^a/t'/oi^nia S^caJemu 0/ .Jcteiicei' RECEIVED BY PURCHASE ]%\%{ BUTTERFLIES CHINA, JAPAN, AND COKEA. BY JOHN HENRY LEECH, B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., ETC. PART II. LYCiENID^, PAPILIONID.^, and HESPERIID^. LONDON: K. H. POKTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, W. 1893-94. PRINTED BT TAYLOR AND FRAN RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. BUTTERFLIES CHINA, JAPAN, AND COREA. PART II. Pam. LYC^NID^. Genus TARAKA. Taraka (Doherty, MS.), de Niceville, Butt. Ind. iii. p. 57 (1890). " Wiri(/s remarkably fragile and thin. " Fore wing : costa regularly rounded, apes rather acute, outer margin convex, inner margin concave ; costal nervure not touching the first subcostal nervule, a little swollen at the base ; first subcostal nervule originates two fifths before the end of the discoidal cell ; second subcostal arising twice the distance from the base of the first as from the base of the upper discoidal ; third subcostal arises midway between the apex of the cell and of the wing ; diseocellular nervules slightly produced outwardly, lower discoceUular longer than the middle one and very slender, meeting the median nervule just beyond its laut forking. " Hind wing long and narrow ; costa long, outer margin rounded, composed of two curves meeting at the end of the second subcostal nervule, inner margin convex for most of its length ; costal nervure long, extending to the apes, running close to the margin ; discoidal 298 LTC.ENID.E. cell abruptly truncate ; discocellular nervules meeting the subcostal nervure just beyond its bifurcation, and the median nervure opposite its last bifurcation. " Eyes naked. " Antenna;, with thirty joints or more, slender, the last ten (approximately) gradually forming a moderate club, abruptly truncate at the tip, the last joint elongate. " Palpi : last joint covered with long appressed scales, rather short, less than half as long as the preceding joint, fusiform, pointed, not clavate. " ie^s covered with very long white hairs, the middle and liind femora longer than the tibia;, which are greatly swollen in the middle, the tarsi as long as the tibiie, the first joint nearly twice as long as the others united, the last joint with simple claws and paronychia. Fore tarsi of the male slender, equal in length to the tibiie, without spines or articulations, the claws united for most of their length, diverging at the end. Fore tarsi of the female longer than the tibia;, without spines, the claws as in the male, no distinct M-ticulations ; the separation of the last joint is slightly indicated but is quite immovable." (DJitrfti, M.S., de Niceville. I. c.) Taraka liamada. Miletus hamada, Drucc, Cist. Ent. i. p. 361 (1875) ; Pryer, Rliop. Kilioii. p. 10, pi. ii. fig. 12(188R). Taraka hamada, de Niceville, Butt. lud. iii. p. 58, pi. xxvi. fig. 164, ? (1890). Miletus hamada, Druce. " Upperside male, dark brown, lightest in the middle of the anterior wing. Tuderside of both wings white, crossed from the costal margin of the anterior to the inner margin of the posterior wing by five rows of large black spots, a fine black line round the outer margin of both wings, the fringe alternately black and white. The female differs slightly from the male, being paler in colour above, and having all the black spots smaller below. Exp. d ? 1 T6 i"*^^- "Hab. Yokohama, Japan." (Druce, 1. c.) Piyer gives Yokohama aud Xikko as Japanese localities for this species, aud says that it is confined to isolated spots : " Some specimens are quite black, and others from the mountains have a patch of greyish white on the fore mng. It varies from f to 1| inch." I found this species all along the west coast of Japan. It occurs iu the neighbourhood of ponds, and flies among thick bamboo-grass ; the black and white under surface of this species renders it very conspicuous when at rest on the leaves. In China 1\ lunnada occurs at Omei-shan, July and August ; Moupiu, July; Chang-van g and Ichang. None of the specimens exceed an inch in expanse, but in all other respects they are identical with the examples from Japan. According to de ^'iceville, T. liamada is a common species iu Sikkim at low elevations from April to December, " and shows much variation iu the extent of TAEAKA.— LTC.ENA. 299 the white coloration of the upperside,one extreme being entii-ely black, while the other has the costa and outer margin of the fore wing alone black, the black spots of the underside showing through by transparency on both wings." Tlie species is also recorded from Cachar, Chittagong Hill Tracts, and Shillong. Distribution. Japan, China, Eastern Java, Himalayas. Genus LYC.ENA. Lycana, sect. 3 (part.)^ FabriciuSj Illiger's Magazin, vi. p. 285 (1807) ; (part.) Westwood, Gen. Diurn.Lep. ii. p. 488 (1852); deNiceville, Butt. Ind. iil. p. 66 (1890). " Body small, slender, and compressed. Wings generaUj* large, and of a delicate texture ; in the majority of the species blue on the upperside (at least in the males) and grey or greyish ■white beneath, and more or less ocellated [as restricted by de Niceville all the species are ocellated] ; the majority having a small black transverse spot at the extremity of the disooidal cell of the fore wing. *' Head small, hairy, the hairs often forming a small tuft on the forehead. " Eyes moderate sized, naked. " Palpi moderately elongated, compressed, scaly ; the middle joint also furnished beneath with detached bristly hairs ; terminal joint shorter than half the length of the second joint, and scarcely varying in length in the opposite sexes, slender, nearly naked, acute at the tip. " Anteniice of moderate length, very slender, with long joints ringed with white, the club distinct, suddenly formed, oblong-ovate, depressed, and sometimes spoon-shaped in dried specimens, the joints of the club very short. " Fore wing generally elongate, subtriangularly ovate, with the costal margin moderately arched, outer margin always more or less convex, inner margin rather short ; costal nervure short, subcostal nervure wide apart from the costa, with two branches preceding the extremity of the disooidal coll, and with a third short branch about halfway between the cell and the tip of the wing ; discoidal cell closed by extremely slender middle and lower discoceUular nervules, which are transverse, the latter uniting with the third median nervule at a moderate distance beyond its origin ; upper discoceUular nervule very oblique, or almost longitudinal, forming, in fact, the base of the upper discoidal nervule. " Hind wiiKj [elongate-ovate, entire ; costal margin straight, apex rounded, outer margin very convex, anal angle rounded, abdominal margin nearly straight ; costal nervure extending to apex of wing, first subcostal nervule given off some distance before apex of discoidal cell, discoceUular nervules very concave, of about equal length, the upper discoceUular outwardly, and the inner discoceUular inwardly, oblique ; discoidal nervule from their point of jimction, discoidal cell very short, much less than half the length of the wing, second median nervule originating just before the end of the ceU." {de Niceville.)'] "Fore ler/s of the male slender, tibia in most species terminated by a short Curved horny point, in others simple ; tarsus slender, exarticulate, elongate, slightly curved and attenuated at the tip, which is terminated by a horny curved point, and armed beneath with short spines. 300 LTC^KID^. Of the female similar in size and shape to those of the male, except that the tarsus is articu- lated and nngniciilated like those of the four hind legs. " Hind legs short, slender. " Labta onisciform, gibho-scutate or oblong-scutate, witb the head and feet small and scarcely perceptible ; the body laciniate, and the back convex and generally beautifully coloured. Pupa oblong, very convex, smooth, obtuse at each end, and marked with obscure spots ; in a few species armed with short acute tubercles." ( Wcstwood, I. c) As many species originally placed in the genus Lycccna have been removed therefrom and placed in other genera, Mr. de Niceville has modified and amended Westjvood's diagnosis, as given above, so as to bring it more in accord Mith the restricted sense in which the genus is now understood. Lycaena SBgon. PapUio (Cffoit, Schiffcrmiller, Wieu. Yerz. p. 185 [1776). Papilio ar[iyrotoxiis, Bergstrasser, Nomen. ii. p. 77 (1779). Lyccena cegon, Lang, Butt. Eiu-. p. 103, pi. xxiii. fig. 1 (1884) ; Pryer, Rliop. Nihon. p. 18, pi. V. fig. 2 (1886). Lycana micrargus, Butler, Cistula Entom. ii. p. 283 (1873). Lyccena pseud(egon, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 1881, p. 851. "Expands O'OO to 1-10 inch. The male has all the wings deep blue, rather inclining to violet, with a narrow brownish-black hind marginal border. The hind wings have some faint brown spots along the hind margin. The fringes of all the wings are broadly white. The female is brown, with faint traces of an orange band along the hind margin of the fore wings ; the hind wings have a more distinct orange hind marginal band, most conspicuous towards the anal angle, and enclosing four or five black spots. Underside grey : in the female with a tinge of brown ; the hind margins of all the wings with a double row of black spots, enclosing an orange band ; internal to these an irregular central row of black spots, surrounded by white rings. The fore wings have a round discoidal spot similarly surrounded by white, and no basal spots ; the hind wings have four spots between the central row and the base, two of them nearly touching the costa. The bases of aU the wings are strongly tinged with blue in the male, more faintly so in the female. The outermost spots of lower hind marginal row are minutely studded with metallic silvery blue. The anterior tibife are furnished witli short spines." (Lang, 1. c.) Larva. " Bright yellow-green, with the dorsal stripe blackish brown edged with whitish from the beginning of the third to the end of the tenth segment ; it is widest on the third and fourth, being on them of a rather rounded lozenge form, with a whitish dot near the edge on each side ; a dull dark brown small plate in front of the second segment, and a broad semilunar- shaped blotch of the same colour a little behind, divided in the middle by a fine line of the green ground-colour. The dorsal stripe on the eleventh segment becomes broad and squarish, but resumes its linear shape on the twelfth and thirteenth. The subdorsal line is visible from the begiuning of the third to the end of the eleventh segment as a greenish-yeUow line running between two green ones darker than the ground-colour. At the bottom of the side LYCiKNA. 301 along the lateral ridge is a whitisli line commencing on the third segment and continued round the anal extremity. Between the dorsal and subdorsal lines on segments three to ten are faintly paler oblique lines of yellow-green, viz. one on each segment sloping downwards and backwards ; the warts on the twelfth segment are very often suddenly projected con- siderably, and then a circle of fine short hairs is visible on their extremities. The surface of the body is also clothed with similar hairs. The head is black, having the base of the papilla? and a streak across above the mouth of buff-colour. " The jjMjja is about five lines long, smooth, but without polish, the top of the head slightly pro- jecting, the thorax rounded, the abdomen plump, curving on the back outwards and back- wards towards the tip, which is hidden in the larva skin, the wing-cases prominent and long in proportion. It is of a dull green tint, with a dark brown dorsal line of arrow-head marks." (Buchler, Larvce of Brit. Butt. 4- Moths, i. pp. 115, 116.) Feeds on Oriiithojms purpusilliis and probably also Genista angelica. Var. micrargUS, Butler. " Above very like L. argia [? argus'] and L. agon ; lilac, with dentated blackish outer border and snow-white fringes ; below with the ground-colour of L. pylaoii (triton '?, Fabr.) ; the markings exactly as in L. argus, excepting that the submarginal black spots of the secondaries have no trace of metallic colouring about them, and the orange belt connecting the two series of black spots is paler. Expanse of wings 1 inch 1 line. Tokio, Japan." {Butler, Cistula.) Var. pseudSBgOn, Butler. " Nearest to L. cegon of Europe, the same colours. The male smaller, and with a very narrow black outer border to the wings ; fringe narrower, submarginal black spots of secondaries rather smaller ; female very faintly shot with steel-blue at the base of primaries, submarginal orange lunules obsolete ; secondaries darker, purplish towards the base, bluish at the base ; the whole of the black submarginal spots bounded internally by orange lunules, and externally by white ones. Under surface greyer than in L. agon, both sexes washed with pale greenish blue at the base ; black spots smaller, but arranged exactly in the same way ; submarginal orange spots of the primaries of the male extremely pale ; those of the secondaries destitute of metaUie spots in both sexes. Expanse of the wings, S 1 inch 2 lines, $ 1 inch 3 lines. Iburi, Hokkaido [Yesso], July. Coll. M. Fenton." (Butler, P. Z. S.) Common at Gensan, Corea, in June and July. It occm-s also in Yesso and in the mountain districts of Central Japan. Corean specimens are usually much above the average size. I have given the original description of micrargus and pseudcegon, Butler, as the names may perhaps be retained for the respective Japanese forms to which they refer. Bisfribution. Europe, Asia Minor, Armenia, Persia, Eastern Siberia, Corea, Japan. Lycaena argus. (Plate XXXI. figs. 5, 8, var.) Papi/io argus, Linasus, Syst. Nat. x. p. 483 (1758) ; Faun. Suec. p. 283 (1761). 2s 302 LTCiENID^. $ . Papilio idas, LinnseuSj Faun. Suec. p. 284 (1761). Lijceena argus, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 105 (1884) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nilion. p. 18, pi. v. figs, la, 16, lc(1886). " Expands 1 to 1-10 inch. The male is dark blue, uearlj- the same colour as L. a;goii, which it altogether greatly resembles ; the hind marginal border, however, is narrower and more defined, the hind marginal spots of the hind wings are more distinct, and the white marginal fringes are very narrow — not broad, as in mfon. The female on the upper surface almost entirely resembles the female of L. cegon, but the orange hind marginal spots are rather more distinct. Underside : ground-colour uniform brownish grey in both sexes ; the central row of spots on the fore wings is more even, the last spot but one from the inner margin being more in a line with the rest, and not, as it were, thrust inwards, as in L. cec/on ; the silvery spots on the hind margin are much more distinct than in (fgon. The anterior tibise are not provided with spines." (^Lang, I. c.) Dr. Lang, quoting Guenee, says that the larva is dark green, with a red dorsal line and an oblique reddish streak bordered with whitish on each segment. Food-plants Genista, Melilotus, &c. The usual form of this species met with in Japan and Corea is brilliantly tinged with pui'ple. It occurs in the mountainous districts of Central Japan, and I have received specimens from the Island of Kiushiu. The form described below as var. insularis has so far only been found in Yesso, and appears to be the only representative of L. argus in that island. Tar. insularis, var. nov. (Plate XXXI. figs. 5 $ , 8 J ■) Male. Ground-colour pale silvery blue ; the neuration is whitish except on the marginal area, where it becomes blackish ; outer border of primaries broadly black. Secondaries have a well-defined series of submarginal spots followed by a narrow black marginal line. Fringes snow-white. Female. Black, much suffused with blue-grey about the disc of the primaries ; discoidal spot distant and bordered with white : there is a marginal line of almost confluent large black spots preceded by a brownish band. Secondaries have a series of elongate black spots, intersected by a series of brownish lunules and bordered externally with pure white. Fringes greyish tinged with brown. Under surface of both sexes as in the type, but paler ; the female being as pale as typical males and more suffused with blue at the base. The silver spots are in some cases absent. This form of L. argus is casUy distinguished from L. ihwiensis by the character of black marginal borders to all the wings, the different colour of the neuration, and on the under surface by the paler coloration, fulvous markings on the outer margin of primaries, and larger size of these markings on secondaries. Expanse 34-36 miUim. A long series of this interesting form was taken by my native collectors in the neighboui-hood of Hakodate in the Island of Yesso in June and July. Lyccena argus and L. cegon are both exceedingly variable insects, and it is LTC^NA. 303 often very difficult to say to -which of these species certain specimens should be referred. With regard to var. insidaris described above, Dr. Staudinger agrees vnih me that it is a form of L. argus, and