ARGYNNIS. 
213 
hind wings is replaced by a bright green as deep as that seen in 
A. Adippc. The arrangement of the silver spots and the silver- 
centred brown ones is, however, exactly the same as in the type ; 
it is therefore impossible to confound it with Afjlaia, to which in 
colour it bears a striking resemblance. PI. LI., 3. 
Habitat.- — Andalusia and Central Spain. 
c. Cleodippe, Staudinger, Cat. p. 21, — Adippe, Hiib. 859-60. — 
A form of the last, occurring in Central Spain, in which the silver 
spots are nearly or altogether absent. 
22. — A. Laodice, Pallas, Pieis. i. 470 (1771); Esp. 93, 1, 102, 4; 
0. i. 1, 95 ; Hup. i., 18, 1, 2 ; Boisd. Ic. 21, 4-6 ; 
Err. 331, 2. 
Cethosia, Hiib. 67, 68 ; Hbst. 263, 1, 2. 
Expands from 2*25 to 2-50 in. Hind margins of fore wings 
slightly concave, especially in the female. Hind margins of hind 
wings rather more dentate than in the preceding species. All the 
wings fulvous in both sexes, brightest in the male, spotted with 
black as in the other species, but the hind-marginal spots are more 
distinctly separated and less crescentic in form. Under side : Fore 
wings fulvous, spotted with black, tinged with yellowish green at 
the apex and along the hind margins. Hind wings with all the 
silver spots absent, except the central row ; the basal portion of the 
wing as far as this is yellow, marked with one or two fine red lines ; 
the silvery spots are small and indistinct in the male, but more 
strongly defined in the female ; immediately external to these is a 
dark brownish purple band, shading off into lighter purplish brown, 
upon which are two parallel rows of dark spots ; the hind margin 
is rather broadly light yellow. PL LI., 4. 
Times op Appearance — June and July. 
Habitat. — Woods in North-Eastern Germany, Central and 
South-Eastern Pmssia to 60°, Poland, Armenia, Siberia, the Amur, 
and Japan. 
Larva. — Unknown. 
