KYMPHALIN^. 
281 
II. Other African Kegions. 
A. South Tropical. 
a. Western Coast. — Damaraland (C. J. Andersson and J. A. Bell). 
"Angola (/. /. Monteiro)'' — Druce. "Congo: Kinsembo 
(//. vlwse/Z)."— Butler. " Chinchoxo {Falkendeiny—J)Qv^\iz. 
aa. St. Helena (il/m Shortis). "Ascension (Betvicke).'' — Mrs. Wol- 
laston. 
b. Eastern Coast. — Zambesi {Rev. H. Roivley). "Tette." — Hopffer. 
hi. Interior. — Bamangwato District {H. Barber). Tauwani and 
Tati Eivers {F. C. Selous). " Zambesi : Victoria Falls (F. 
Oates.y — West wood. 
bb. Mauritius. — " Madagascar and Bourbon." — Boisduval. " Rodri- 
guez (6r. Gulliver).'^ — Butler. 
B. North Tropical. 
a. Western Coast. — " Gaboon {Theorin).^'' — Aurivillius. Ashanti. — 
Coll. Brit. Mus. Sierra Leone {J. M. Fask). 
b. Eastern Coast. — " Somauliland." — Felder. "Abyssinia (Baf- 
fray) ; and Slioa {Antinori)." — Oberthiir. " Abyssinia : 
Atbara."— A. G. Butler. 
lY. Asia. 
A. Southern Kegion. — India (North India : Cauara. — Coll. E. Ind. 
Mus.) Madras : Bangalore {R. G. Sout/iey). Ceylon (F. L. Layard). 
" China."— Boisduval. " Formosa."— Wallace. 
B. Malayan Archipelago. — Java : Borneo. — E. Ind. Mus. " Lombock, 
Timor, Celebes." — Wallace. 
VI. America. — " Guiana." — Boisduval. Surinam." — Cramer and Drury. 
" Cayenne."— Godart. " Para {Berliri il/^^6\)."— Hopffer. " St. Chris- 
topher's." — Drury. Antigua. — Hewitson Coll. 
Genus EURALIA. 
Euralia ("Sect. B. Sub-Sect, a," of Diadema), Westw., Gen. Diurn. Lep., 
ii. p. 281 (1850). 
Diadema (part), Trim., Rhop. Afr. Aust., i. p. 150 (1862). 
Imago. — Intimately allied to Diadema, Head narrower ; antenna 
considerably longer, with the club gradually-formed and elongate. 
Hind-wings : with discoidal cell open, — the lower disco-cellular nervule 
entirely wanting. 
Larva. — As in Diadema^ but apparently thicker. 
(In Mr. W. D. Gooch's series of drawings and notes there are two 
pencil outlines and written details of a larva stated to have resulted in 
" Euralia mima or E. dubia." The attenuation of the two segments 
next the head is represented as more abrupt from the general thickness 
of the body than is usual in Diadema, The colouring is noted as vel- 
vety-black, with the spines springing from narrow white rings.) 
It is with very great hesitation that I have allowed Euralia generic 
rank, as I can discover in the perfect insect no constant structural 
distinctions from Diadema except those above noted. The section or 
sub- section was defined by Westwood for the two West- African species 
D, dubia (fal. de Beauv.) and D. Anthcdon^ Doubl. ; and the seven 