informs me that he has never previously seen such pale specimens. Distribution. Europe, Asia Minor, Armenia, Amurland, Japan, Corea, and % N. China. LycaBna iburiensis. Lycana iburiensis, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1881, p. 852; Waterhouse, Aid Identif. Ins. pi. 108 (1882). " Allied to L. arr/us, but more riearlj- of the size and colour above of L. hjcormas. Pale silvery blue ■with brown veins and broad smoky-brown external borders ; fringe very narrow and snow- white : secondaries with broad brown costal area ; body above rather darker than the wings. Fnder surface ohall;y bluish white ; the base, especially in the secondaries, suffused with pale bluish green ; black spots arranged as in L. argus, but large and intensely black ; the orange lunules wanting in the marginal ocelloid spots of the primaries, paler in those of the secondaries ; no metallic pupils to the black spots of the secondaries ; pectus bluish. Expanse of wings 1 inch 5 lines. " Ibui-i, Hokkaido [Yesso], July. Coll. M. Fenton." [Butler, I. c.) Only one specimen of this species appears to be known ; this was in Mr. Fenton's collection, and is figured in 'Aid.' As I have not seen the type I am unable to say anything postively about its being a valid species or not, but the figui'e seems to represent an insect specifically distinct from either L. argus or L. oegon. In the description of this species the fringes are stated to be snow-white, but in the figure the fringes are chequered with black and white on the upper surface, but are entirely omitted in the drawing of the under surface. Lycaena segina. (Plate XXXI. fig. ll, s .) Lycana S. ferrea, but it is very different from that species in colour and in the markings of under surface. Satsuma pratti. (Plate XXX. fig. 10, j .) Safsuma 2Jraiti, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 44 (1890). Mah. Fuliginous brown. Primaries have some blue scales below the median nervure, and the secondaries have a dull bluish reflection. Under surface of primaries brown, suffused with blackish towards the black basal area, an indistinct wavy dark central line bordered with white at costa : secondaries black, irrorated with white scales, and a brown cloud towards outer angle, the indented central line broadly bordered with white below costa and on inner margin ; submarginal band wavy, ill defined, and intersected by a pale wavy line. The sexual mark is small, dark, and not well defined. Female. Upper surface : discal area of all the wings steely blue, outer margin broadly blackish, as also is the costa of primaries. Under surface as in the male. Expanse, J 32 millim., 5 32-36 millim. Separable from Satsima [Theda) frivaldszhji by the darker colour of all SATSUMA. 355 tlie wings, and by the white markings and bhickisli ground-colour of under surface of secondaries. Occurs sparingly in June and July at Ichang and Chang-yang in Central Cliina and at Chia-kou-ho in Western Cliina. Satsuma chalybeia. (Plate XXX. figs. 7 ? , 8 var. d .) Satsuma chulyhdu, Lcccli, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 43 (1890). Male. Pale blue ; costa, apical third, and outer margin of primaries black, as also are the fringes ; secondaries with an interrupted black submarginal band ; a broad black line before the black and grey fringes. Under surface gre}' dusted -with black atoms, basal half of primaries blackish; discoidal spot, central and submarginal wavy lines black; transverse band of second- aries occupying the central third of wing, blackish, limited by black wavy lines ; submarginal line black, undulating, followed by some obscure dusky spots. Fringes as above. Female. Similar to the male, but the black margins are more clearly defined. Expanse 32-33 millim. Differs from Satsuma {Thecia) fn'valdsz/ci/i, Ld., in having two distinct transverse lines on under surface of primaries, and in the absence of white markings on under surface of all the wings. The above description of the male refers only to specimens from Chang- yang, Central China, from which place I first received this species. I now have male examples of *S'. chaUjheia from several localities in Western China, and as these differ from the type I describe the form as var. yluto (Plate XXX. fig. 8) : — All the wings blackish, the basal area tinged with blue in one speci- men ; there is a pale blue submarginal line towards anal angle, and the anal lobe is brownish ; under surface brownish. The female is similar to the same sex from Central China. Occurs at Chang-yang, Central China, and at Wa-ssu-kow, Pu-tsu-fong, and Chow-pin-sa, Western China. It flies in June and July. Satsuma nicevillei, sp. nov. (Plate XXX. fig. 9, j .) Male. Black, with a dark bluish sheen iu certain lights ; the basal area of all the wings greyish blue, this colour extending in some specimens into the outer marginal area of secondaries ; the glandular patch is large, elongate, dark ; the anal lobe is tinged with brownish, and the abdominal margin above it is hollowed out ; there are indications of a bluish line on the outer margin. Fringe dark greyish. Female. Greyish blue ; the costa and outer margin of primaries broadly, and the outer margin of secondaries narrowly, bordered with black ; anal lobe and excavation above as in the male. Under surface of both sexes : primaries ochreous brown, broadly streaked with grey along the inner margin ; a narrow black transverse line from the costa, just beyond the middle of the wing. 356 LTaENID.E. terminates at tlie first median nervule ; secondaries ratber redder than primaries ; basal area darker, its outer limit not clearly defined; submarginal line blackish and interrujited. Expanse, J 32 millim., $ 30 millim. The female of this species is very similar to a female Satsuma from the Khasi Hills which Mr. de Nice villa has figured and described but not named*. In the Indian species, however, the anal angle is not lobed as in S. 'nicevillei, it also exhibits the follomng differences of colour and marking: — Upper surface : the black border of costa and outer margin of primaries is rather narrower ; the black outer marginal border of secondaries is represented by a dash at anal angle ; the fringes are whitish, distinctly chequered with black at the extremities of the nervules. Under surface ferruginous bro^vn ; central line of primaries edged with white, as also is the lower portion of tlie limiting line of the dark basal area of secondaries. Probably it will ultimately be proved that S. nicevillei and the unnamed insect just referred to are specifically identical, but it seems advisable to leave them separate at present. I have two males and one female taken by a native collector at Chang-yang, Central China, at an elevation of GOOO feet. Genus THECLA. Theda (part.), Fabricius, Illiger's Magazin, vi. p. 286 (1807); Westwood, Gen. Diurii. Lep. ii. p. 481 (1852) ; de Niceville, Butt. lad. iii. p. 297 (1890). "■Fore ivinj subtriangular ; costa arched at the base, then nearly straight to the apex; apex rather acute, slightly more rounded in the female than in the male ; outer margin slightly convex or straight ; inner margin straight ; costal nervure ending exactly opposite the termination of the discoidal cell ; first subcostal nervule given off from the subcostal nervure rather beyond the middle of the cell, second subcostal originating at about one third from the apex of the cell in the male, at about one fifth in the female ; subcostal nervure reaching the apex of the wing : upper discocellular nervule absent in both sexes, middle discocellular straight, arising in the male from the upper discoidal nervule some distance beyond its origin, arising in the female exactly at its point of origin, lower discocellular of the same length as the upper, straight ; second median nervule originating some little distance before the lower end of the cell; submedian nervure nearly straight. Male furnished with an elongated narrow shining black patch of differently formed scales from those on the rest of the wing at the anterior end of the discoidal cell, which patch is bounded anteriorly by the basal portion of the second subcostal nervule, and extends slightly into the cell and beyond its end. " Hind wing ovate, all the margins rounded, furnished with a somewhat long narrow tail at the * ' Bombay Natural History Journal,' vi. pp. 374-37C, pi. F. fig. 17 (ISDl). THECLA. 357 termination of the tirst median nervule, and a small anal loVic ; costal nervuve much arched at base ; first subcostal nervule originating some distance before the apex of the cell ; disco- cellular nervules concave, discoidal nervule from their point of junction ; second niediau nervule originating just before the end of the cell ; internal nervure very sinuous. "jl)!te«H(E short, not half the length of the costa of the fore wing, with a gradually formed elongated club. " Pal^n somewhat short, obliquely porrected, second joint bristly beneath, third joint naked. " Ei/e^ hairy. " Legs short, scaly." (de Nkeville, I. e.) Thecla spini. Papilio spini, Wien. Verz. p. 186 (1776) ; Hiibner, Eur. Schraett. i. figs. 376, 377. Thecla spini, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 76, pi. xvii. fig. 3 (1884). Thecla spini, var. latior, Fixsen, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 271 (1887). " Expands 1-18 to 1-40 inch. The wings are brown on the upper surface. The hind wings distinctly tailed. The male has one or two small orange spots near the anal angle of the hind wings. The female is larger and lighter in colour than the male, and has a large indistinct lighter patch on the fore wings, and a row of orange spots on the hind margin of the hind wings extending from the anal angle. The underside is brownish grey ; the fore wings have a distinct white line beginning on the costa at a point which is distant from the hind margin by a space equal to a fourth of the width of the wing. The hind wings have a white line running from about the middle of the costa to the inner margin, taking near the anal angle an upward and then downward direction, so as to give it somewhat of a W-shape. Along the hind margin is a row of orange spots, and near the anal angle, and filling up the whole distance between that point and the tail, is a patch of light blue. " Larva light green, with two yellowish streaks on the sides ; on each segment is a row of oblique lines of a darker green than the ground-colour ; on the dorsal surface, which has a dark streak, are some pink dots. Feeds iu June on Prumis spinosa and Crato'cfus oxyacantha." (Lancj, I. c.) Var. latior, Fixsen. "One third larger than European T. sj^ini. The ground-colour of the upper surface is darker and more velvety, the markings on the primaries of the female more distinct and broader ; the marginal band of the secondaries sharper. On the under surface the colour is also darker than in the type ; the white band on the primaries is more curved towards the inner margin, and the band on the secondaries has the W towards anal angle less clearly defined ; the blue on the outer margin in cell 2 is darker, and this colour extends upwards between two rows of black spots ; the rusty-brown band is broader and brighter." Fixsen states that typical T. spini occurs commonly at Pung-tung, Corea, and that the two specimens which he describes as var. latior are also from that locality. Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 147) records both forms from Amurland, and says that Hertz took var. latior in North China. 3 b 358 LYaf.NID.E. Giaeser bred the var. latior fiom larvae found feeding in June on Bhamniis near Chabarofka, in Amurland (Berl. ent. Zeit. 1SS8, p. 71). Thecla mera. (Plate xxix. fig. 14, ? .) Therla mera, JaDsoii, Cistula Eiitom. ii. p. 156 (1877) ; Pryer, Rliop. Nihou. p. 15, pi. iv. fig. 16 (1887). " Above dark brown, secondaries produced at the anal angle and with a sborfc outer tail, the inner ono long, its apex white ; beneath pale brown, both wings crossed beyond the middle by a fine waved white line, margined with dusky brown on its inner side, divided by the nervures, bent inwards posteriorly, and ending at the abdominal margin ; anal region of secondaries pale orange, with a large black spot between the tails and a row of four smaller ones just above it ; anal angle black, speckled with pale blue, a fine white marginal line, and a row of obscure dusky-brown submarginal spots near the apex. Expanse of wings 1| inch. " Several specimens taken by llr. Jonas at Matzabaro, about 200 miles N.W. of Yedo [Tokio]." (Janson, I. c.) The type in the National Collection appears to be a female. The male only differs in being blacker and in having a very conspicuous broad short glandular patch on the primaries. I have a series from Oiwake and Yesso. Pryer records the species from Nikko and Assama-Yama, and states that it is a scarce insect. Thecla w-album. Papilio u'-album, Kiioch, Bcitr. lus. ii. p. 85, pi. vi. figs. 1, 2 (1782). Thecla w-album, Laug, Butt. Eur. p. 77, pi. xvii. fig. .3 (1884) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 15, pi. iv. fig. 14 (1886). Strtjmonfentoni, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 1881, p. 854.; AVaterhouse, Aid Identif. Ins. ii. pi. cxv. fig. 2. " Expands 0-93 to 1-25 inch. Hind margin of hind wings scalloped, and with a small slender tail. Wings dark blackish brown, the nervures showing a little darlvcr. Pore wings quite without any pattern. The hind wings have an orange spot at the anal angle ; the tail is tipped with white. Underside : — The colour of all the wings is greyish brown ; the fore wings have a narrow white line, somewhat wavy, reaching from the costa to the inner margin, and placed closer to the hind margin than to the base of the wing. The hind wings have a white W-shaped line beginning at the costa and ending at the inner margin ; along the hind margin is a row of brilliant orange crescents, which are largest near the anal angle and decrease in size as they approach the costa. " Larva onisciform, light green, with a yellowish-brown dorsal stripe ; every segment has two oblique light yellow lines on each side ; the head is black and retractile. It feeds on the leaves of the common elm (Ulmus camjjesiris), from whence it may be beaten at the end of May and the beginning of June. Pupa attached to a twig by a belt of silk and also by the tail." {Lanrf, I. c.) TJIECLA. 359 Strt/mon fentoni, Butler. — " Nearly allied to S. w-alhum of Europe, but quite as large as S. qiini ; under surface like the latter species in tint, but with almost the pattern of S. w-alhum ; the discal line of the primaries, however, is more arched and continuous, that of the secondaries is more transverse, and therefore does not run inwards in the direction of the base ; the submarginal spots are more dome-shaped, of a bright orange instead of rod colour ; and there is a distinct submarginal white line. Expanse of wings 1 inch 5 lines. " Shiribetsu, Hokkaido [Yesso], August. Coll. il. Fenton." {Butler, I. c.) I am indebted to Mr. Janson for the loan of one of M. Fenton's original specimens of Butler's fentoni. It is rather larger than the examples of T. w-album from Yesso in Fryer's collection, but not so large as some of my European specimens. I cannot find any character by Avhich fentoni, Butler, may be separated, even as a local race, from w-album. Elwes (Froc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1881, p. 886) states that AV. B. Fryer found T. w-album at Shanghai * and Bremer at Fekin. D/sfribittion. Central and South Europe, Siberia, Amurland, Japan. Thecla patrius. (Flate XXIX. fig. 11, d .) Thecla patrius, Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 58 (June 1891). Eesembles T. w-alhum from Europe, but in the mal^s the sexual mark is oval in shape and the tails are longer. The principal distinctions, however, are found in the markings of the under surface, where the transverse lines are more oblique ; that on the secondaries starts from beyond the middle of costa ; the orange band is broader, and is followed by two large velvety black spots ; the orange band is preceded and followed by a metallic bluish line ; the primaries have a pale submarginal line, which in the male merges into orange towards inner angle. Expanse 33 millim. A large number of specimens, including both sexes, from Pu-tsu-foug, taken at an elevation of about 10,000 feet in June and July. Thecla eximia. (Flate XXIX. figs, l d, 2, 3, var.) Thecla w-album, var. eximia, Fixsen, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 271, pi. xiii. fig. 2 CISS?). Thecla affinis, Staudinger, op. cit. vi. p. 148 (1892). Male. Fuliginous brown. Primaries have a large well-defined glandular patch agreeing in shape better with that of T. spini than T. w-alhum. Secondaries as in T. w-alhum, but the tails are longer and the reddish patch on anal lobe is brighter and larger. Fringes are white, but in some specimens suffused with dusky. Under surface olivaceous grey : primaries traversed * I have seen Fryer's Shanghai specimens in Mr. Elwes's collection and find that they are male examples of T. eximia, Fixsen {= affinis, Staudinger). The specimens recorded by Bremer from Pekin are probably also referable to that species. 