12 MR. C. T. A. PEEL AND OTHERS OX [Jan. 23, 



this submarginal pale area is somewhat more distinct than in 

 the other British Museum specimens, but it does not reach the 

 condition seen in Mr. Peel's examples. The dated specimens in 

 the National Collection were taken at Bundu Maria, Somaliland, 

 in April. Mr. Peel's were all captured at A oho, near Hodayu, 

 Ogaden Country, Central Somaliland, on Aug. 20, 1897. The 

 country consisted of stony hills, with thick bush. Prom the dates 

 it seems probable that the present specimens belong to the wet- 

 season, and the British Museum specimens to the dry-season form 

 of the species. 



Ntmphalinje. 



Junonta cebrexe Trim. 



Six specimens, all males. Three were captured at Hargaisa, 

 April 25-28, 1895 ; the other three in the summer of 1897, two 

 bearing the date June 20, and the locality Arigumeret, Farfanyer 

 District. These latter have the underside generally darker and 

 more speckled than the spring examples; this is less apparent in the 

 third specimen, from Central or East Somaliland, June 5-Oct. 29, 

 1897. 



Juxonia clelia Cram. 



Six specimens : 3^,3$. Hargaisa, April 25-28, 1895. The 

 undersides of these specimens vary, but in all the ocelli are more 

 distinct and the general tint is less uniform than in the ordinary 

 " dry-season " form of the species. 



Junoxia taveta Rogenh. 



One male. Hargaisa, April 25-28, 1895. 



Btblta ilithyia Drurv. 



Pour specimens : 3 <5 , 1 $ . These are of the " intermediate " 

 seasonal form, the female verging towards "wet" 1 . All are dated 

 Hargaisa, April 25-28, 1895. 



Hypolimxas misippus Linn. 



Twenty-eight specimens: 26 <$ , 2 $> . It is very remarkable 

 that of the only two female specimens obtained by Mr. Peel, one 

 should be of the ordinary form, resembling the type of L. c7iry- 

 sijipus, and the other of the var. alcippoidee, differing from the 

 former only in the whitish suffusion on both surfaces of the hind 

 wing. From the facts given above (see under L. chrysippus, p. 10), 

 it would appear that the form Telugii of L. chrysippus occurs in 

 Somaliland to the exclusion of the type, and it might have been 

 expected that the form of H. misippus $ which so closely resembles 

 Mugii, viz. II. ivaria Cram., would have been the form similarly 



1 For a discussion of geographical and seasonal forms in the genus Byblia 

 Hiibn., with especial reference to the relations between the forms occurring in 

 Somaliland and Socotra, see Dixey, Proc. Zoo!. Soc. 1898, pp. 376-379. 



