232 L. de Niceville— Butterflies of the Kanara District. [No. 2, 



Poinciana regia, Bojer (Leguminosae). 



Acacia pennata, Willd. (Leguminosae). 



Albizzia Lebbek, Benth. (Leguminosae). 



Dr. F. Moore in Lep. Ind., vol. ii, p. 252 (1896) records Eulepis 

 atlutmas from South India, while the Hon. W. Rothschild records in 

 Nov. Zool., vol. vi, p. 249 (1899) " a 1 . Eulepis athamas agrarius f. (temp. ?) 

 madeus, Rothschild" from "Karwar, September and October; N. Canara, 

 September." 



70. Charaxes fabius, Fabricius. 

 Wagatea spicata, Dalz. (Leguminosae). 

 Tamarindus indica, Linn. (Le gummosa?). 



71. Charaxes imna, Butler. 



Saccopetahtm tomentosnm, Hook. f. and T. (Anonaceae). 

 Aglaia Roxburghiana, Miq. (Meliaeeae). 



Family LEMONIID^E. 

 Subfamily Libyth.ein^. 



72. Libythea rama, Moore. 

 Geltis tetrandra, Roxb. (TJrticaceae) . 



Lakva. At first sight the larva reminds one rather of the larva of 

 a species of Catopsilia (Pierinm). It is the same thickness from segment 

 4 to segment 10, narrowing to the head and to segment 14; segment 2 

 is about the same breadth as the head at the front margin, but is wider 

 behind, and has the front margin very slightly produced in the dorsal 

 line ; the anal flap is rounded behind, and its dorsal slope is nearly a 

 quarter of a circle, the extremity nearly touching the resting surface ; 

 it has a depressed dorsal oval mark two-thirds the width of the segment 

 reaching from its hinder extremity towards the front margin, which 

 surface or mark is covered with brown streaks and has no hairs on it, as 

 has the rest of the segment; the prolegs are rather long. The head is 

 small, being only about half as broad as the larva is at the centre; it 

 has a dull smooth surface set with minute rather sparse dark bristles ; 

 a rather large clypeus ; it is round in shape, with a shallow broad curved 

 depression on the vertex ; is green in colour with brown markings as 

 seen under a lens, antennas reddish, labium green, eyes black, and some 

 light hairs about the jaws. The surface of the body is dull, each segment 

 has four broad ridges, that is, each segment is divided into four by thin 

 depressed transverse lines, and on these ridges are rows of minute 

 bristle-like black hairs all over, some even on the ventrum. The spiracles 

 are light yellow, black-rimmed, oval, and flush to the surface, of ordinary 



