BY J. C. MOULTON. 
169 
Gazette ’ a fortnight later—November 1st—so that beyond 
an account of the journey little could be said of the scientific 
results of the expedition. 
These may now be summarized as follows : No mammals 
or birds new to science were obtained ; of the former, thirty 
specimens, representing thirteen species, were collected; 
of the birds, one hundred and eighty-seven specimens, 
representing sixty-two species. Owing to accidents with 
the spirit jars, our collections of fish, reptiles, and 
amphibia were poor. This deficiency, however, was more 
than made up by very large insect collections, which are 
still in process of being worked out. New butterflies 
(Lyccenidce and Hesperidce) have been reported * * * § ; many new 
Coleoptera,t ten of them in the one family Tenebrionidse; 
seven new dragonflies have already been described, in¬ 
cluding one new genus t ; some of the new species of 
Hymenoptera and Heteroptera are described in the present 
number of this Journal. Plants have not been completely 
studied as yet, although I have little doubt that there 
will be some novelties § among the one hundred and twenty 
species gathered, in addition to a Begonia which Mr. H. N. 
Bidley describes as new in this Journal. 
Permission to make this expedition was obtained from 
the British North Borneo Company Government, and, 
thanks to their officers, every facility was afforded me for 
making the journey to and from the mountain without 
difficulty or loss of time. The Assistant District Officer at 
Kotabelud, Mr. P. Skene Keith, was deputed to accompany 
me to the mountain, and we broached a bottle of champagne 
together on the summit of Low’s Peak on August 25th. 
I owe much to the forethought and general efficient way in 
which this young officer managed our transport arrange¬ 
ments from the coast to the mountain. It was with the 
deepest regret that I heard of his death less than a year 
* “ Some Undescribed Bornean Nymphalidge,” by J. C. Moulton, F.E.S. 
Entomologist , vol. xlviii. pp. 97-100, May, 1915. (Describes three Kina¬ 
balu forms in addition to those noted as new in the two families mentioned 
above.) 
f “ A New Cicindelid from Borneo,” by J. C. Moulton, B.Sc., F.E.S. 
Entomologist's Monthly Magazine , No. 611, pp. 129, 130, and fig., April, 
1915. Descriptions of other new Coleoptera have not been published yet. 
I “Contributions to a Study of the Dragonfly Fauna of Borneo. 
Part III.—A Collection made on Mount Kina Barn by Mr. J. C. Moulton in 
September and October, 1918,” by F. F. Laidlaw, M.A. (Camb.), F.Z.S. 
Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., pp. 25-39, 1915. 
§ Two species are described by W. W. Smith in Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. 
Edinburgh, No. xl., 1915. 
