EEPIDOPTEBA INDICA. 
-♦- 
Sub-family PAPILIONINlffi ( continued ). 
Genus ZETIDES. 
Zetides, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 85 (1816). Moore, Lep. of Ceylon, i. p. 144 (1881). Ivirby, 
Allen’s Eat. Hist. Butt. ii. p. 277 (1896). 
Papilio (part), Doubleclay and Hewitson. 
Pathysa (part), Eeakirt, Proc. Ent. Soc. Philad. iii. p. 503 (1864). 
Papilio (sect. 27, suhsect. c, d, e), Felder, Verh. Z. B. Ges. Wien. pp. 305, 350 (1864). 
Papilio (group 36, pt. et 37), Rothschild, Nov. Zool. ii. pp. 429, 446 (1895). 
Imago. —Male. Forewing elongatedly triangular ; costa arched, exterior margin 
concave in the middle, slightly sinuous; cell long and broad; first subcostal branch 
at one-sixth before end of the cell and anastomosed to the costal, second branch at 
one-third between the first and end of cell ; discocellulars slightly oblique, upper 
longest. Hindwing triangular, broad, short, and slightly produced hindward ; 
exterior margin scalloped (and in some with a short blunt or slightly spatular tail) ; 
abdominal margin folded over; when open displaying a longitudinal dense woolly 
scent organ. Body woolly ; antennae comparatively short, club short and spatular. 
Sexes alike. 
Laeva. —Smooth; anterior segments from the head to the fifth increasing in 
size, and then gradually tapering to the end ; a pair of short pointed spines on 
the second and anal segment, and a pair of short nodular spines on the fourth 
segment. 
Pupa. —Broad anteriorly; thorax with a dorsal forward-projecting frontal 
process. 
Type. —Z. Eurypylus. 
ZETIDES JASON (Plate 467, fig. 1, larva wad pupa ; la, b, $, lc £). 
Papilio Jason , Linnaeus, Syst. Nat. ed. x. p. 485 (1758) ; id. ed. xii. p. 752 (1767); id. Mus. Lud. 
Ulr. p. 210 (1764). Esper, Ausl. Schmett. pi. 58, fig. 5, (1796). de Niceville, Journ. As. 
Soc. Bengal, 1899, p. 224. 
vol. vi. January 23rd, 1903. 
B 