3b2 360 LYC.llNID.E. by a white line internally bordered with Mack, this line is divided by the nervules into eight portions, the lower set inwards ; marginal line is white, bordered inwardly with blackish, and preceded on the submarginal area by a series of black lunulated marks, bordered with whitish and extending from inner margin to just beyond the middle of the wing : secondaries have a white line, interrupted by the nervules and forming an open W before terminating on abdominal margin ; anal half of the outer marginal area reddish, enclosing a large velvetj- black spot placed in first median interspace and a bluish patch in suhmedian interspace ; anal lobe velvety black ; between the reddish colour aud costa there is a series of blackish spots bordered with white : marginal line white. Female rather browner than the male above and paler beneath : markings similar on the under surface. Expanse, S 40 millim., J 46 millim. Var. fixseni, var. nov. (Plate XXIX. figs. 2 5 , 3 (J .) In this form the sexes have, on the upper surface, a fulvous patch on the disc of the primaries, intersected by the nervules and some fulvous spots above anal angle. All these markings are much larger in the female than in the male. The under surface is typical. This species is distinguished £i-om T. lo-album by its larger size, longer tails, and more conspicuous red patches on anal lobe. On the under surface the white line of primaries is not angled inwards as in xo-album, and the angles of the W on secondaries are rounded ; the reddish band is broader and does not extend along the outer margin beyond the second median nervule. From T. grandis, Felder, it is separated on the upper surface by the more distinct sexual mark of the male, and on the under surface by the much less conspicuous black spots on submarginal area ; the spots in T. grandis are very large, well defined, and form a series from costa to inner margin on all the ^^^ngs. Fixsen's type of T. eximia was from Corea and that of Staudinger's affinis from Amurland. I have received specimens from Moupin, Wa-shan, and Wa-ssu-kow in Western China, and Dr. Staudinger has sent me a female specimen of affinis taken by Hertz in the neighbourhood of Pekin, which agrees exactly Avith some of my Western Chinese specimens of T. eximia. Thecla grandis. Thecla grandis, Felder, Wien. ent. Mon. vi. p. 24 (18G2). Thecla eretria, Hewitson, 111. Diurn. Lep. {Lycasnidm), p. 114, pi. xlii. fig. 153 (1869). "Alls supra fuscis, posticis linea marginal! interrupta alba, omnibus subtus multo pallidioribus, striga pone discum alba angusta, fusco intus cincta marginem internum versus valde refracta, maculis exterioribus nigricantibus albido cinctis, in posticis lunulis aurantiacis magnitudine increscentibus adnatis, his macula inter ramos primores medianos alfceraque anali atris, tertia inlerjeeta glauca. TIIECLA. 361 " Ningpo. — Fiiictim specimen pessime conservatum ante nos habemus. Tcrtia fere parte majus est quam Th. spxni, AVien. Vcrz., et al) omnibus speciebns europa;is costa alarum anti- carum omnino convexa ramo ultimo subcostali vix deflexo in costsc apicem escurrento caudisque longioribus discrepat.'' {Felder, l. c.) Felcler does not mention the sex of his type, but Dr. Rogenhofer has been good enough to send me a beautifully executed figure of the specimen, and from this it is distinctly seen to be a female. The male differs from the female in having tlie ground-colour darker and a well-defined sexual mark on the primaries, similar in shape to that of T. spini. The different formation of the sexual character will in itself serve to distin- guish this species from T. w-album. Hewitson also describes the female of this species under the name of eretria, as follows : — " Female. Dark brown. Posterior wing with two tails (one very short) ; the outer margin dark brown, with a submarginal line and the fringe white ; throe or four spots near the anal angle ; the lobe black, marked b)' a small scarlet spot. Underside rufous. Both wings crossed beyond the middle by a linear white baud, bordered inwardly with brown ; both wings with a band of dark brown spots, bordered on both sides with white, bisected on the posterior wing by bands of orange ; a large space of orange at the anal angle marked with a large black spot between the tails, the lobes black, the space between them brown irrorated with white ; both wings with the margin brown ; a submarginal line and the fringe white. "Expanse l-j-V inch. " In the Collection of tlic British Museum, from N. China." {Heivitson, I. c.) I have examples of both sexes of T. grandis from Kiukiang. It appears to be a scarce species, and, so far, has only been recorded from North China, Ningpo, and Kiukiang. Thecla pruni. Papilio pruni, Linnaeus, Faun. Suec. p. 283 (17G1) ; Esper, Schmett. i. 1, pi. xix. fig. 3, pi. xxxix. fig. 1 a ; Hiibner, Eur. Schmett. i. figs. 386, 387. Thecla pruni, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 80, pi. sviii. fig. 1 (1884) ; Pryer, Ehop. Nihon, p. 15, pi. iv. fig. 15 (1887). " Expands 0-87 to 1-12 inch. Wings brownish black. The fore wings in the female, and sometimes in the male, exhibit faint traces of a brownish-orange band running parallel to the hind margin. The hind wings have a short tail somewhat like that of T. spini, and parallel to the hind margin is a row of well-defined semilunar spots of an orange-brown colour, decreasing as they approach the costa. The colour of the underside is paler than that above. The fore wings have a bluish-white interrupted line running from the costa to the inner margin. The hind wings have a similar line which does not assume a W-shape. The hind margin has an orange band bordered with bluish white, and having a row of black spots, one 362 LYC^NID^. being placed in each iiiler-neural space. Fringes black. Antennas black, ringed with white." {LaiHj, I. c.) Larva. " Green, darker on the back ; two rows of long yellow spots on the back, and a row on each side above the legs ; six long oblique yellow stripes on each side." (Stainton, from Dupoachel.) " Feeds on the leaves of Primus spinosa, on the twigs of which the eggs are laid in the summer and remain all the winter, the larva appearing in May. Pupa. " Obese, blunt-headed, and hump-backed ; it has a medio-dorsal series of five rather con- spicuous warts or tubercles." (Newman, from Huhner.) The larva and pupa of this species are figured in Buckler's 'Larvte of British Butterflies,' pi. xii. figs. 5-5 c. There was a female example from Yesso in Fryer's collection. This speci- men is much suffused with pale fulvous on the upper surface, and is figured in his ' Rhop. Nihonica.' Fixsen records one female specimen from Corea, and comparing it with European examples says that it has a sharper design ; the submarginal row of spots on primaries is more distinct and bordered internally with white ; the series of black spots which bounds the broader reddish-brown band of secondaries is also more strongly marked with white. Graeser (Berl. ent. Zeit. 1888, p. 72) records two female specimens from Pokrofka. Staudinger states that Dorries bred this insect in the Sutschan district, and Elwes (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1881, p. 886) says that T. pruni occurs at Vladivostock, and ou the lower Ussuri. Thecla prunoides. Thecla pninoidcs, Staudinger, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 129, pi. vi. figs. 1 a, b (1887) ; Fixsen, torn. eit. p. 278. " Nearest allied to T. iiruni,'bui smaller (25 to 27 millim.), the similar-coloured dark upper surface does not exhibit, in any of the five specimens before me, any trace of yellow-brown spots, which are always more or less conspicuous at the anal angle of pnnii. The male does not exhibit the sexual patch beyond the cell, which is present in T. pruni ; but there appears to be in the male of prunoides a similar lighter spot at the lower end of the discoidal coU, but this may be owing to abrasion of the scales. The tails of the hind wing are longer than in pruni. On the yellowish-grey underside of the fore wing only one row of white spots is present; there are no black outer spots as m pruni. The underside of the hind wing is very similar to pruni, but the black spots before the outer margin are much less distinct, smaller, and not so sharply bordered with white internally ; there is only one black spot on the outer margin above the tail, and not several as in pruni. The head and body are not materially different in the two species." (Staudinger, I. c.) Fixsen records a male and female taken at Pung-tung, Corea, in June ; he states that in the female specimen there are two light brown patches on the THECLA. 363 fore wing similar to those in T. spini, ? ab. Iijnceus, and ilicis, ab. cerri, and suggests for this form the name fuha ox fidvofenestrata. Staudinger's types are from Amurland, and he also records this species from Japan ; he has since informed me that on further examination he considers the Japanese specimens to be referable to T. pnini, but adds that he has an undoubted female of T. prunokles from the Altai. Thecla rubicundula. (Plate XXIX. fig. s, $ .) Thecia rubicundula, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 40 (1890). Female. Fuliginous brown. Primaries with a discal reddish-orange suffusion. The tail of secondaries hardly darker, narrowl^v tipped with white ; fringes grey. Under surface brown : outer margin of primaries broadly tinged with reddish orange ; central transverse line white, bordered internally with dark brownish ; there are some indications of a submarginal series of black dots : central transverse line of secondaries white, bordered internally with dark brownish, and bidentated before reaching the abdominal margin ; outer margin broadly bordered with reddish orange, and preceded by a submarginal series of small black spots, edged internally with bluish ; a black spot at anal angle, and one in the second median inter- space ; between these is a faintly blue triangular spot. Expanse 31 millim. Allied to Thecla ornata, but the primaries are paler and the reddish-orange colour does not form a distinct patch ; on the under surface the red markings at once separate it both from T. ornata. Leech, and T. v-allmm, Oberlhiir. It is also closely allied to T. pnmoides, Staudinger, but the direction of the transverse lines on under surface, the greater extent of the red submarginal band on secondaries, and the series of black spots followed by red lunules on primaries will serve to separate T. nibicundula from that species. Appears to be a local and scarce species. I received two female speci- mens (originally supposed to be males) from Chang-yang, Central China, where they were taken in June. Thecla lais, sp. nov. (Plate XXIX. fig. 4, ? .) Female. Tuliginous brown. Primaries have an obscure orange patch on the disc, intersected by the second and third median nervules, the portion below the second nervule least evident. Secondaries have a bright orange band on the outer marginal area towards anal angle : this band is separated into three parts by the submedian nervure and first median nervule. Fringes pale grey-brown, white at the angle of secondaries, and white tijiped with black on each side of the tail, which is black with a whito apex. Under surface grey-brown : primaries have a series of six linear white spots, bordered internally with M^u'ki.sli, fdrming a transverse band : secondaries have a slightly obliqiie central series of five « liite linear spots, edged inwardly with blackish ; submarginal band composed of seven white crescents and two neaily parallel 364 LYCVENID^. bars, the last spot of central series almost touches the sixth crescent ; beyond the submar- ginal band are some velvety-black spots, edged outwardly with white towards costa, and followed by a broad deep fulvous band towards anal angle ; there are three conspicuous spots on the outer portion of this band — one in first median interspace velvety black, a bright bluish one in submedian interspace, and a velvety-black one occupying the whole of the anal lobe ; marginal line black, edged inwardly with white. Expanse 30 millim. One female specimen was taken by a native collector at Wa-ssu-kow in July, at an elevation of 5000 feet. On the upper surface this species resembles T. v-aJbum, Oberthiir, but, apart from the orange band on secondaries, it may be distinguished by the much less conspicuous orange patch on primaries. The ornamentation of the under surface is also similar to that of T. v-album, but the arrangement of the white markings is different, and the blue and black spots on outer margin of secondaries are more distinct ; the tails also are rather shorter and broader. Thecla ornata. (Plate XXIX. fig. 7,d .) Tliecla ornata, Leech, Entamolugist, x.\iii. p. 40 (1890). Male. Primaries blackish, with a large reddish-orange patch on the disc, intersected by the second and third median nervules ; fringes dark grey. Secondaries fuliginous brown, with a short tail at the extremity of the second, and a much longer one at the extremity of the third median nervule ; both are black, tipped with white ; fringes white, tipped with black and preceded by a black line, which towards anal angle is edged internally with whitish. Under surface olivaceous grey ; central transverse line of primaries white, edged internally with black ; submarginal series of black spots bordered with white and increasing in size towards inner margin ; secondaries have a white central line inwardly edged with black, and uniting in the second median interspace with a submarginal line composed of white-edged black spots, and followed by a reddish-orange patch, which is widest between the second and third median nervales, and hardly to be traced beyond the first median branch ; from the abdo- minal margin, above the orange patch, are two short black-edged oblique lines, approximating at their discal extremities ; between the termination of these lines and the juncture of central and submarginal lines is a black-edged white curve ; a black spot at anal angle, between which and one in the second median interspace is a pale blue patch, edged internally with black ; fringes of all the wings olivaceous grey, preceded by a dark line, which is edged in- ternally with white, especially on the secondaries. Female. Fuliginous brown, sometimes without reddish-orange patch. Under surface as in the male. Expanse, S 32-3-1 millim., $ 35 millim. Allied to T. v-album, Oberth., but the reddish-orange patch on upper surface of primaries is more in the centre of wing, and the markings of under surface are of a verv different character. THECLA. 365 Occurs in June and July at Cliang-yang, at an elevation of 6000 feet. It does not appear to be found in AVestern Cliina. Thecla inflammata. Thecla inflammata, Alplieraky, Rom. sur Lep. v. p. 102, pi. v. fig. 3, ? (1889). " A Thecla e.clmia, Fixsen, cui valde affinis, differt statura minore, disco anticarum supra macula fulva magna, macula anali fulva posticarum nulla. Subtus, statura excepta, ab exiinixi, Fixsen, non secerni potest. 5 = 31 mm." {Alplieral-\j, I. c.) Alpheraky states that T. inflammata, of which a single female specimen was taken in July near Hei-H6 in the province of Kan-sou, is smaller than T. eximia, but agrees exactly with that species on the under surface of the wings. On the upper surface, however, it exhibits the follo-sving diiferences : a fulvous patch on disc of primaries which begins a little below the second nervure and finishes above the fourth, being placed as in some female specimens of T. arata, Bremer ; the fulvous spot at anal angle of secondaries which is so distinct in eximia is entirely absent in inflammata. Alpheraky considers that this species may prove to be a local form of T. eximia ; but I think that it agrees better with T. ornata, especially in the character of the tails. Probably these two insects may be specifically identical, but it is not possible to arrive at any decision on this point without comparing the specimens. T. inflammata has nothing to do mth the fulvous- marked f(jrm of T. eximia (var. fixseni) described by me in the present work. Thecla v-album. Thecla v-album, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entora. xi. p. 20, pi. iv. fig. 23, ? (1886) ; Alpheraky, Kom. sur Lep. v. p. 102 (1889) . " Differe de w-album par ses ailes plus arrondies, sa texture plus delicate, la tachc orangee qui orne I'aile superieure en dessus dans les deux sexes et la direction plus arrondie et parallele au bord exterieur de la Ugne blanche qui traverse I'aile superieure en dessous. " En outre, le c? de v-album tend a avoir le dessus des ailes assez largement saupoudre' dun semis e'pais d'atomes oranges." {ObertJiiir, I. c.) This species appears to occur commonly in Western China at Wa-ssu-kow, Ta-chien-lu, and Omei-shan, in June and July, up to an elevation of over 8000 feet. Alpheraky (/. c.) records a female specimen taken by M. Potanine in July 1885, at Ou-pin, which he says is without doubt referable to T. v-album, Oberthiir. 