APPENDICES TO CHAPTER XVIII. 
371 
Kilima-njaro, in wooded country at 6000 feet 
A single female specimen. 
18. COLIAS EDUSA. 
Papilio edusa, Fabr. Mant. Ins. ii. p. 23. 
Kiliman-njaro, wooded and grassy country at 4000 and 5000feet, July. 
Four males and one female. 
19. Teracolus auriginius. 
Teracolus auriginius, Butl. Ann. Mag. Hat. Hist. ser. 5, vol. xii. 
p. 103. 
Kilima-njaro, in wooded and grassy country, 5000 and 6000 feet. 
Two examples agreeing with specimens in the British Museum 
thus named by Mr. Butler. 
20. Papilio demoleus. 
Papilio demoleus, Linn. Syst. Hat. i. p. 753. 
Kilima-njaro, in wooded country at 5000 feet, August. 
A single specimen of this common African species. 
21. Papilio brontes, sp. nov. 
Alis nigris fascia lata communi, ad cost am anticar um disjunct a, 
metallico-cceruleo, macula parva ad anticarum apicem et posticis 
serie submarginali ejusdem coloris ; subtus fusco-nigris anticis ad 
apicem et posticis omnino, brunnescentioribus, his venis et striis 
tribus in cellula longitudinalibus nigris, fascia communi sub- 
marginali a vena mediana anticarum ad angulum posticarum 
analem transeunte, venis nigris divisa, in anticis quoque inter 
venas bisecta lactescente-alba, margine posticarum interno macidis 
parvis duabus ejusdem coloris, posticis subcaudatis, vena mediana 
producta. 
Kilima-njaro, in forest country at 5000 feet, August. 
Allied to Papilio bromius, but the transverse band is of a deeper 
blue, both wings are less elongated, the secondaries are more acutely 
produced at the anal angle. Beneath, the light coloured submarginal 
band is straighter on the secondaries and less broken up, moreover it 
is extended on the primaries as far as the median nervure beyond the 
cell, the apex of primaries and the secondaries are browner and 
though the latter have three radiating streaks in the cell as in P. 
bromius, there are no intervenal streaks beyond it. 
A single male specimen is the only one Mr. Johnston obtained. 
Heterocera. 
Mr. Johnston’s collection contains six specimens of as many species 
of Heterocera, and for these Mr. Butler has kindly given us the 
following names. 
b b 2 
