47) THE CRUISE OF TEE ' OURAQOA.' 



Family Papilionid;!!, Doiibleday. Sub-Fa-mily Piee,in;e, Bates. 



Genus Cali.ideyas, Boisduval. 



PLATE XLIX. Figs. 1, 2. 

 CALLIDEYAS LAGTEA, Butler. 



Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. s. 4, vol. v., p. 361 (1870). 



^ , ? ^^'ings above white, the apex tinted with brown ; males 

 with a very minute brown discocelhilar point, females with a 

 larger one ; body above grey, head somewhat greenish. 



Wings below pale ochraceous, hatched with ochreous ; a minute 

 brownish discocellular ring-spot ; front wings with the internal 

 area whitish ; body below whitish, antennae ochraceous ; expanse 

 of wings 2 inches 7 lines. 



Three examples (2^, 1$). South Sea Islands. Colls. Brit. 

 Museum and Maidstone. 



This species also occurs in various parts of Australia ; in India 

 it is replaced by C. Gnoma, Fabricius, but I have seen nothing 

 like it from the Malayan Archipelago ; a very similar form also 

 occurs in Africa (C. Pyrene, Swainson). 



Genus Terias, Swainson. 

 PLATE XLIX. Fig. 3. 



TEBIAS INGANA, Wallace. 

 Trans. Ent. Soc. s. 3, vol. iv., p. 322, n. 10 (1867). 



$ Wings above sulphur-yellow ; front wings with a minute 

 black discocellular point ; outer margin to first median branch 

 broadly brown ; suddenly narrowed and bisinuate from third 

 median ; hind wings with abdominal margin whitish ; nervures 



