LEPIDOPTERA. 
PAPILIO AGRICOLA. 
GENERIC CHARACTER. 
Antennae thickeft towards the extremity, and generally terminated in a club. Wings ereft when at 
reft. Fly by day. 
SPECIFIC CHARACTER. 
Wings black : anterior ones with yellow, and orange fpots : on the pofterior wings a ftreak of blue, and 
another of fanguineous colour. 
Papilio Agricola: alis nigris: anticis flavo aurantioque maculatis; pofticis cyanea fanguineoque 
fafciatis. 
This is perfe&ly a new fpecies, and poflefles no ordinary (hare of gaiety in its contrafted hues to recom¬ 
mend it to particular obfervation. Its appearance beneath is nearly the fame as on the upper furface. 
From New South Wales. 
PAPILIO FRONTINUS. 
SPECIFIC CHARACTER. 
Wings fomewhat dentated, black, and white at the tips: a broad unindentated band of white acrofs the 
middle of the anterior pair. 
* 
Papilio Frontinus : alis fubdentatis nigris apice albis : anticis medio fafcia lata unindentata alba. 
Papilio Frontinus was received from New SouthWales, and does not appear to be defcribed by any writer. 
The two infects above mentioned having filiform acuminated antennas, are e\idently of the Papilio 
genus: belonging to that particular fedlion which our good friend William Jones, Efq. of Chelfea, in his 
excellent paper on a new arrangement of the Papiliones calls Romani .* To what genera we ought to refer 
the other fpecies reprefented in the fame plate is not quite fo obvious : they appear at the firft view to be 
ftrongly allied both in charader and habit to Romani likewife 5 but this is doubtful: we are upon the 
whole inclined, on a more accurate inlpe<5lion, to refer them rather to the Bombyces. 
* Trans. Linn. Soc. Vol. II. p. 63. 
H 