366 LYCENlD.i:. Thecla percomis, sp. nov. (Plate xxix. fig. 5, j .) Male. Erowuisli black. Sexual mark small but distinct. Primaries have a large, somewhat triangular, orange patch on the lower half of the wiug intersected by the median nervules and the submedian nervure. Secondaries have a broad orange band, intersected by the nervules, on the lower half of the submarginal area, and a few blue scales at anal angle. Fringes of the ground-colour. Under surface fuliginous : primaries have an interruijted, oblique, silvery-blue, central line, which terminates on the submedian nervure, in close proximity to the submarginal line ; the latter represented by three linear silvery-blue spots edged outwardly with black : secondaries have an oblique silvery-blue central line, which is indented just below costa, and forms a W before terminating on the abdominal margin ; sub- marginal line composed of a series of silvery-blue crescents, edged outwardly with velvety black, as far as the submedian nervure, from whence it runs parallel with the central line to abdominal margin ; there is an orange band ou the lower half of submarginal area; the anal lobe is velvety black, as also is a spot placed on the margin in first median interspace, the space between this spot and the anal lobe is also black but less intense; marginal line silvery blue, only distinct towards anal angle. Expanse 36 millim. One specimen taken at Omei-shau by a native collector in July, at an elevation of 4000 feet. This species seems very distinct on the upper surface from any Thecla knovs'n to me ; on the under surface, however, it agrees in some respects Avith T. v-albiim, but the ground-colour is darker, the markings are silvery blue in colour, and the central line of primaries is oblique, not curved as in T. v-album. Thecla cenone, sp. nov. (Plate XXIX. figs. 6 d' , 9 ? .) Male. Fuliginous-brown, with a cupreous tinge ; the sexual glandular patch on primaries is small, but well defined. Secondaries have two black spots, bordered internally with fulvous, above anal angle ; a white marginal dash, most distinct towards anal angle. Tails slender, black, narrowly tipped and partially edged with white. Under surface fuliginous grey : the primaries have an oblique white line, formed of five crescents, extending from near costa to first median nervule, and a submarginal series of black spots, externally bordered with whitish, but not well defined towards costa : secondaries have a central white line, interrupted by the nervules and forming a W before reaching the abdominal margin; submarginal series of black spots encircled with whitish, the sixth bordered with fulvous and followed by another black spot placed nearer the margin, the seventh is double, and its lower edge bordered with fulvous ; anal lobe black, with a dark patch powdered with bluish scales above it ; marginal line whitish. Female. Browner than the male ; all the wings have a falvous submarginal band which does not reach tlie costa. Under surface as in the male, but the submarginal spots are better defined ; the white transverse line on primaries runs almost parallel with outer margin as far as the first median, from whence it is angulated inwards to the submedian. The anal extremity of the abdomen is ornamented with a tuft of velvety -black closely compressed hairs. Expanse 37 mUlim. THECLA. 367 Three specimens were taken at a high elevation to the nortli of Ta-chien-lu. T. cenone resembles T. priiid on the under surface, but the white lines are straighter and have a well-formed W before terminating on abdominal margin ; there is much less fulvous colour on marginal area of secondaries, and no trace of this colour on primaries. It also agrees with T. mera in some characters, but the sexual mark on primaries is less conspicuous, and the tails of secondaries are more slender than in either of those species. The only other species of Theda in which I have observed the anal patch of velvety-black hairs referred to above are T. acacice, a species which I believe has not been recorded from Eastern Asia, and T. feivjstrn'mi, recently included by Mr. Baker in the genus. Mr. de Niceville has recently (Butt. Ind. iii.) created the genus ChcHoprocfa for the reception of D. oclata, Hewitsou, the female of which has a large tuft of densely packed pale ochreous-brown hairs at the extremity of abdomen. Excepting that each has this anal tuft of hairs, the three species referred to above have few characters in common. Thecla herzi. Theda Iwrzi, Fixsen, Rom. sur Lt'p. iii. p. 279, pi. xiii. fig. 4 (1887). Thecla phijllodendri, Staudinger, MSS., Elwes, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1881, p. 880. " Corpore fusoo, capitis colore vix obsouriori, palpis supra et extrorsum nigris, intns pills albido- coeruleis, oculis albide circumductis, anteunis nigris, albide annulatis, apice fusco, fomoribus cinereo-coeruleis, tarsis nigris albo-annulatis. " Alls supra fuscis ; postieis linea limbali teniii albide circumductis ; subtus pallidioribus, seriebus punctoruni nigroruni albide cinctis duabus parallelis in area limbali, fasciaque fusca, marginem anteriorem versus linea alba limbali obducta, ciliis fuscis griseseentibus." (FLvsen, I. c.) This species, which Fixsen described from the Corea, has since been met with in various places in Amurland. Graeser (Berl. ent. Zeit. 1888, p. 72), describes the early stages as follows : — " Larva. Velvety uniform dark green, beneath rather paler blue-green ; head shinino- black. Feeds on Pyi-us, and is full-grown iu the middle of June. " Pupa light green, with a series of broad darker violet-brown lozenges on the back. " Imago appears in Jul}'." Distribution. Amurland and Corea. Thecla thalia, sp. nov. (Plate xxx. fig. 15, c? .) Male. Upper surface uniCorm fuliginous brown ; male mark placed as in T. spini, and fairly dis- tinct. Under surface rather paler ; primaries have a black diseoidal spot encircled with 3c2 368 LTCENID.^. whitish ; a central transverse row of seven whitish- edged black spots, the upper four united and the seventh placed inwards ; a submarginal series of six black spots outlined with, whitish ; the secondaries have a black discoidal spot and central and submarginal series of black spots, all are outlined with whitish ; between the submarginal spots and the whitish marginal line is a bright fulvous band towards anal angle. Female. Similar to the male, but the wings are more ample and the spots on under surface are larger. /('s round, rather prominent. " Labial palpi Tather short, projecting but little beyond the forehead; densel}' clothed with short round scales at the sides, with longer ones in front. First joint slightly curved, broadest at the base, slightly compressed at the sides ; second joint scarcely one third the length of the first, oval ; third joint minute, oval, clothed with very small scales, almost hidden beneath the scales of the second joint. " AntenncB rather short, moderately stout, gradually incrassated beyond the middle ; the apex rounded. " Thorax slender, hairy. " ^nto-ror mm(7s subtriangular, generally rounded at the apes, rarely acuminate; the costa much curved at the shoulder ; the inner margin slightly emarginate. Costal nervure rather stout. Subcostal nervure four-branched : the first nervule thrown off about the middle of the cell ; the second just before the end of the cell ; the third nearer to the apex than to the end of the cell. Upper discocellular nervule wanting ; middle discocellular rather shorter than the lower. Upper discoidal nervule united for a greater or less distance to the median nervule. Internal nervule wanting. " Posterior wings mostly broadly obovato, or rounded, sometimes angular. Precostal nervule nearly atrophied. Discoidal nervule sometimes appearing to be a third submedian, at others thrown off exactly where the subcostal nervure branches, sometimes above that point. Discocellular nervule much curved. Abdominal fold broad. " Feet slender. Tarsi long, very spiny. Claws deeply bifid ; the outer tooth mostly more slender and acute than the inner. Paronychia as long as, or longer than, the claws ; sometimes broad, nearly covering the claw, sometimes narrow, lanceolate ; fringed with delicate hairs. Pulvillus jointed, very broad at the end ; about equal in length to the claws. " Abdomen slender, arched, not quite so long as the abdominal margin of the posterior wings. " Larva long, slender, linear, scarcely tapering towards either extremity. " Piqia smooth ; keeled along the back, navicular, somewhat compressed laterally, not tubercu- late at the sides; the head very pointed."' {Douhleday, I. e.) Terias laBta. Terias Iceta, Boisduval, Spec. Gen. Lep. p. 674 (1836) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 10, pi. ii. fig. 10 (1884). Terias jcegeri, Menetries, Cat. Miis. Pctr. Lep. p. 84, pi. li. fig. 1 (1855). Terias bethesba, Janson, Cist. Entom. ii. p. 272 (1878) ; Pryer, 1. e. fig. 11. Terias biformis, Pryer, 1. e. p. 21. Terias subftrvens, Butler, Aim. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) xi. p. 278 (1883). 3 L 426 PAPILIONID.E. " Enverg. 16 a 18 lignea. Cette espjce est bien distincte de toutes celles de genre par ses premieres ailes, dont le bord posterieur est coupe droit, avec le sommet aigu. Dessua des quatre ailcs d'un Jaune gomme-gutte, moins vif que dans Jiecabe, les superieures aj'ant la base un peu saupoudree de noiratre, et une bordure noire, presque aussi large que dans hecabe, commengant en pointe vers la base de la cote, et finissant carrement, une li'jne avant Tangle interne, sans decrire aiicun sinus quadrangulaire ; cette bande s'elargit graduellement au sommet, et est un peu sinuee ct legCTcraeut denticulee interieurement : frange d'un jaune rosatre, aiusi que le bord de la cote. Ailes infeiieures moins arrondies que dans la plupart des especes, tantot san taches, tantot avec un commencement de bordure noiratre sur Tangle externe, et quelquefois avec une rangee de petits points margiuaux noirs. Dessous des premieres ailes jaune, avec les bords anterieur et posterieur d'un jaune roussatre. Dessous des secondes dun jaune roussatre pale, avec deux raies transverses droites, plus obscures, dont Tanterieure longue, situee au milieu de Taile, et la posterieure couite ; la base et le bord anterieur marques de trois ou quatre points obscurs, souvent effaces et a peine visibles." " Bengale (Coll. Boisd.). Sur plus de quarante individus recueiUis a Bombay par feu Polydore Roux, nous n'avons point remarque de difference bien tranchee entre le male et la femelle. " Xous possedons une variete femelle que M. de Haan nous a envoyee comme venant du Japon, qui est un peu plus grande, et chez laqueUe la bordure est divisee par deux ou trois traits jaunatres, obsoletes. Du reste, elle offre tous les caracteres des individus ordiuaires." (Boisduval, I. c.) Var. SUbfervens, Butler. "Nearly allied to T. jcfgeri oi Japan, -^^i lb wbich it agrees on the upper surface ; on the under surface, however, the costa and apex of the primaries, and the entire surface of the secondaries, are of a reddish gravel-colour, deeper even than iu the males of T. lata. Expanse of wings 40-41 millim. •• South Coast, ' Carzodo Island,' S. Corea, Novemhcr 19th. " The above differences are based upon three examples compared with seven of T.jcegeri ; of the latter, however, I have examined about fifty specimens, and never found anything at all approaching T. suhferveiis iu the coloration of the under surface." {Butler, I. c.) Var. bethesba, Janson. ''Male. Above lemon-yellow, the primaries narrowly margined with black on the costa, the apical black band commencing on the costa about one third from the apex, thence obliquely narrowed to about one third across the wing, and then gradually narrowed to the anal angle, the posterior two thirds having three well-marked semicircular emarginations on its inner edge ; secondaries with a very narrow black marginal line slightly dilated anteriorly ; beneath rather paler yellow than above, with fine sparingly scattered black scales, which form two indistinct transverse bands on the secondaries, the extremity of aU the nervures marked with a very small black spot ; the body black above, with pale yellow pubescence ou the thorax, the side of the abdomen yellow with a fine black longitudinal line, the underside and legs pinkish white. " The female is smaller and of a paler yellow than the male, with the wings rather thickly speckled with black, the apical band on the primaries ends abruptly just before the anal angle, and the secondaries have a narrower black margin and a large rather iU-defiiicd black spot at the anterior angle. " Expanse of wings 1 inch 4 lines-1 inch 8 lines. Yokohama. " Allied to T. Icfta, Bdv., but diifers in having the primaries more rounded at the apex, and in its . paler colour and iu the form of its markings." {Janson, 1. c.) TERIAS. 427 T. laia is very commou in Japan and China in the autumn, and appears again after hibernation. The specimens differ from N.W. Himalayan examples, of which I have a long series, in having scarcely any black mark- ings on margins of secondaries, and in the redder tone of under surface. Extreme examples of this form from Japan and South Corea are described by Mr. Butler as T. siibfervens. The late Mr. Henry Pryer (/. c. p. 21) placed T. hefhesha, Janson, as a synonym of T. laia, Boisduval, and merged both in T. biformis, Pryer, giving the foiloAving reasons for doing so : — " I have, in conjunction with Mr. Nawa, of Gifu, made an extremely interesting and important discovery. It is that T. hethesha is the summer form, and T. lata the winter form, of one and the same species. This was quite unexpected. Both Mr. Nawa and myself saw females of T. hefhesha depositing their eggs on Cassia mimosoides. From these eggs we reared many specimens of T. lata, but not a single individual bearing the most remote resemblance to the parent form of hethesha. I have, however, reared a single specimen from these hethesha ova which strongly resembles the hecahe form of T. multiformis, and it is therefore probably a hybrid. The outline of the wing of lata is pointed, that of hethesha rounded, and the former is a much larger insect than the latter. I have proposed the name of T. hiformis to unite these two forms. The form lata is only seven days in the pupa, but lives for eight months in the imago state, during which time it hibernates for from four to five months. I previously stated that lata appears from March to November ; this I now see is an error, the reverse being nearer the truth. It appears last in the year in November-December, and emerges from its hibernation first in March. The lata form emerges during the first Aveek of September, or, exceptionally, during the last fcAV days of August, from ova laid by the hethesha form in August, taking a remarkably short time to complete its metamorphosis. The lata form does not commence to hibernate before November, and continues in hibernation until the first warm days in March awaken it. Specimens may be seen flying about until May, when the females deposit their ova which produce the hethesha form in July." In the autumn of 1887 I was in South Kashmir, where I met with lata and a form which I am quite unable to separate from hethesha. Probably the hethesha-Vike specimens were late examples of the summer brood of lata, . 3l2 428 PAPILIONID/E. whilst those of the typical form of the species may have been early examples of the autumn brood. This species is common in China, Japan, Southern Corea, and the Hima- layas, occurring up to 9000 feet. Terias hecabe. Papilio hecabe, Linnaeus, Syst. Nat. i. 2, p. 703 (170"). Terias hecabe, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 118, pi. xlv. figs. la,b,c (1881) ; Distant, Rliop. Malay, p. 304, pi. xxvi. fig. 19 »ortliern China. ajaka, Moore ; North-west Himalayas (the spring form, which is smaller and less heavily marked with black, is unnamed). Distribution. Amurland, Askold, Corea, Japan, North and Central China, Sikkim, N.W. Himalayas. Pieris extensa. (Plates XXXVI. figs. 4 ore. " White. Male. Fore wing with a transverse quadrate black spot at end of discoidal cell ; apex and submarginally before it with a series of ill-defined blackish spots. Underside dull white ; fore wing as above ; hind wing with all the nervurcs broadl)' margined with pale greenish brown, with a submargiual series of lanceolate marks of the same colour, the intermarginal spaces being white. 3p2 460 PAPILIOXID^. " Femide. Base of -wings, nervures, and exterior margin of hind wing suffused with greenish grey. Fore wing with the discoidal, black, transversely quadrate spot large, the black marginal and submarginal band broad, the interspaces forming a series of white outwardly pointed spots. Hind wing with a similar submarginal, apically black, zigzag band, the intermarginal space forming a series of white inwardly pointed spots. "Expanse, d li inch, 5 ]| inch." {Moore, I. c.) My collectors did not meet vni\\ this insect in any part of China that they visited, but M. Potanine obtained specimens in April at Sinine, Province of Kansou. In referring to these specimens, Alplieraky says that they are inter- mediate between his var. orientalis * from Kuldja and chrysidice, Herr.