th, 

 15th, and 21st, 1896. 



21. Junonia cuama. 



Junonia cuama, Ilewitson, Exot. Butt, iii., Jun. pi. 1. figs. 2, 3 

 (18G4). 



Mtambwi Hill, July 1st, 1895. 



Said to be the extreme dry-season form of /. simia, but we have 

 it from Zomba taken in the wet season. 



