74 MR. R. TRIMEN ON BUTTERFLIES [Jan. 20, 



15. ACR^A BUXTONI, Butl. 



Ao'cea buxtoni, Butl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4) xvi. p. 395 

 (1875). 



Acrcea(TelcMnia) perrupta, Butl. op. cit. (5) xii. p. 102 (1883). 



Omrora (August), Ehanda (September), Omaramba-Oamatako 

 (January). Six male and one female specimens. 



In the males there is much variation in the development and 

 distinctness of the fulvous-ochreous spots in the dark hind-marginal 

 border, ranging from even completeness throughout to obsolescence 

 in tlie fore wings and partial obsolescence in the hind wings. The 

 abbreviated subapical dark marking of the fore wings also varies con- 

 siderably, and in two males and the only female is reduced to an 

 irregularly subcrescentic moderate-sized spot. Of these latter one 

 male and the female evidently represent the yl. perrupta of Butler, 

 founded on specimens from Lake Nyanza. 



Subfamily Nymphalin^. 

 Genus Pyrameis, Uoubl. 



16. Pyrameis cardui (Linn.)- 



Ehanda (September) and Omaramba-Oamatako (January). Two 

 examples. 



Genus Junonia, Doubl. 



17. Junonia cebrene. Trim. 



Junonia cebrene. Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1870, p. 353. 

 Omrora (August), Ehanda (August-September), and Omaramba- 

 Oamatako (January). Four examples ; three males, one female. 



18. Junonia clelia (Cram.). 



Papilio delta, Cram. Pap. Exot. i. t. xxi. fF. E, F (1775). 



Omrora (August), Ehanda (August-September), Omaramba- 

 Oamatako (January). Thirteen examples ; eleven males, two 

 females. 



19. Junonia boopis, Trim. 



Junonia boopis, Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1879, p. 331. 

 Omrora (August) and Ehanda (August-September). Four 

 examples ; one male, three females. 



Genus Precis, Doubl. 



20. Precis cuama (Hewits.). 



Junonia cuama, Hewits. Exot. Butt. iii. p. 25, pi. 13. ff. 4, 5 

 [c?](1864). 



Ehanda (August-September) and Okavango River (December). 

 Five examples ; three males, two females. 



All these specimens, as well as another female from the Zambesi, 

 and two males from Mashuna-land in the South-African Museum, 

 are of a much yellower and less rufous tint than the figure of the 



