PAPILIONIN^. 
22 1 
' rated from the inner row of white spots by the diffused black edging 
' of white patch ; ochre-yellow of border darker and rather broadly and 
j regularly edged with black throughout. 
$ Like $ ; hind-wing with ochre-yellow anal-angular spot better 
j developed. Under side. — Hind-tving : white inner-marginal border 
I not black-edged, but with a blackish longitudinal streak running near 
I its inner edge about as far as end of abdomen. 
Head with frontal white spots smaller. Ahdomcn above more 
j decidedly black down the middle, with the white on each side more 
sharply separated, and so widened in apical half that the oclirc-yelloio 
lateral land docs not extend heyond fourth segment ; beneath with the 
black middle and lateral streaks and segmental incision streaks more 
I strongly marked. 
'I In addition to the various differences above pointed out, Morania 
presents shorter and more rounded wings, and much slighter dentation 
j of the hind-wings. 
I Larva. — Dull-green with a yellowish tinge ; two parallel darker 
transverse lines across back of each segment ; incisions of segments 
pale bluish-grey. First thoracic segment and lateral stripe bright- 
yellow, the latter deepening to orange on last segment, and edged infe- 
i riorly throughout by dark-green. Lower portion of sides pale bluish- 
green, with a bluish-white stripe immediately above legs. Head pale- 
green. Each thoracic segment with a pair of short, pointed, laterally 
\ projecting spines, of which the first pair is shortest and mainly black, 
but sandy-yellow at base, — the second ferruginous basally, but thence 
black, — and the third whitish tinged with blue; between the bases 
of the second and third pairs a transverse ferruginous-brown streak 
j (incomplete on second thoracic segment). Anal segment bearing dor- 
: sally a pair of terminal, short, acute, yellow spines. 
A small example in an earlier moult is very different, having 
three dorsal longitudinal blackish lines, of which the middle one is 
thinnest, the transverse darker dorsal lines more developed, and a 
blackish transverse bar on the penultimate segment. The lower sides 
and the under side are fuscous, the head is sandy-yellow, the thoracic 
spines are proportionally larger, and the transverse bars between the 
second and third pairs broader and much darker. 
Food-plant, Artabotrys, n. sp., one of the Anonacem, native of 
D'Urban, Natal, and Delagoa Bay. (Determined for Colonel Bowker, 
on reference to Kew, by Mr. J. Medley Wood, Curator of the Botanic 
Gardens, D'Urban.) 
Pupa. — Stout, rounded, but tapering posteriorly to rather a long 
point ; not depressed or widened dorsally, as in Brasidas. ISTot nearly 
so blunt and rounded anteriorly as in Brasidas, the cephalic promi- 
nences, though short, being acute and widely divergent. Dorso-thoracic 
peak not so long as in Brasidas, and more ascendant, so as not to pro- 
ject so far in front of the head. About one inch in length. Bright- 
