GENERIC CHARACTER.
Antennæ thicker towards the tip, and generally terminating in a knob; wings erect when at rest. Fly by day.
* DANAI CAND.
SPECIFIC CHARACTER
AND
SYNONYMS.
Wings entire rounded yellow; anterior pair at the tip black above, beneath sanguineous brown.
Papilio Agave: alis integerrimis rotundatis flavis: anticis apice supra nigris, subtus brunneis.—Fabr. Ent. Syst. t. 3. p. 1. 193. n. 599.
This very scarce and pretty species of the Papilio tribe is an inhabitant of Cayenne, and may possibly occur also in other parts of South America. It was unknown to Fabricius when he published the work entitled Species Insectorum; he afterwards observed a species of it in the cabinet of Von Rohr, and inserted a description of it between the two species P. Hecabe and P. Cardamines in his subsequent production Entomologia Systematica.
The upper surface of this Butterfly is entirely yellow, without any marks, excepting only the apex of the anterior wings, which are black in that portion of the tip which appears red on the lower surface, or as Fabricius terms it, somewhat erroneously brown.
This fly, so uniformly simple in the aspect of its superior surface, appears to peculiar advantage when in a resting position as it is depicted in the lower part of the plate.
7
London. Published as the Act Directs, by E. Donovan, Simpkin & Marshall. June 1, 1822.