14 
The Queensland Naturalist 
Feb., 1942 
13. Scaly Breasted Lorikeet. 45. 
14. Black Cockatoo 46. 
(Yellow-tailed) . 47. 
15. White Cockatoo. 48. 
16. Crimson Rosella. 49. 
17. Pale-headed Rosella. 50. 
18. King Parrot. 51. 
19. Eastern Rosella. 52. 
20. Azure Kingfisher. 53. 
21. Kookaburra. 54. 
22. Fantail Cuckoo. 55. 
23. Lyrebird sp. ? (heard only). 56. 
24. Welcome Swallow. 57. 
25. Grey Fantail. 58. 
26. Wagtail. 59. 
27. Restless Fly-catcher. 60. 
28. Jacky Winter. 61. 
29. Northern Yellow Robin. 62. 
30. Southern Yellow Robin. 63. 
31. Golden Whistler. 64. 
32. Rufous Whistler. 65. 
Mistletoe Bird. 
Black-headed Pardalote. 
Grey-breasted Silvereye. 
Eastern Spinebill. 
Lewin Honeyeater. 
Yellow-faced Honeyeater. 
Bell Miner. 
Noisy Miner. 
Blue-faced Honeyeater. 
Noisy Friar Bird. 
Australian Pipit. 
Double-bar Finch. 
Red-browed Finch. 
Olive-backed Oriole. 
Green Cat-bird. 
Satin Bower Bird. 
Australian Crow. 
Pied Currawong. 
Pied Butcher Bird. 
Grey Butcher Bird. 
Black-backed Magpie. 
NOTES ON THE LIFE-HISTORIES OF SOME 
LYCAENID BUTTERFLIES— PART I. 
By Miss M. Smales and Dr. C. P. Led ward, 
Burleigh Heads. 
These notes are offered in the belief that some of the 
observations are new or hitherto unpublished. We are 
indebted to Mr. C. T. White and Mr. W. D. Francis for 
identifying a number of food-plants, to the late Mr. W. 
F. Blakely of the National Herbarium, Sydney, for 
identifying the mistletoes, and to Mr. J. Clark of the 
National Museum, Melbourne, for identifying the ants. 
Observations have been confined to the South Coast, from 
Southport to the Tweed. 
Pseudodipsas cephenes Hewitson. 
So far we have located larvae on a single tree only, a 
rain-forest tree about 20 feet high, identified as Maba 
fasciculosa. This tree is the home of large numbers of 
a dull black ant, Iridomyrmex gilberti , which is nesting 
in holes in the trunk. This ant, which is in constant 
attendance on the larvae, is larger than Crematogaster 
laeviceps 9 the ant found with the larvae of Pseudodipsas 
