834 DR. A. G. BUTLEIl ON LEPIUOPTBIIA [NoV. 17, 



tain, 6500 feet June 27fcb, 7400 feet June 30th ; Kondowi, Lower 

 Nyika, Nov. 30th, 1895 ; Kasungu Mountain, 5945 feet Feb. 29th, 

 7425 feet March 2nd, 7200 feet March 5th, 1896. 

 Most of the specimens are of the ordinary European type. 



fi7. Tehtas leonis. 



Terias leonis, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 5, vol. xvii. 

 p. 222, pi. V. fig. 6(1886). 



d, Kondowi, 4000 feet alt., Nyika, Feb. 21st, 1896. 

 Tliis is the first example I have seen from Central Africa. 



88. TeMAS UEGULAlllS. 



Terias rer/ularis, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat, Hist. ser. 4, vol. xviii. 

 p. 48(5(1876). 



d ■ Kasungu Mountain, 7425 feet alt,, Nyika, March 3rd, 1896 



89. TBRACOtTTS MUTANS. 



2 • Teracolus miitans, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 4, 

 vol. xix. p. 459 (1877); cJ. P. 2. S. 1896, p. 126. 



d ? , Mpimbi, Upper Shiri Eiver, March 24th and 25th, 1896. 



Dry-season form. 



Differs in the great enlargement of the discal series of spots on 

 the secondaries, these being salmon-buff tinted in the male, and 

 sulphur-j'ellow in the female; the primaries in the latter sex are 

 also coloured more nearly as in the male, but the salmon-bufF area 

 is waslied with yellow ; on the under surface the whole colouring 

 of the male and the bands upon the yellow area of the female are 

 deeper and redder. 



(5, Mwankanka, Loangwa Eiver, Senga, Sept. 7th, 1895; 

 5 , Loangwa Valley forest, Senga, August 30th, 1895. 



The feiuale contained "pale orange ova" {It. C). 



When describing the male of T. mulans 1 compared it with T. 

 vesta (meaning the southern species usually so-called) ; but T. vesta 

 is an Abyssinian species, identical with T. velleda of M. Lucas, and 

 differs from the South-African butterfly in the much brighter 

 colouring, « ith somewhat differently formed and much redder bands 

 on the under surface of the secondaries : the southern species is 

 only the wet-season form of ?'. argillaceus, and is T. vesta of Trimen 

 {nee Lucas) ; the latter, on the under surface, is much nearer to 

 T. aurigineus, whereas T. argillaceus is certainly the southern 

 representative of T. mutatis. 



90. Tebacolus aueigineus, var. venusttjs. 

 Teracolus venustus, Butler, P. Z. S. 1888, p. 94. 



d d, 2 2, Mbalizi Valley, 4375 feet alt., Unyika, August 25th : 

 d , Mwewe's town, Nyika, August 26th ; $ , Kaun Guzi, 

 4620 feet, Unyika, August 27th ; d , Cliuona Eiver (Mwewe's 

 town), Sept. 15th, 1895. 



At the last-mentioned locality Mr. Crawshay speaks of this 

 butterfly as being plentiful ; yet he seems only to have captured 



