1897.] L. de Niceville — List of the Butterflies of Bali, SfC. 



"05 



Mr. Fruhstorfer refers to D. wallacei, Rothschild, from Bali. The 

 species was originally described from Celebes, and Mr. Fruhstorfer 

 probably meant that island when referring to it. Dr. A. G. Butler in 

 his revision of the genus, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., sixth series, vol. 

 xx, p. 153, n. 35 (1897), sinks D. wallacei under D. peribsea. 



Von Mitis records D. egialea, Cramer, from Bali and Lombok with 

 a query. We have seen no specimen of this species from either island, 

 and doubt its occurrence there. 



253. Catopsilia crocale, Cramer. 



Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty). Neither 

 Doherty nor Fruhstorfer obtained the species in Bali, though it certainly 

 must occur there. We consider G. crocale and C. catilla, Cramer, 

 which are usually kept distinct, to represent one and the same species. 

 Wallace records it from Lombok as Callidryas hilaria, Cramer, which 

 is another synonym. Mynheer M. C. Piepers in his latest paper on 

 the Migrations of Butterflies (Nat. Tijd. voor Ned.-Indie, vol. 1, pp. 

 198-253 ( 1897) says on page 219 that " Papilio " pomona, Fabricius, is 

 the oldest name for this butterfly. Both P. pomona and P. crocale were 

 described in 1775, but as Cramer alone figured it, we prefer to use his 

 name. 



254. Catopsilia scylla, Linna3us. 



Bali (Doherty and Fruhstorfer), Lombok (Fruhstorfer and Wallace), 

 Sambawa and Sumba (Doherty). Mr. Doherty credits this species to 

 Boisduval. 



255. Catopsilia pyranthe, LinnaDus. 



Bali (Doherty and Fruhstorfer), Lombok {Fruhstorfer), Sambawa 

 {Doherty). Dr. Pagenstecher records this species in his second paper as 

 G. chryseis, Drury, which is a synonym we believe of C. pyranthe. Hither- 

 to it has not been recorded from Sumba, though it almost certainly 

 occurs in that island. 



256. Terias hecabe, Linnasus. 



Bali {Doherty), Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty). 

 In Dr. A. G. Butler's recent revision of the genus Terias from the 

 Old World (Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., seventh series, vol. i, pp. 56- 

 82 (1898), no species is given from the islands treated on in this paper. 

 Our numerous specimens of the T. hecabe group from Lombok agree so 

 exactly with examples taken by de Niceville in Hongkong of the wet- 

 season form that no words can convey any impression as to the slight 