-SchafF. " The female is smaller, but does not otherwise differ from orientalis ; but the male is at once distinguished by its more slender form and the absence of the black spot above first nervure of primaries . Probably it is identical with Jcalora, Moore, at least the figm-e of male kalora is exactly like the male from Sinine, and both .approach var. chrysidice from Asia Minor." Var. kalora, Moore, is one of the commonest of the Pieriuae met with between 10,000 and 16,000 feet in the North-west Himalayas. It differs only from typical S. callidice in the darker green coloration of the under smface and in the female being somewhat more suffused with darker scales on the upper surface. The size of the black spot at the termination of the cell is a variable character both among European and Indian examples, and so also are the dark apical markings of the male. I received male specimens from M. Grum-Grshimailo labelled Pieris chry- sidice, var. kalora, from Amdo. They differ from aU my North-west Himalayan examples in having a larger and more quadrate black spot at end of the cell distinctly bisected with white, and in having one or sometimes two additional spots in the submarginal series of primaries towards inner margin. On the under surface the brownish-green markings of secondaries are much reduced in size, and the interstices are pure white. Genus METAPORTA. Metaporia, Butler, Cist. Entom. i. p. 51 (1870). " Fore wings subpyriform : second subcostal not so near end of cell as in Aporia ; upper discocellular oblique, nearly as long as lower, which is perpendicular and feebly arched ; second and third median branches rather near together." * Horte Soc. Eut. Eoss. 1881, p. 359. METAPORIA, 461 " Hind u'ings subpyriform ; the cell broader, less pointed ; discocellulars of equal length, the upper oblique, the lower less so. " Bochj moderately hairy ; palpi slender, hairy beneath ; anteiiuie with distinct flattened club. " Type 31. cigaiJwn, Gray." (Butler, I. c.) Metaporia largeteaui. (Plate XXXVI. fig. 9, ? var.) Pieris largeteaui, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. vi. p. 12, pi. vii. fig. 1 (1881). " Voisine de phi-y.re, Boisduval ; a peu pres de memo taille, et blanche en dessus et en dessous. Comme phryxc, la Pieris lartjeteaui a la base des ailes inferieures eu dessous marque'e d'une tache orangee, qu'on apercjoit en dessus par transparence ; les nervures sout dcrites en noir, finement d'abord ; puis lo trait noir s'epaissifc a mesure que les nervures se rapprochent du bord exterieur qui se trouve ainsi orne d'une serie de taohes en dessus cuneiformes et en dessous moins larges au contact du bord exterieur, mais prolongees plus loin jusque vers la base par un trait a peu pres aussi epais sur chaque nervure. Une ligne noiratre sinueuse, parallele au bord exterieur, descend du bord costal de I'aile suporieure jusque pros du bord anal des inferieures, au dela de la cellule discoVdale. " L'abdomen est blano ; les pattes et les antennes sont noires. Un caractere qui distingue bien nettement largeteaui d& pJiri/xe et de la variete obscure de cotte espece {agatJwii, Gray), c'est que la cellule discoVdale des quatre ailes est toujours a son extremite fortement empatee de noir dans j)^)-i/.re et agathon, tandis que dans Jargeteaui, aus ailes inferieures, la cellule est simplement dessinee par un trait noir. Aux superieures, dans largeteaui, la cellule est fermce par un trait un peu plus cpais qu'aux inferieures, mais ce trait n'a aucun rapport avec la grosse tache carree qu'on remarque dans phryxe et agathon. Enfin, la bande noire transverse dans largeteaui ne tend pas a former au contact des nervures cette dilatation particuliere qu'on remarque dans phryxe. " Je suis heureus de de'dier cette belle Pieris a JI. I'abbe Largeteau, qui I'a prise ;i Kouy-Tcheou, et I'a envoyee a M. I'abbe Mege, de qui je tiens le bel exemplaire cJ que j'ai deerit ci-dessus." {Oberthur, I. c.) Male. White, aU the veins black ; the nervules are bordered with black increasing in width on outer margins, but more especially so on the primaries ; all the wings are traversed by a dusky or blackish submarginal band, and there is a smaU. dull yellow spot at the base of the secondaries. Under surface as above, but the black borders of the nervules are more uniform in width, their expansion on the outer margin being more gradual ; the transverse band is better defined and the yellow spot at base of secondaries is larger and brighter. Female. Larger than the male ; the black markings are less intense and more diffuse, and there is always a distinct black transverse band on all the wings ; the ground-colour is not nearly so white as in the male, and in some specimens it is distinctly yellow. In other specimens a strong tendency f o melanism is exhibited ; an extreme example of this form of aberration is figured (Plate XXXVI. fig. 9, 2 ). Expanse, d 70-102 millim., $ 86-110 millim. The foregoiug description of the male has been made from a specimen which agrees exactly with Oberthiir's figure. I have also given a description of the female, which sex has hitherto been undescribed. The black borders of the nervules vary considerably in width. In some 462 PAPILIONID^. examples they are so broad that they give the outer half of the wings the appearance of being black marked with white lanceolate streaks in the nervular interspaces ; in other specimens the nervules of secondaries are not bordered with black at all. Sometimes the transverse band is entirely absent in the male. In several specimens of the female and a few examples of the male the under surface of secondaries is yellow. The melanic specimen figured was taken at Chang-yang. Judging from the enormous number of specimens that T have received 3£. largeteaui would seem to be the most abundant member of the Pierinae occurring in Central and Western China at moderate elevations. From M. phryxe, Boisduval, it may be distinguished by the absence of the large black spot at end of the cell of primaries, and by the diff'erent character of the transverse band. Metaporia oberthuri. (Plate XXXVI. fig. l,s .) Pieris oberthuri, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 46 (1890) ; Obertliiir, Etud. d'Entom. xvi. p. 5, pi. i. fig. 2 (1892). Mali'. Wliite. Primaries : costa bordered with black ; nervules edged ou each side with black, expanding towards tlie outer margin, which appears in consequence to be deeply bordered. Secondaries black at outer angle and halfway along the costa; nervules bordered with black, and there are streaks of the same colour in the interspaces, pointed towards outer margin and bifurcated at their inner end. Under surface similar to above, but the streaks in interspaces of secondaries are connected with the borders of nervules ; a deep yellow patch at base of secondaries. Female. The black borders of nervules of primaries are not quite so broad as in the male, but otherwise there is no difference in the markings of the sexes. Expanse, S 80 millim., $ 92 millim. In one specimen the whole of the primaries is black with the exception of the discoidal ceU, a broad patch from the base between the median nervure and inner margin, intersected by the submedian and a curved series of five oblong spots beyond the middle of the wing. A fine series taken in May and June, at Chang-yang, Central Chiua, and Omei-shan, Western China. Allied to M. acnva, Oberth., but difi"ering therefrom in the character of the marginal borders. Metaporia (Pieris) hastata, Oberthiir (Etud. d'Ent. xvi. p. 5, pi. i. fig. G), from Yunnan, is very closely allied to M. oberthuri on the upper surface, but hardly separable from M. lotis on the under surface. It appears to be a METAPORIA. 463 good species, but probably local as it was not met with by my collectors in any part of China visited by them. Metaporia lotis. (Plate XXXVI. fig. 6, d .) Pieris lotis. Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 192 (1890). Black witli -white markings ; these on the primaries are very similar to M. larraldei (Oherth. Etud. d'Eiitom. ii. p. 19, pi. i. fig. 2 a, J) ; the basal two thirds of secondaries are white, with a broad patch of black scales at the base and extending along the median nervure ; there are no white or whitish submarginal spots on either primaries or secondaries, but the latter have a series of more or less lunulated spots on the outer margin. Under surface of primaries also similar to M. larraldei as regards the white markings, hut the costa and apical third arc pale yellowish ; the latter is intersected by the black nervules and some thin black bifurcated streaks between them : secondaries are pale yellowish ; neuration black, a bifurcated black streak in each nervular interspace. As in the same sex of M, larraldei, the female lias the white markings suffused with greenish yellow. Expanse, S 7-1 milhm., 5 78 milHm. Four male specimens taken in a marsh near Wa-shan, June ; and two examples of each sex at Ta-chicn-lu, July. I have also received it from Pu-tsu-fong and Moupin. Metaporia acraea. Pieris acrxa, Oberthiir, Bull. Soc. Eat. Fr. 1885, p. ccxxvi ; Etud. d'Entom. xi. p. 15, pi. ii. fig. 7 (1886). " Eappelle beaucoup, par la taille et la formo allongee de ses ailes, VAcraa terjjsicliora, Linne, et se i^lace, a cause de la disposition dea dessins et des taches dont elle est ornee, dans le groupe de soracta, arjathon, larraldei, &c., mais ne peut etre confondue avec aucune autre Pieris, tant ses ailcs longucs et etroites lui impriment un caractere particulier. " En dessus, le fond des ailes est jaunatre clair. Aux ailes superieures, les dessins brun-noir sont, comme disposition, presque les memes que dans larraldei § mais le contour interiour en est beaucoup moins arrondi et plus aigu. Aux ailes inferieures, la bordure brun-noir n'esfc pas traversee au milieu par un rang de taches intra-nervurales, comme dans larraldei. Cette bordure, chez le Pieris acrcea, n'est eclairoie de blanchatre qu'au contact du bord exterieur. " Le dessous differe du dessus parce que toutes les parties brun-noir sont attenuees et lavees de jaune, surtout au bord des superieures et des inferieures, qui sont elles-memes plus lavees de jaunatre que les superieures et ornees d'une macule orangee siluee dans I'espace iiervural basilaire. Les nervures, en dessous, sont finement ecrites en noir. " Les antennes, le corps et les pattes sont noiratres. Le corps est reconvert d'une pilosite ct d'un semis d'atomes jaunatres." (Ohertliur, I. c.) Oberthiir states that he received this species from M. Biet, but does not mention the locality in which it was taken. My collectors did not meet with it in any part of China which they visited. 464 PAPILIOXID.E, Metaporia larraldei. P/eris larraldei, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entoin. ii. p. 19, pi. i. fig. 2 a, b (1876). Pieris larraldei, var. melania, Oberthiir, op. cit. xvi. p. 5, pi. i. fig. 5 (189.2). Pieris larraldei, var. nutans, Oberthiir, 1. c. p. 6, pi. i. fig. 3. " Les aUes sont H'xm. blane iin peu verdatre, avec tout le bord exterieur largement lave de noir brim. Cette teinte uoire, qui envahit les ailes superieures jusqu' au tiers de la cellule discoidale, est coupee par deux rangees de macules blanches, doiit I'une suit le bord exterieur de I'aile ; I'autre qui n'est d'abord pour aiusi dire qu'une seule tache divisee par les nervures, descend juste au-dessus de la cloison do la cellule discoidale et se relie a la partie blanche partant de la base et que divisent aussi les nervures. "Les aUes inferieures sont egalement bordees de noir; une serie de taches blanches, dont le sommet est aigu, penetre entre les nervures, vers le bord exterieur; ces taches blanches qui partent de la base memo de I'aile, sont eUcs-inemes divisees par une bande noiratre parallele a la frange, plus foncee a son point de depart et finissant en pupUlation grisatre un peu avant d'arriver a Tangle anal. " Le dessous reprodtdt le dessus ; mais le noir est moins veloute, moins fence et un peu glace. Les taches blanches sont plus nettement decoupees sur le noir, et a I'aile iuferieure, ainsi qu'au sommet de I'aile superieure, elles sont lavees de jaune ; les nervures sont toutes accompagnees d'un lisere noir assez large a I'aile iuferieure. La tache basilaire a I'aile iuferieure est d'un jaune orange vif. " Les antenncs sont noires ; I'abdomen blanc en dessous et noir en dessus, mais presque entiere- ment couvert de pupUlations blanches. " La femeUe dilfere du male par une plus grande taille et la coulour noire moins foncee." (Oberthiir, Etud. ii.) Male. Outer half of primaries black ; basal half white, separated into four patches by the black submedian nervure, median nervure, and first branch ; there is a short white band composed of three elongate spots from just beyond the middle of the costa and a submarginal series of white spots. Secondaries black with the discoidal cell and the abdominal margin white, a white longitudinal streak from base of costa to the first subcostal nervule and in each nervular interspace there is a long, broad, white streak terminating outwardly in an obtuse point and divided by a transverse band of the ground-colour. Under surface : primaries black marked with white as foUows : — a broad stripe in the discoidal cell, another below in the submedian interspace, and an oblong spot in the first median fork ; a curved series of seven elongate spots, three of these are near the costa and close together, two at outer angle also contiguous, and one in each median interspace ; there are five yellowish tinged streaks on apical area ; secondaries are white, more or less tinged with yellowish and with a yellow patch at the base ; neuration black, broadly bordered with the same colour and expanding on the outer margin ; there is a broad curved black transverse band beyond the middle of the wing. Femcde. Fuliginous with 3-ellowish markings ; there is rarely more than one submarginal spot on the primaries and this is placed in second median interspace, but sometimes there is a double spot at iuner angle ; the secondaries have four submarginal spots representing the outer portions of the streaks seen in the male. Under surface of primaries as in the male ; the secondaries are yellow. Expanse, S 73-87 millim., 5 7S-S5 millira. METAPOKIA. 