NOTES ON THE BUTTERFLIES 10. DAPTONOURA FLORINDA (Buti). One specimen only of this butterfly was secured in the Western District on the Cayo-Belize Road. It is of a much brighter yellow colour than Isandra. II. TERIAS ALBULA (Cram). A common little woodland butterfly always seen flying close to the herbage. It is found through- out the Colony. It is a delicate insect and its flight weak. 12. TERIAS NICIPPE (Cram). This pretty little butterfly, rather larger than the other species of the family, resembles very much in its colour, and the way in which it flies rapidly and close to the ground, the European Colias edusa. When I first saw it I took it to be a small Colias. It is not at all common, but is generally distri- buted from San Pedro in the south to Corozal and Orange Walk in the north, but curiously enough it appears to be absent from the Western District. I once saw the female depositing eggs on a small leguminous shrub and I obtained the perfect insect from these in less than one month. The butterfly is found in open sunny grasslands. I have seen it in August and also in December and January.