I HESPERID^. 309 
I thicker tlian in B., and witli its terminal liook more bent ; 
I palpi normal. — P. Zcno. 
D. Antennae short ; their club as in C. — P. lugens. 
E. Antennse very short ; their club short and thick, with the 
terminal hook exceedingly small, short, and slender, and 
consisting of a single joint. — P. liottentota, 
F. Antennae rather long ; their club rather long and stout, with 
the terminal hook rather long and sharply recurved. — P. 
Moritili and P. Ayrcsii. 
G. Antennae rather short ; their club as in F. — P. Monasi, P. Bor- 
honica, P. Fattcellus, and P. Moliopaani. 
H. Antennae long ; their club as in F. and G. — P, Erinnys, P. 
dysmepliila, and P. Fiara. 
The colouring of most of them is dull; Callicles (with clearly- 
\ defined pale-yellow spots on a brown ground above and black-ringed 
I white spots on a yellow ground beneath), Mo7'antii, and Zeno (witJi 
, warm ochre -yellow macular bands on a brown ground above), and 
I Erinnys (with colouring like the last on the hind-wings above, and a 
; whitish varied bronzy- glossed under- side), being the only species of a 
somewhat gayer aspect. 
The most widely distributed species are Hottentota and Mohopaani, 
- both of which occur near Cape Town occasionally, and are recorded 
j from both Tropical belts. Callicles is known from such remote points as 
I Damaraland and Somaliland, but in South Africa seems to have been 
met with only at Delagoa Bay and Natal. Porhonica inhabits Natal 
and Transvaal as well as Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands. All 
the remaining species belong to the south-eastern side, and six of 
them are known to occur within the Southern Tropic. The four which 
appear to be confined to South Africa are Monasi (limited to Natal), 
and Erinnys, Dysmepliila, and Fiara^ all of which inhabit Kaffraria and 
Natal, and penetrate as far as the eastern districts of the Cape Colony. 
The rarest of the South -African species are Callicles, Morantii, Zeno, 
Lugens, and Ayresii. 
343. (1.) Pamphila Callicles, (Hewitson). 
$ Cydopides Callicles, Hewits., Descr. New Sp. Hesp., ii. p. 42, n. 6 
(1868); and Exot. Butt., v. pi. 59, ff. 10, 11 (1874). 
Fxp. al., Q) I in. i lin. ; (g) I in. 2^ lin. 
$ Glossy-broiun, with straio-yelloio terminal disco- cellular spot and 
irregular series of discal spots in both luings ; cilia very pale yello2uish, in 
fore-wing mixed with broivnish except at posterior angle. Fore-wing : 
basal fourth, and costal and inner-marginal border to beyond middle, 
rather closely irrorated with yellow ; terminal disco-cellular spot elon- 
gate transversely, narrow and constricted superiorly ; discal series of 