465 Tar. melania) ObertLUr. " A ilou-Pin, d'ou proviennent les esemplaires qui out scrvi de t3-[io a la description ct a la figure que j'ai publiccs dans la ir livraison des ' Etudes d'Entomo- logie,' la Pieris larraldei est d'un as])ect bien different de la forme de Ta-Tsien-Lou. Celle-ci est beaucoup plus obscure ; les taches blanches sent retre'cies par Tenvabissemeuts des parties uoires. En outre, la taille est generaleinent plus grande. De plus, la coloration des ailcs inferieures en dessous est plus jaune. " Ma collection renferme sept tivs beaux males de Ta-Tsien-Lou. lis ne varient presque pas entre cux." (Oherthur, Etud. xvi.) Var. nutans, OberthUr. " Ta-pin-tze (Yunnan), E. P. Ddavay. " Les ailes superieures en dessus sont a pen pres semblables a celles de hasluta ; mais les inferieures sont bien plus rembrunies. " C'est par le dessous des ailes inferieures, ou les taches jaunes sont tantot plus daires et tantiit plus fonce'es, que luttatis est bien distincte. " L'espace basilaire est jaune orange, au lieu d'etre jaune citron comme ohez larraldei et hastiita ; la premiere tache subbasilaire costale est blanchatre ; la tache allongee intranervurale, superieure a la grande tache eellulaire, est jaune citron vif, tandis que la tache cellulaire est jaune nankin ; les taches du bord anal sont jaune nankin pale ; les taches subraarginales sont jaune citron legereraent orange, et les cinq taches qui entourent les cellules sont, comme la tache cellulaire, d'une teinte jaune jilus claire. " En outre, la forme de toutes ces taches jaunatres est moins aigue que dans les formes voisines." (Oherthiir, I. c) In typical M. larraldei the white colour preponderates on all the mngs, but in several examples the outer area of the wings is almost devoid of white markings (var. melania, Oberthiir), and in some specimens from Ta-chien- lu the outer third is entirely black. M. Oberthiir considers melania to be a form of M. larraldei peculiar to the neighbourhood of Ta-chien-lu. I received, however, both it and the type from Moupin as Avell as from Ta- chien-lu, and among the other specimens sent from each locality there were intergrades connecting the two forms. None of my specimens of M. larraldei agree with Oberthiir's var. nutans from Yunnan, which he compares with his P. hastata from the same locality, pointing out that the markings on the upper surface are deeper than in that species, whilst he says that nutans differs principally from the type of larraldei in the deeper yellow of the under surface of the secondaries. Occurs commonly in May and June at Moupin, Ta-chien-lu, Wa-shan, Wa-ssu-kow, and Chia-kou-ho in Western China. Metaporia goutellei. Pieris gouteUti, Oberthiir, Etud. crEntom. xi. p. 15, pi. ii. fig. 11 (1886). "Blanc jaunatre en dessus, avcc toutes les nervures empatees de noir, surtout vers le bord 3q 4GG PAPILIOXID.E. exterieur des superieures. Les ailcs sont traversees par une bande noire extraeellulaire, parallele au bord extt'rieur, composc'e de traits cuneiformes iutranervuraux dirigeant leur pointe vers le bord exterieur at tres aigus. Ces traits cuneiformes ressortent sur une partie blanche avant une forme analogue, mais plus attenuee. Le dessous reproduit le dessus ; mais avec cette difference que tons les traits noirs, aussi bien ceux des nervures que ceux des cuneiformes de la ligue transversale. sont plus nettement ecrits, moins erapates, et qu'enfiu Tapes des superieures et toute la surface des inferieures soiit laves de jaune nankin. " Les antennes el le corps sont noirs, sauf le dessous de Tubdomen qui est blanchatre. " La Piei-is goiitellei vient de Tse-Kou." (Oberthiir, 1. c.) Mah. White with black neuration. Primaries have a large black spot at the end of the diseoidal cell ; submarginal band black, generally well defined and more or less obscuring a series of intense black sagittate marks ; the black borders of the nervules increase in width as they approach the outer margin ; the submedian interspace is transversely divided by a fine blackish line which expands into a triangular blotch on outer margin. Secondaries have a submarginal series of fine black sagittate marks. Fringes dark grey preceded by a black line. Under surface : costa and neuration of primaiies black, apical area yeUow, a submarginal series of black arrow-heads ; secondaries yellow with black sagittate marks as above. Female with the markings as in the male but the primaries are suffused with blackish. Expanse G5-70 millim. Occurs at Ta-cliien-lu aud Wa-ssu-kow iu Western Chiua. The male is t'aiily common but the female is exceedingl^y rare. ^I. Oberthiir s description applies only to the male. Metaporia delavayi, Pieris delavayi, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xiii. p. 37, pi. is tig. 97 (1890). " Yunnan {R. P. Ddavaij). " Appartient au group de soracta ; plus grande, avec le sommet des ailes superieures un peu plus arxondi. Le dessus des ailes est blane, avec Tapex pupille de noir, ainsi que I'extremite de la cellule et des nervures des superieures. " En dessous I'apex des superieures et la face des inferieures est jaune nankin ; les nervures des inferieures surtout sont empatees de noiratre ardoise ; la cellule contient une fourche dont les deux branches se fondent dans une tache noiratre qui s'etend des deux cotes de la nervure fermant la cellule. Un feston de croissants dont le sommet regarde vers la cellule et ren- contre les nervures, s'appuie, au moyen de traits noiratres, sur le bord externe des ailes. "La contexture des ailes est mince et delicate. "Les antennes et le corps sont noirs en dessus ; les cotes de la poitriue en dessous sont converts de polls blancs et le dessous de Tabdomen est blanc." Male. "White, neuration blackish. Primaries have a black bar at end of diseoidal cell aud a black patch at apex. Under surface of secondaries creamy yellow ; at the end of the diseoidal cell, which contains a black bifurcate ^ein-like streak, there is a black bar, and beyond the middle the wing is traversed by a chain of dusky Y-like marks, the leg of each Y being continued to the outer margin ; the apical area of primaries is creamy yellow, there is a black bar at the end of the cell and a short black dash from costa just beyond. Expanse (J7-S5 millim. METAPOEIA. — APOIIIA. 467 This species, -which bears a superficial resemblance to a gigantic Ajm'ia soracta, Moore, is fairly common at Wa-shan, Pu-tsu-fong, Chia-kou-ho, and How-kow in Western China. My collectors, however, failed to meet with the female. Genus APORIA. Aporia, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmett. (1816). Pontia, Fabricius, Butler, Cist. Eutom. i. p. 50 (1870). " Front wings subtriangular or subpyriform ; second subcostal emitted close to end of cell ; disco- cellulars more or less oblique and varying in relative length ; median branches generally emitted at nearly equal distances from each other. " //jnrf wings pyrif orm ; ccU more elongate than in preceding genus [Belcnois, Hiihii.']; disco- cellulars oblique, the upper nearly equal to lower in type ; the same also applies to the distance between median branches. " Palpi densely hairy. Antennse -with compressed club ; abdomen without anal hooks. Type A. craitegi." {Butler, I. c.) Aporia dubernardi. (Plate XXXVI. fig. 8, ? .) Pieris dubernardi, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Eutom. is. p. 13, pi. i. fig. 6 (1884). " Ailes blanches avec le herd costal des supL'rieures noir, ainsi que I'apex et le bord esterne, le long duquel les parties noires, outre qu'elles sont plus foncees au voisiaage de chaque nervure, ferment une sorte do feston dont la partie la plus saillante joint la nervure, tandis que la plus creuse se trouve au millieu de I'espace intranervural. La cellule discoidalo est empatee de noir. Les cinquieme et sixieme espaees intrauervurau.x contiennent, entre la cellule discoVdale et le bord exterieur, une tache noire plus grosse dans le cinquieme. " Le bord extcrne des inferieures est lisere finement de noir ; le contact des nervures et du bord externa est marque d'une petite tache triangulaire noiratre et les espaees intranervuraux, entre la cellule discoidale et le bord externe, sont marques de taches noires plus ou moins accentuees, mais qui paraissent surtout dans les espaees premier, deuxieme et quatrieme, parallelement au bord externe. La base des ailes est marquee de noiratre. " En dessous lea ailes superieures sont blanches avec Tapex jaunatre, et les ailes inferieures jaune canari et nankin, notamment le long du bord externe. L'espace basilaire est jaune orange. Aux quatre ailes, les nervures sont empate'es de noir, mais surtout aux inferieurs. Les taches noires intranervurales, paralleles au bord externe, sont reproduites et ferment aux inferieures, dans I'empatement nervural, comme une ligne reguliere. " Les antennes sont annelces et comme tressees de blanc et de noir, ce que la figure dessinee par M. d'Apreval ne represente malbeureusement pas. Le voisinage du corps est assez velu, ainsi que la surface de Taile inferieure en dessous, surtout pres do la base. " Dc'couverte a Tsckou par M. I'abbe Dubernard." (Oberthiir, I. c.) Male. White, venation blackish. Primaries have a triangular black mark on the costa which unites -with a heavy black bar at the end of the discoidal cell ; there is an elongate black spot on the disc intersected by the second median ner-vule, and this is generally connected with the bar at end of ccU by a diffuse black streak from its upper edge along the third median 3q2 468 PAPILIOXID.E. nervule ; there is a series of triangular black spots on outer margin placed on the nervules, their bases united and the apical ones more or less confluent. Secondaries have a black bar at end of cell, a submarginal series of black spots extending from costa to second median interspace and a series of small triangular black spots on outer margin, placed on the nervules and united bj' a black marginal line. Fringes of primaries black except towards inner angle, where they are greyish as are those of secondaries. Under surface : venation broadly black ; apex of primaries yellow ; secondaries yellow, the area beyond the blackish submarginal band and also the abdominal margin paler ; there is a patch of deeper yellow at the base of costa, and one below median nervure. Female. Black markings more pronounced; all the wings are traversed by a black band and are suffused with black on the basal area. Under surface similar to that of the male but the secondaries are rather whiter. Expanse, (S 70 millim., J OS millira. The female of P. dubernardi, which has not been previously described, appears to be scarce, but the male seems to be common from May to July at high elevations in the neighbourhood of Ta-chien-lu, Ni-tou, Wa-ssu-kow, and Chow-pin-sa, Western China. M. Oberthiir's type vpas from Tsekou. Referring to this species, Mr. Elwes says, in his " Catalogue of the Lepido- ptera of Sikkim " (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 415) : — " This species is only kno\vn to me from some eight or nine specimens v^^hich were brought by a native employed by the late Capt. Harman, R.E., in surveying the Thibetan frontier, and may not occur on this side of the passes." Aporia davidis. (Plate XXXVI. figs, l ? , 3 var.) Pieris davidis, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. ii. p. 18, pi. i. fig. 5, (^ (1876) ; Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 57, ? (June 1891). Pieris davidis, var. venata, Leech, 1. c. p. 58. Pieris davidina, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xv. p. 8, pi. iii. fig. 20 (July uec June, 1891). "En dessous, les ailes superieures sont blanches, avec le sommet lave d'un peu de jauno plus on moins nankin ou canari. Les nervures sont noires, sur un trait brun plus ou moins large. Des atomes noirs sont saupoudres dans I'interieur de la cellule discoVdale et ga et la entre les nervures. Les ailes inferieures sont jaune paiUe ou jaune vif, avec toutes les nervures assez largement empatees de brun ou de noir ardoise. Dans Finterieur de la cellule discoVdale sont meme un ou deux traits longitudinaux de la couleur de ceux qui bordent les nervures. La frange, les antennes, les pattea sont noires. Je possede Dependant un exemplaire ou la frange brune a la base est ensuite blanchatre." {Oherthib; I. c.) Male. White with the venation blackish. Primaries black at the base ; submarginal band broad, black, and not continued beyond the first median nervule. Secondaries black at the base and along the median nervure as far as the first branch ; there is sometimes a black spot at outer angle. Fringe pale greyish preceded on all the wings by a fine black line. Under surface : the neuration is more broadly black than above ; primaries are tinged with pale APORIA. 469 yellow at the apex, and the secondaries are entirel}' of this colour with a patch of darker yellow at the base of costa and below the median nervure. Female. Primaries almost entirely black, suffused about the disc with greyish scales ; there is a series of white blotches along the outer margin and also white longitudinal patches at the extremity of the cell, the first being situated near the costa ; in other respects the female does not differ from the male, except in size. Expanse, c? 58-68 millim., ? 65 millim. I have only one example of the female. It was taken with males at an elevation of over SOOO feet at Ta-chien-lu in June. Var. Venata, Leech. (Plate XXXVI. fig. 3, 2 .) Except that the black subraarginal band of primaries is often continued to the submedian nervure, the nude agrees on the upper surface with typical A. davidis; the female is less suffused with black. On the under surface, in both sexes, the secondaries and the tips of primaries are rich lemon-yellow and the venation is broadly bordered with black: the fringes arc usually black, but in some specimens they are not darker than in typical A. davidis. Expanse, (S 69 millim., J 55 millim. This form, which at first sight seems to be a distinct species, occurs in the same localities as typical A. davidis, and is probably a seasonal variety. In one large male specimen from Chow-pin-sa there are two black nerve-like streaks in the discoidal cell of each wing and a similar one in the submedian interspace of primaries ; these streaks are visible on both surfaces, but are most distinct above ; the apical area of primaries is thickly dusted a^ ith blackish. Var. venata is identical with F. davidina, Oberthiir, of which the following is the original description : — " En dessous, les ailes superieures de davidina sent plus empatees de noir vers le bord exterieur, et les nervures des inferieures sent egalement plus largement noircies au contact du bord exterieur. " Le meme empatement melanien se remarque en dessous ; mais I'apex et la face tout enticTe des ailes inferieures y sent lavees de jaur.o canari asscz vif, au lieu do jaune nankin pale ; de jslus Tempatement nervural est d'un noir ardoise tendant plutot a I'indigo bleuatre qu'au brun sur les ailes inferieures, alors que la nuance reste brun noir aux superieures. Pres de la base des ailes inferieures et assez loin vers le milieu des ailes, il y a une jnlosito bltmchatre rela- tivement longue et cpaisse. " La frange dans davidina est noire : elle est blanche dans davidis, sauf en remontant vers Tangle apical des ailes superieures ou ello tend a noircir." {Oherthiir, I. c.) Occurs at Ta-chien-lu, Omei-shan, Ni-tou, and Chow-pin-sa, ahvays at high elevations. Aporia procris. (Plate XXXIII. fig. 10, d .) Aporia procris, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 191 (1890). Pieris halisca, Obertliilr, Etiul. d'Eutom. xv. p. 7, pi. iii. fig. 23 (1891). 470 PAPILI0X1D.5:. Male. Yellowish white, with the neuration black and conspicuous ; submarginal line of primaries dentate, extending to first median nervule : on the secondaries there are indications of bifurcated streaks between the nervules. Under surface of primaries whitish, costa and apex yellowish ; secondaries j-ellow, with a patch of orange at base ; neuration and lines as above. Expanse 25 millim. Allied to A. soracta, Moore, but differs therefrom iu colour aud in the absence of black patch beyond discoidal cell. It is perhaps most readily dis- tinguished by the black neuration. Fresh specimens are more brightly tinted with yellow than worn examples. Appears to be a very rare species ; I have only received six specimens from Ta-chien-lu and two from Ni-tou. These are all males and were taken iu July at a considerable elevation. M. Oberthiir also describes a male specimen of this species from Ta-chien-lu, under the name Pieris halisca, and compares it with P. leucodice, Eversmann, but I consider it is more nearly allied to A. soracta, Moore. Aporia martineti. Pieris martineti, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. ix. p. 12, pi. i. fig, 5, ^ (1889-), xiii. p. 38, pi. ix. fig. 98, ? (1890). Pieris martineti, var. kreitneri, Frivaldsky, Term. Fiiz. x. p. 39, pi. iv. fig. 2 (1886). " Voisine A'hippia ; mais tout a. fait distincte par la forme plus etroite dos ailes, la couleur blanche en dessus plus opaque et plus vive, les traits nervuraux noirs plus nets et la nervulation, notamment en ce qui eoncerne la direction et la position comparative des deux premiers rameaux nervuraux de Taile infurieure et la forme de la cellule diseoidale. •' En dessous, la Pieris martineti a, comme en dessus, toutes les couleurs, blanche de Faile superieure, jaune de I'aile inferieure et noire des nervures bien vives et nettes. L'apex des ailes supe- rieures est jaune cauari et la teinte jaune des inferieures n'est pas un lavis uuiforme ; mais dans la cellule diseoidale et un pen au-dcssus du bord cxterne, on remarque des eolaircies d'un nankin pale. " Les antennes sont noires ; le corps et les pattes sont assez velus, noirs avcc des touffes de polls jaunatres." (Ohertliiir, Etud. ix.) '■ Les femelles des Pieris bieti et martineti sont tres differentes entre elles. Bieti femeUe a les ailes transparentes et les nervures ne sont pas sensiblement empatees de noir, tandis que martineti femeUe a le fond des ailes plus opaque, blanc ou jaunatre, avec les nervures tres largement empatees de gris noiratre. L'individu figure dans cat ouvrage a ete envoje de Yunnan par M. le E. P. Delavay. " La Pieris bieti se trouve aussi au Yunnan. EUe y est blanche et plus grande qu'a Ta-Tsien- Loii. Le type de Bathang est aussi clair, mais moins grand." (Oberthiir, Etud. xiii.) Male. Resembles the same sex of A. hippia, but all the wings, especially the secondaries, are black at the base ; the spot at end of discoidal cell of primaries is narrower and more intensely black ; the black borders of the nervules commence farther from the outer APOEIA. 471 margin and increase in width more gradually; the submediau iiervure is straighter. Fringes black. On the under surface the apical area and costa of primaries are tinged with yellow ; the secondaries are yellow marked with whitish at the base of the costal nervure, along upper portion of discoidal cell, and between some of the uervules ; the venation is heavily bordered v\ith black. Body and legs very black. Female well clothed with scales on all the wings. "White, sometimes tinged with yellowish ; the veins are broadly bordered with black. Under surface similar to that of the male, but the veins of primaries are bordered with black throughout their length, and the white markings on secondaries are more clearly defined. Expanse 60-63 millim. Both sexes occur, uot uncommouly, at high elevations in June and July at Ta-chien-lu, Western China. Oberthiir figures a female from Yunnan and Frivaldsky describes and figiu-es var. kreitneri from Koko-noor. Aporia hippia. (Plate XXXVI. fig. 2, var.) Pieris hippia, Bremer, Bull. Acad. Pet. ill. p. 464 (1861) ; Lep. Ost-Sib. p. 7, pi. iii. lig. 1 (1864). Aporia hippia, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 67 (1884). Leuconea cratagioides, Lucas, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr, 1865, p. 503, pi. xi. fig. 11. Leuconea hippia, Lucas, op. cit. 1867, p. v. Pieris bieti^ Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. ix. p. 12, pi. i. figs. 7 (?, 8 ? (1884). " Alae albas, nigro nervosoB ; posticiB subtus flavescentes, macula basali fiava. 