670 L. de Niceville — List of the Butterflies of Bali, fyc. [No. 4, 



is hardly any trace of an Australian element, the butterflies being 

 almost entirely of Indo-Malayan types. The most conspicuous butter- 

 flies of an A us tro- Malayan type are Melanitis constantia, Cramer, from 

 Sambawa and Sumba, Acrcea andromacha, Fabricius, from Sumba, Junonia 

 villida, Fabricius, from Sumba, Gharaxesjovis, Staudinger, from Sambawa 

 and Sumba, Charaxes ocellatus, Fruhstorfer, from Lombok, Huphina 

 temena, Hewitson, from Lombok, Sambawa, and Snmba, and Papilio 

 canopus, Westwood, var. umbrosus, Rothschild, from Sambawa, and var. 

 sumbanus, Rothschild, from Sumba. 



The only papers relating to Sumba and Sambawa are : — 



1. " The Butterflies of Sumba and Sambawa, with some account of 

 the Island of Sumba," by William Doherty, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lx, pt. 2, 

 pp. 141-197, pi. ii (1891). 



2. " Uber einige Schmetterlinge von der Insel Sumba," by Dr. 

 Arnold Pagenstecher, Jahr. des Nass. Vereins fur Natur., vol. xlvii, pp. 

 52-58 (1894). 



3. " Tiber die Lepidopteren von Sumba und Sambawa," by Dr. 

 Arnold Pagenstecher, Jahr. des Nass. Vereins fur Natur., vol. xlix, pp. 

 95-170, pis. i, ii, and iii (1896). 



Mr. H. Fruhstorfer has recently published a paper on the butterflies 

 of Lombok in the Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., vol. xlii, pp. 1-14 (1897), entitled 

 " Aufzahlung der von mir auf der Insel Lombok im Jahre 1896 gefan- 

 genen Rhopaloceren ; " another on the butterflies^ of Bali in Stet. Ent. 

 Zeitung, vol. lviii, p. (1897), entitled " Liste von Rhopaloceren der 



Insel Bali ; " and lastly " Rhopalocera Lombokiana," in Berl. Ent. 

 Zeitsch., vol. xlii, p. 119 (1897). 



Family JSTrMPHALID^S. 



Subfamily Dana ike. 



This subfamily has been arranged in the order given by Mr. F. 

 Moore in " A Monograph of the Limnaina and Buploeina " in the Proceed- 

 ings of the Zoological Society of London for 1883, pp. 201-324. It is 

 a little remarkable that no species of Nectaria, Hestia, Gamana, and 

 Ideopsis appear to occur in the islands dealt with here. 



1. Danais (Radena) vulgaris, Butler. 



Sambawa (Doherty). Mr. Doherty says that a Badena occurring in 

 Sambawa " Appears to be a representative of B. vulgaris, and is common 

 everywhere. I have now no specimens, and am unable to compare ifc 

 with its allies." On a subsequent visit to the island, Doherty obtained 

 it again, and there are two pairs in Elwes' collection, who notes that 



