1895.] L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin— Butterflies of Sumatra. 507 
Males of H. lea are common in the forests of both the plains and 
mountains, and we have specimens taken at Selesseh and Bekantschan 
from February to October, but none from the remaining months. The 
female is decidedly rare. 
566. *Huphina judith, Fabricius. 
Hagen. H. judith is confined, as far as I am aware, to Java, where 
it replaces H. Zea, Doubleday, of Borneo, Banca, Sumatra, the Malay 
Peninsula, and Burma. The occurrence of H, judith in Sumatra, is, I 
think, more than doubtful. 
Subfamily Papilioninj:. 
567. Troides ( Trogonoptera ) brookiana, Wallace. 
Grose Smith as hrookeana [sic]. Snellen as hrookeana [sic], 
Hagen as hrookeana [sic]. Wallace as hrookeana [sic]. Rothschild 
as hrookianus [sic]. Distant as hrookeana [sic]. Staudinger. Kirby. 
Occurs throughout the year in the plains and outer hills, not much 
higher than Bekantschan, at Selesseh, and even near Bindjei, in Padang 
Bedagei and Asahan down the coast; abundant at Quala Loemoerak 
near Bohorok, where the males are fond of frequenting a hot sulphur 
spring. The female is very rare, Dr. Martin obtained only three. 
568. Troides ( Pompeoptera ) honrathiana, Martin. 
Ornithoptera honrathiana, Martin, Berl. Ent. Zeitsoh., vol. xxxvii, p. 492 (1892) j 
idem, id., Nat. Tijd. voor Neder.-Indie, vol. liii, p. 332, n. 1 (1893). 
Martin. Hagen. Rothschild as T. vandepolli honrathianus. This 
is a local race of “ Papilio ” van de polli, Snellen, Tijd. voor Ent., vol. 
xxxiii, p. 22 (1890), from Java, differing therefrom in the abdomen 
in both sexes being very hairy and entirely black instead of more or less 
yellow beneath. It is found only on the Central Plateau, and never 
below 3-4,000 feet, and is not so rare as T. cunifer , Obertliiir. The egg 
is salmon-coloured. The types were taken in December, but it probably 
flies all the year round. 
569. Troides ( Pompeoptera ) Helena, Linnaeus. 
Cramer as minos. Snellen. Grose Smith as minos. Kirby as 
minos. Hagen as heplisestus. Wallace as pompeus. T. pompeus, Cramer, 
by which name this species is generally known, was originally described 
from a female from Batavia in Java. T. minos , Cramer, was originally des¬ 
cribed from a female said to have come from the West Coast of Sumatra, 
but is really confined to S. India. T. helena is common throughout the 
J. ii 64 
