§2 [September, 
JUNONIA KowaRa, 0. s. 
¢ Fore-wing falcate, hind-wing prolonged at the anal angle. 
Upper-side : base brown, both wings crossed vertically with a band of lighter brown, 
narrow at the fore-margin of upper wing, broadest at the inner margin of lower 
wing; this band is bordered on the inner side with rosy-purple, and contains 
eleven small spots, the uppermost white, the others black; outer margin of 
both wings dark brown. 
Under-side: light brown, crossed midway from the anal angle of lower wing to 
centre of upper wing with a narrow band of darker brown, the base of upper 
wing with waved markings of darker brown. 
® resembles ¢, but a lighter brown. Expanse g 24 inches; § 23 inches. 
Habitat : Old Calabar, Camaroons. 
EvRYPHENE CoMts, n. s. 
3 Upper-side: brown, fore-wing crossed obliquely with an orange band ; near the 
apex a white spot; the apical half and extremity of cell a darker brown. 
Under-side : light brown, both wings banded across with purplish-grey; apex of 
fore-wing tipped with white. Expanse 23 inches. 
Habitat : Camaroons. 
EURYPHENE NIVARIA, n. s. 
& Upper-side: brown, fore-wing with an oblique patch of yellow near the apex ; 
darkest towards the outer margin. 
Under-side: light brown, with a broad curved band of grey crossing both wings, 
lightest at the apex of fore-wing. 
? resembles ¢, but considerably larger. Expanse fg 24 inches; 9 34 inches. 
Habitat : Camaroons. 
The upper-side of the male resembles Huryphene Phantasia, Hewit- 
son, but the female, and the under-side of both sexes, are quite distinct. 
(To be concluded in our neat.) 
Addition of a genus and species to the list of British Xylophagous Coleoptera.— 
Among some beetles recently taken near Scarborough by that assiduous and suc- 
cessful Coleopterist, Mr. R. Lawson, and sent to me for determination, is a specimen 
of Polygraphus pubescens, Fab. (found under fir-bark). The genus to which it belongs 
is readily separable from the other Hylesinides by each of its eyes being almost en- 
tirely divided into two parts, through an encroachment of the lateral piece from 
which the antenna springs (not of the forehead,as Redtenbacher states) ; by the third 
joint of its tarsi not being wider than the preceding ; and by the club of its antenne 
not being articulated. The club, moreover, is very large, flattened, ovate, and con- 
siderably longer than the fowr-jointed funiculus. The anterior coxe are very close 
to each other, and the intermediate pair widely separated. 