55-70 miUim.'' {Bmner, I. c.) " Slightly smaller than ^J. (•/•rt^ip^'i. The hind wings are straighter and more oblong. The fore wings have the nervures shaded with black ; beneath, the apices are tinted with yellowish. The hind wings resemble those of cmUfgi above, but beneath they have the nervures very much extended, or shaded with black ; at the base is a patch of bright orange-yellow." {Lang, I. c.) Graeser(Berl. ent. Zeit. 1888, p. 66) states that he found larvaj of^. hipj)ia commonly in webs on all the bushes of Berberis sinensis and B. amurensis in the neighbourhood of Vladivostock. He writes : — " The larvae were sent by me in large numbers to Europe during the winters of 1884 and 1885 and were there bred. I need not give any description as the larva can easily be distinguished. Its life-history is exactly like that of A. cmt(£(ji and passes the winter in the same way, several together in a close web." Var. bieti. " Du group de soracta, davidia, hippia, &c. TaiUo de somcta ; ailes du male d'un blanc un peu jaunatre en dessus avec les nervures des superieures tres accentuees et empatees d'un trait bruu noiriitre, large surtout au voisinage du bord externe ; les nervures des infe- rieures paraissent plutot par transparence du dessous, sauf au voisinage du bord externe et le long du bord anterieur oil elles sont uu peu empatees de noir. 472 PAPILIONID.E. "En dessous, ailes superieurcs blanc jaunatre aveo I'apex d'un jaune canari et rempatemcnt noir nei-vural, au milieu des ailes, au lieu d'etre au bord exterieur comme en dessus. Ailes infeiieures d'un jauno canari vif avec les nervures noires saillantes sur un filet noir, tres net, pas large et assez vif. L'espace basilaire compris dans Tangle nervural est d'un jaune plus fence que le fond des ailes. " Le male varie pour la couleur des ailes qui, dans quclques individus, est d'un jaune soufre en dessus. J'ai appele cetto aberration, qui est constaute et commune a beaucoup de Plerkles blanches, sulphurea. " Le male varie encore pour le semis d'atomes noirs qui dans d'autres individus couvre la base et le milieu des ailes superieures. J'ai appele cette autre aberration, qui est egalement con- stante, fumosa. " Dans la femollo les ecaillos des ailes sont moins adherentes que chez le male, et les cinq exemplaires que je posscde de ce sexe femelle, ont tons ua ton luisant resultant de co que les ailes supe- rieures surtout sont comme hyalines. Cependant un semis d'dcaillcs blanc jaunatre persiste dans le milieu de chaque espace nervural. - Uccouvcrt a Ta-Tsien-Lou par Mgr. Biet." {OherthUr, I. c.) Alpheraky (Eom. sur Lep. v. p. 96) remarks that after carefully comparing a number of specimens of A. hippia from cliiFerent localities -with typical specimens of bieti, Oberthiir, from Ta-chien-lu, and also with seventeen examples taken by Potanine in North China and Mongolia, he arrived at the conclusion that Meti was not specifically distinct from hippia but only a well- marked form of that species. Potanine's specimens, he says, differ from Ta-chien-lu examples in having the wings broader in proportion to their length and in the nervures being less heavily bordered with black, and are intermediate between Meti and typical hippia. According to Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 140), A. hippia is common on the Ussuri and throughout the whole of Southern Amurland. Staudinger also states that the species is peculiar to Amurland, thus implying that it had never occurred elsewhere. It would seem therefore that he was not aware of the fact that cratcegioides, Lucas, from Pekin, is synonymous Avith A. hippia. Oberthiir (Etud. d'Entom. v. p. 12) records hippia from Askold. The hieli form of this species appears to be exceedingly common in Western China. The specimens vary considerably in size, some examples are much suffused with blackish about the base of the wing [wax. fumosa, Oberthiir); a few are tinged with yellow (var. svlphurea, Oberthiir); a specimen of the latter form is figured (Plate XXXVI. fig. 2, c^ ). I have a long series of A. hippia from Amurland, and I find there is considerable aberration in the neuration of the females, e. g. the second subcostal nervule of secondaries is sometimes bifurcate on the outer margin of the wing. In some specimens APORIA. 473 the discoidal uervule is united by a short veiulet with the second subcostal nervule, forming a secondary cell on the hind wings, sometimes this occurs on one wing only. The fifth subcostal branch of primaries is in one specimen independent, and as its point of origin is from the upper discocellular it is really equivalent to a discoidal nervule. iJistrihution. Amurland, the Ussuri, Mongolia, North and Western China. Aporia cratsegi. Pupilio cralceyi, Liiinteus, Syst. Nat. i. 2, p. 758 (1767). Aporia cratcegi, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 27, pi. vi. fig. 1 (1881) ; Pryei-, Rhop. Nihon. p. 5, pi. iii. fig. 7 (188G). " Expands 1-75 to 2-50 in. All the wings are white, more or less diaphanous, more so in the female than the male, without marginal fringe. The nervures are very distinct, and generally have at their marginal ends triangular patches of blackish scales. Antennae black. Head. thorax, and abdomen of the same colour, and slightly downy. " Larva covered with a white down, with tho sides and ventral surface load-coloured. The dorsal surface marked with two longitudinal yellowish bands. Feeds in company on the hawthorn, sloe, wild cherry, and other fruit trees. Sometimes very destructive to orchards. " Pupa greenish white, with two lateral yellow lines, and numerous black points. The larva appears in the spring." (Lane/, I. c.) The early stages of this species are figured in Buckler's ' Larvae of British Butterflies.' Common in the Island of Yesso, whence the specimens are larger than European examples, and the females are very thinly clothed with scales which gives them a very transparent appearance. The species does not seem to occiu- in any other part of Japan. Examples from Chang-yang, Central China, are typical, but those from Ta-chien-lu and Ni-tou in "Western China are smaller than European specimens ; the wings are broader and the under surface of secondaries is closely sprinkled with black scales. According to Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 140), the species is common throughout Amurland, and he states that Herz obtained it in China to the north of Pekin. Alpheraky (op. cit. v. p. 95) records it from several localities in North-western China and Mongolia, and Obertliiir, in tlic fifth part of his Etudes, mentions it from the Isle of Askold. Distribution. Europe, Siberia, Amurland, China, Mongolia, Japan. 3b 474 PAPILIONID^. Genus DAVIDINA. Davidina, Obertliiir, Etud. cl'Entom. iv. pp. 19, 108 (1879). " c? • Anteniics coiirtes a massue asscz epaisse ; palpes saillants ; corps et abdomen greles ; ailes entieres, rondes, a nervures saillants, dont une fourchue dans I'interieur do chaque cellule discoidale." {Ohertliur, I. c.) Davidina armandi. (Plate xxxill. fig. 9, d .) Davidina armandi, Ohevilmr, Etud. d'Entom. iv. pp. 19, 108, pi. ii. fig. 1 (1879). " Aux caracteres generiques precites, j'ajouterai que les ailes sont d'un blano jaunatre avec lo bord rembruni, surtout aux superieures. Tous les espaces intranervuraux sout marques sur le pli d'un trait court, noir. Les epaulettes sont blanches. Le dessous ne differe du dessus quo par Tabsence, le long du bord des ailes, des atomes bruns qui sont remplaces par une tcinte Icgerement plus jaunatre que le fond blancbatre des ailes, etpar une raie large sinueuse d' atomes brunatres qui traverse les ailes inferieures par le milieu, du bord anterieur au bord anal. " Je ne connais que le male. " M. I'abbe David a capture la Davidina armandi au sommet du P6-Hoa-Chan, sur les plateaux les plus eleves des montagnes qui se trouvent a trente lieues au nord-ouest de Pekin. Le papillon vole en plcin ete, pas tres haut au-dessus de terre et avec une allure rappelant le vol des Parnassius, sur les pentes et autour des rochers qui oouronnent les cimes des montagnes Sicban. Les brouillards entourent presque constammeiit les hauteurs ou vit la Davidinn armandi." {Oherthur, I. c.) I have only received four examples of this interesting species (two males and two females) ; these were taken at a considerable elevation in the neighbourhood of Chang-yang, Central China. Except that the males are more suffused with black on the margins of all the wings, the sexes do not differ in appearance. The ground-colour of all my specimens is more ochreous, and the neuration more broadly black than in M. Oberthiir's figure ; the fringes are also black. M. Grum-Grshimailo sent me specimens of JlJesapia peloria, Hewitson, from Amdo. This insect bears a superficial resemblance to B. annandi, but has not yet been met with in the region here dealt with. Genus TACHYEIS. Tachyris, Wallace, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (3) iv. p. 3G1 (1867). " Head moderate, palpi long, acutely pointed ; antenna; of moderate length, terminating in a slender club ; thorax stout ; abdomen slender. Anal valves of the male elongated and provided with a tuft of long and stiif hairs at each side of the base beneath. " Upper wings with the apex acute or much produced, two subcostal nervules given off before TACHYEIS.— ANTHOCHAEIS. 475 the end of the ccU, the third of moderate length or very short, and in some species quite wanting; upper radial as a branch of the subcostal at some distance beyond the cell. Sexes often differing widely. " Larva hairy, with four or six longitudinal rows of spines ; pupa with two lateral spines. " This genus does not differ materially in neuration from Pieris, but the remarkable character of the strong tufts of hair at the anal valves of the males enables us to bring together a number of allied forms, whicli, wherever the male is obtained, can be referred to the genus with the greatest certainty. Most of the species fly swiftly, and many of the males assemble in troops about wet places and on river margins after the manner of the genus CaUidryas." {Wallace, I. c.) Tachyris paulina. Papilio paulina, Cramer, Pap. Exot. ii. pi. ex. figs. E, F (1779). Tachyris paulina, Wallace, Trans. Ent. Soc. Loud. (3) iv. p. 3G9 (18G7) ; Elwes, Traus. Eut. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 419. Male. White bordered with black. Primaries have the basal area blackish from the submedian nervule to the costa, which is broadly bordered with black as also is the outer margin, the latter, which encloses two large white subapical spots and two smaller ones below, has its inner edge deeply bidentate. Secondaries tinged with yellowish at the base and along costal area; the outer margin has au internally dentate black border. Under surface shining white ; the primaries yellow on basal area and traversed by an angulated black band which originates from a black streak on the coata and terminates in a black patch at inner angle. My collectors only obtained one example of this species. It was captured at Ta-chien-lu in July. This specimen differs from Cramer's figures in being blacker on the basal area of primaries and in the two lower white spots being smaller on those wings, the black border of secondaries is narrower and the black band on under surface of primaries is more angulated and much narrower. The species is common in India and is found at low elevations in Sikkim. Genus ANTHOCHAKIS. Anthocharis, Boisduval, Sp. Gen. i. p. 556 (1836) ; Doubleday, Gen. Diuru. Lep. i. p. 55 (1847). Euchlo'e, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmett, p. 94 (1816) ; Kirby, Cat. Diurn. Lep. p. 505 (1871). " Heab rather small, clothed with long hairs. " Eyes round, rather large, and prominent. 3r2 476 PAPILIOXIDiE. '^ Labial paljn longer than the head. Basal joint subcylindrical, more or less curved at the base : second joint subc3-liudrical ; or elongate, ovate : third joint about one third the length of the second, slender, subcylindrical, pointed ; or obovate, pointed. " Anteiinw rather short, terminating in an ovate compressed club, sometimes rather elongate. " TaoRAS moderately stout, clothed with long fine hair. •' Anterior ivings subtriangular, rounded externally, or falcate. Subcostal ncrvule four or five branched. First discoidal nervule united for some distance beyond the cell to the subcostal nervure. Lower discocellular nervule rather long, curved. •' Posterior wiiir/s obovate, the abdominal channel sometimes not much developed. Precostal nervure simple. Discoidal nervure appearing to be a third subcostal nervule. " Lee/s rather slender. Claws very deeply bifid. Paronychia lanceolate, not so long as the claws. Pulvillus jointed, generally as long as, or longer than, the claws. The basal joint sometimes slender and very long. " Abdomen rather elongate, often nearly as long as the abdominal margin of the wings, slender. " Larva slender, tapering considerably towards each extremity, pubescent. " Pupa elongate, navicular, much arched, very pointed at each extremity, slightly keeled down the back ; the segments of the abdomen not movable. " AntJtocharis is easily disliuguished from Pieris by its palpi, which have the last joint very short, and also by the very different form of the pupa. '• The habits of this genus much resemble those of Pieris, but the flight of the European species is stronger and more rajiid. '•The Larvoe, as far as known, live on various cruciferous plants, and are more slender than those of the Pieridcie. " The Pupae are remarkable for their elongate form, pointed at each extremity, and dififer from those of Pieris in not being tuberculate at the sides, and in having the abdominal segments immovable.'' (Douhhdaij, I. c.) Anthocharis cardamines. PapUio cardamines, Liniiieus, Syst. Nat. i. '2, p. 761 (17G7). Euchlo'e cardamines, Lang, Butt. Eiir. p. 39, pi. \\. fig. 1 (1884). Antlwcliaris cardamines, var. thibetana, Oberthiir, Etad. d'Entom. xi. p. 16 (1886). " Expands from 1-50 to 2-00 in. Wings white, rounded. The male has the fore wings white, with a black tip and a black discoidal spot ; a large patch of brilliant orange reaches from the tip of the wing to considerably within the discoidal spot. Hind wings white and unspotted, but exhibiting traces of the pattern of the underside. Underside : — Fore wings white, yellowish at the base, and having the orange patch tipped with greenish grey and white. Hind wings white, marbled with irregular patches of yellow and black scales so mixed as to produce the effect of a beautiful green ; these patches follow more or less the course of the nervures. Female similar to the male, but without the orange patch, and the tips of the wings are marked more strongly with black. " Larva. Green, finely speckled with black, with a white lateral stripe less clearly defined at its dorsal than at its ventral edge. It feeds on various field Cruciferae, including Cardamine prutcnsis, the pods generally forming its principal food. ANTHOCHARIS. 477 " Piqm. Boat-shaped, at first green, but clianging to greyish j-ellow, with clearer stripes. The eggs are laid in the summer, and the larva changes to a chrysalis in July, hibernating in this state." {Laiuj, I. c.) A more extended account of the earlier stages of this species will be found in Buckler's ' Larvae Brit. Butt.' Var. thibstana, OberthUr. " Differo du type europe'en parce quo les ailes inf't'rieures sont lave'es de jauue soufre sur les nervures. " Parait oommun a Ta-Tsien-Lou." {Ohcrtliiir, 1. e.) In this form of A. cardamines, which is very common in Western China at Ta-chien-lu, Pu-tsu-fong, and Wa-ssu-kow, the male has the secondaries more or less suffused with sulphurous, especially about the nerves (I have examples similar in this respect from Greece and Asia Minor) ; the dark apex of pri- maries is much suffused with orange scales. In the female the apical black marking does not extend to the margin (this is also the case in some of my Syrian specimens of the same sex). The most important characters of thibetann are the broader wings and much longer chequered fringes which give the wings the appearance of being scalloped towards apex. Graeser (Berl. ent. Zeit. 1888, p. 68) states that A. cardamines is fairly plentiful in the neighbourhood of Nicolajefsk, Amurland, in July. The females agree with European examples. In the males the black discoidal spot is either only faintly indicated or entirely absent ; the orange colour extends much further inwards than in European specimens, occupying in some individuals almost two thirds of the primaries, and extending along tlie inner margin nearly to the middle of the wing. On the under surface the space between the orange colour and the base of the wing is much more brightly tinged with yellow. I have seen an examj^le of this form in Mr. Elwes' collection and it seems to be a transition between A. cardamines and A. bambusanim. Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 142) mentions that Radde captured this species in the Bm-eja Mountains and that Schrenck met with it from Marinski to Nicolajefsk. He states that he has never received specimens from Amur- land, and this may account for the fact that he does not make any remarks on the difference between Amurland and European examples. Alpheraky (Bom. sur Lep. v. p. 100) records a female A. cardam.ines from Mongolia, but states that the specimen may possibly be a female of A. hambiisartim, Obcrthiir, which he says had hitherto only been recorded from 478 PAPILIONID.E. Moupin and Japan. I am quite unable to find any particulars of the occurrence of hambiisarum in either of these localities. Distribution. Europe, Northern and Western Asia, Asia Minor, Amurland, Mongolia, Western China. Anthocharis bambusarum. Anthocharis Immbusariim, Obcrthlir, Etud. d'Eutoiu. ii. p. 20, pi. iii. fig. 4 (1876). " Cette charraante espuce vole en avril clans les bambouseraies du Tche-Kiang (' Journal du 3' voyage de I'abbe Arm. David dans TEmpiro chinois,' pp. 24 et 25). " Les ailes superieures sont eutierement aurores, tant en dessus qu'en dessoiis ; Ics ailes infe- rieures sont blancbes en dessus ; en dessous, elles sont marbrees de verdatre comme dans A. cardamines. "Cette demiere espece, que VAnth. hamhusarum remplacc au Tehc'-Kiang, sc trouve dans le Thibet oriental, oii M. I'abbe A. David en a pris un cxemplairo dans les montagnes, a 3000 metres d'altitude. " Je ne possode qu'un exemplaire de YAnth. hamhusarum. Cast le seal, du rests, que M. I'abbe David ait rapporte. II etait serre dans un livre, tout aplati, mais tres-entier cependant." {Oherthur, I. c.) Possibly A. bamhusarum may be a local race of ^. cardamines, but it is dis- tinguished by the more rounded apex of primaries, the duller orange colour above, and the different arrangement of the greenish markings on the under surface of secondaries. I am indebted to M. Oberthiir for an example from Leon-fang, this differs from the specimen figiu-ed by him in having a pyriform, instead of a bar-like, black discoidal spot. In Oberthiir's figure the median nervure and first branch of primaries are black, forming a < -shaped mark, and these wings are entirely orange as far as the black basal patch. The Leon-fang specimen is without the < mark and there is a white space between the basal patch and the orange colour. Occurs in Tche-Kiang and at Leon-fang, and Mr. W. B. Pryer records it from the Snowy Valley, Ningpo. Anthocharis bieti. Anthocharis bieti, Obertliiir, Etud. d'Entom. is. p. 14, pi. i. fig. 1, ? (1884), xi.'p. 16, pi. vi. fig. 39, (J (1886) ; Alplieraky, Rom. sur Lep. v. p. 72 (1889). " Cbarmante Pieride du groupe de scolymus et cjenutia, a)'ant a peu pros la forme et la taille de cette demiere espece, dont elle differe surtout par I'ajiex de ses ailes superieures et le dessous de ses ailes inferieures. " Le male ditfcre de la femelle par uue petite tache subapicale auroro circonscrite entre le bord AXTHOCHAEIS. 479 costal, le point noir collulaire, line ombre iioiratre intranervurale et la partie saillante de Tapes qui rcste blanche. La femelle a en outre un lavis orange pale sur I'aile infdrieure en dessus. L'aile infe'rieure en dessoua est ornee de petites taohcs formees d'atomes bruns converts d'un lavis d'un jaune un peu orange. Ces taches brunes sent interrompues au dela de la cellule discoidale par une eolaircie toute blanche, parallele au bord exterieur ; le long du bord exterieur, les taolies reparaissent sous forme d'une sorto de feston dont les dents corres- pondent aux nervures et la partie concave aux espaces intranervuraux. La frange est blanche, longue et soyeuse.'' Male. Primaries are blackish at the base and have a broad subapical orange patch bordered inwardly by the large black spot which closes the discoidal cell, and a diffused blackish streak running from the spot towards outer margin ; the apex is produced, and this portion of the wing is often more or less sprinkled with dark greyish scales, especially along the course of the nervules ; the median nervules are blackish towards outer margin, the third often through- out its length. Secondaries white, sometimes tinged with yellowish, blackish at base and along the nervures ; the pattern of the under surface shows through faintly. Under surface white : primaries have the orange subapical patch black and discoidal spot fainter than above : secondaries have the veins marked out with yellow and are traversed by irregular greenish bands ; on the outer margin the nervules are bordered on each side with greeuish. Female has no orange subapical patch, but is otherwise similar to the male ; the space, however, between second and third nervules is sometimes filled up with blackish scales. Expanse 48-52 millim. This species was discovered by Mgr. Biet in the neighbourhood of Ta- chien-lu, and my collectors obtained large numbers of both sexes there in May and June. They did not, however, meet with it in any other locality. Alpheraky records specimens from North-eastern Thibet and Grum- Grshimailo captured examples in Amdo. Anthocharis scolymus. Anthocharis scolymus, Butler, Journ. Linn. Soc, Zool. ix. p. 53 (1866) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 6, pi. ill. figs. 4 a, 4 6 (1886). Anthocharis thunbergii, De I'Orza, Lep. Jap. p. 14 (1869). " S ■ ^^cB antictv elongatae, costa ad vense costalis finem directa, apice falcate ; margine postico oblique, sub unco sinuate ; margine anali convexo ; supra nivesB, basi costaque apicali cinereis, apice nigro maculis quatuor luteis interrupto, tertia permagna, alteris minimis, cella macula elongata reniformi nigra terminata. '^Alce 2^ostiece piriformes, supra niveae notis inconspicuis per alas indicatis, macula nigra in costa apicali, venis nigro aciiminatis. " Corpus fuscum ; capite olivaceo pilosato. '^Alce anticce subtus viridi pro fusco cinereoque, maculis albis nee luteis, alitor velut supra. Alu- posticce virides, maculis albis valde irregularibus variegatse, margine postico pallidiore, maculis marginalibus hastatis inter venas dispositis. " Corpus cinereum, viridi pilosatum. "Alar. e.rp. une. 2-^^. " Most closely allied to Anthocharis geimtia, Bd. (United States), but very distinct." {Butler, I. c) 480 PAPILIONID.E. Mah'. White. Primaries have a large black oblong spot at end of discoidal cell ; the apex, which is much produced, and acuminate, is marked with black, the apical fourth of the wing is pale orange with a large black spot on the costa and a similar one on outer margin, that on the costa frequently unites with the black markings of the apex, forming a broad streak along this portion of the costa ; the base of the wing is blackish grey. Secondaries have the pattern of the under surface faintly showing through. Under surface of primaries white, marked with pale olive-grey along the costa and on apical area, the latter has also two patches of darker olive ; discoidal spot as above : secondaries white, mottled with pale olive-grey over the whole wing, with two white-spotted dark olive patches from costa and others along the course of the median and subraedian nervures ; none of these dark markings invade the outer third of the wing, but the pale olive-grey markings are often heavier on this area ; the outer margin is narrowly white interrupted at the ends of the nervules with dark olive. Female. Similar to the male, but the orange on apicul fourth is usually absent, although in some specimens it is faintly exhibited. Expanse, J 45-52 millim., J 42-GO millim. Pryer remarks : — " this insect undoubtedly only appears once during the year. There are no allied forms, and it is the only representative of the genus in Japan. I know little or nothing concerning its life-history beyond the fact that the larva feeds upon a bitter cress, common in marshy situations." Appears to be a common species throughout Japan. It is recorded from Shanghai, and I have received several specimens from Chang-yang, Central China, and from the province of Kwei-chow, Western China. In some of the female specimens from Japan there are distinct indications of the orange patch of the male. The Western-Chinese examples are rather smaller than those from Japan. Distribution. Japan, Western and Central China. Genus LEUCOPHASIA. Leucophasia, Stephens, 111. Brit. Eut., Haust. i. p. 24 (1827) ; Doubleday, Gen. Diurn. Lep. i. p. 38 (1847). " Head rather large, very hairy. " Eijes large, round, prominent. •' Labial palpi rather longer than the head, very hairy. Basal joints long, curved at the base, carinate externally, obliquely truncate at the apex ; second joint rather more than one third the length of the first, much more slender, ovate, truncate at the base : third joint about one sixth the length of the first, oval. " Antenrnr. short, terminating in an abrupt, short, compressed club. " Thoeax rather slender. '^Anterior wings elongate, rounded externally. The discoidal cell very small, barely one third the length of the wing. Subcostal nervure five-branched ; the first nervnle thrown off LEUCOPUASIA. 481 about the middle of the wing ; second about equally distant from the first and third ; fourth rather nearer to the third than that is to the second. Upper disooceUular nervule verj' short, barely visible above. Submedian nervure bent near the base. " Posterior winr/s obovate. The disooidal cell very small. Subcostal nervure branching beyond the middle of the wing. Discoidal nervure thrown off from the subcostal about midway between the bifurcation of the latter and the base of the wing, much bent at the end of the cell. Lower discocellular nervule short. Submedian nervure bent near the base. Precostal nervure branched ; the inner branch very short and obscure, the outer rather long. "Legs slender. Paronychia as long as the claws, very slender. Pulvillus very minute, consisting merely of a very small fringed cushion, placed between the claws, quite at the base, only visible below. " Abdomen slender, elongate, extending slightlj' beyond the posterior wings. " Larva slender, tapering towards each extremity, pubescent. " PnPA elongate, angular, not arched. " In general the species of this genus frequent open places in woods, flying not very rapidly, with an undulating unsteady motion. Our own species occurs both in the spring and autumn. Those of the autumnal brood, almost entirely wanting the black at the apex, have been formed into a species by Hiibner, under the name of P. erysimi. " The larva feeds on various Papilionaceous plants, especially Vicia cracca and Lotus corniculatus ; resembling in this respect those of the genera Terias, Colias, and Callidryas, more than those of Pieris and Anthocharis. It is green, with a lateral yellow stripe. The pupa is elongate, very pointed at each extremity." {Douhledaij, I. c.) Leucophasia sinapis. PopiUo sinapis, Linnreus, Syst. Nat. i. 2, p. 760 (1767). Leucophasia sinapis, Lang, Butt. Eur. ^. 45, pi. x. fig. 4 (188i) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nilion. p. 7, pi. ii. figs. 7&8 (1886). Leucophasia amurensis, Menetries, Schrenck's Reiseii, ii. p. 15, pi. i. figs. 4 & 5 (1859). Leptosia sinensis, Butler, Cist. Ent. i. p. 173 (1873). Leucophasia vibiiia, Janson, Cist. Eat. ii. p. 372 (1878). Leptosia morsei, Fenton, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1881, p. 855. " Expands from l-37-l'68 in. Wings white, fore wings with dusky coloured spots at the tips, of a roundish shape, and darker in the male than in the female. Hind wings white. Underside : fore wings white, faintly marked with greenish yellow at the tips ; hind wings with dusky shading, and one white and several greenish spots. Head, thorax, and abdomen black ; antennae black, with white flattened clubs. " Larva green, with a darker stripe on the back where the dorsal vessel shows through ; beneath this on each side is a yellow stripe. June and September, the insect being double- brooded . 482 PAPILIO^-ID.E. It feeds on Ficia cracca, Lotus, Lathyrus, and several otlier plants of the order Legumiuosas." {LcuKf, I. c.) " Chrysalis yellowish green or gre}-, rusty red on tlie sides and on the wing-cases." (Boisdiival.) For an extended acconnt of the early stages and figures of larva and pupa see Buckler's ' Larvae of British Butterflies.' Var. amurensis, Menetries. " Alis ohlongo-elongatis, albis ; maris, anticis raargine exteriore sinuatis, apice macula nigra notatis, feminoe immaculatis ; maris subtus alis posterioribus concoloribus, vix striga transversa nebulosa notatis. " Enverg. 15 lign. " Cette espeoe est tres voisino de la L. sina2»s, mais la coupe de ses ailes la fait facilemcnt reconnaitre ; elle offre des caracteres plus tranches que ceux do la L. lathyri, Hiibn., Duponch. " Les ailes superieures sont plus etroites; plus allongees, leur bord anterieur est droit : elles sont arrondies au sommet (ou angle apical), puis faiblement sinuces a leur bord esterne, chez le male, car chez la femelle ce bord est droit jusqu'a Tangle interne qui est sensible chez les deux sexes, et non arrondi comme chez la sinapis. Les ailes inferieures ont leur bord externe moins arrondi : chez les males la partie de I'aile la plus longue est plus proche de Tangle externe, tandis que chez la sinapis elle se trouve au milieu de Taile : le bord posterieur est plus droit et non arrondi ; chez la femelle tout le bord externe, depuis Tangle externe jusqu'a Tangle interne, forme un oval. " En dessus les ailes sont blanches; les superieures presentent une tache noire a leur sommet a peu pres comme chez la sinapis (cette tache varie de forme), mais quelquefois de tt-inte brunatre claire, et qui disparait entierement chez la femelle. En dessous, les ailes sont blanches : chez les males, les superieures offrent le long du bord anterieur, depuis la base jusque vers le milieu de ce bord une large bande a teinte jaunatre fortement saupoudree de noir, mieux marquee que chez la sinapis, mais qui laisse egalement blanchatre, le croissant sifcue a Textremite de la cellule discoidale ; la tache noire du sommet est representee par une teinte jaunatre. Les ailes inferieures presentent quelquefois la trace de la bande transversale inferieure de la sinapis. La femeUe diflPere par ses ailes inferieures faiblement teintes de jaunatre et saupou- dre'es d'atomes bruns, plus serres le long de la b' cote (' Pterographie,' Herrich-Schaffer), tandis que Tiiitervalle entre la 5= et la 6' cote ou nervure, forme une bande blanchatre depourvue d'atomes et qui se continue a travers la cellule discoidale, a peu pros comme chez la sinapis mais sans interruption. Le reste comme chez cette espece. " D'apres 6 individus males, et 3 femelles rapportes des rives de TAmour par MM. Maack et Schrenck. Ce dernier voyageur qui a ete fort exact a noter le lieu et Tepoque de ses chasses les a pris vers la fin du mois de juillet. " Cette espece est repandue, selon M. Schrenck, depuis les montagues de Boureia jusqu'a Pakhale, ainsi entre le 48|° et le 50|^ ; depuis nous Tavons re(i\\c de Kiachta par M. Popoff." {Menetries, I. e.) Var. sinensis, Butler. " Allied to L. sinapis, wings longer ; fringe tinted with red-brown : primaries more dusky at base, costal margin and apex red-lirown ; a large subapical oval black spot. Wings below white ; fringe as above : primaries with apical half of costa and apex ochreous ; discoidal cell, area immediately beyond it, and a large subapical patch greyish green ; a white spot on upper discocellular. Expanse of wings 1 inch 10 lines. "Shanghai (W. B. Prycr), B.M." (Butler, Cist. Ent.) LEUCOPHASIA. 483 Var. vibilia, Janson. " Above creamy-white, the body black, dusted with white : primaries witli the basal half of the costa and four short ill-defined longitudinal stripes at the apex dusky black ; beneath cream-coloured, the posterior part of the primaries white, the costa broadly dusted with black; secondaries strongly dusted black on the anal half and on the costa, leaving a narrow longitudinal stripe of the ground-colour, the dusky-black scales becoming rather sparse on the apical margin, but are very close, and form an obscure transverse band about one third from the apex. " Expanse of wings lg-l| inch. Nambu, North Japan. " Differs from L. amurensis, Men., besides the colour and markings, in having the primaries more acutely pointed at the apes. It is also allied to L. duponcheli. Stand." {Janson, I. c.) Var. morsel, Fenton. " Allied to L. (imure7isis. Wings rounder, not produced at the apex : the black apical patch lighter: average expanse of L. amurensis, S 1 inch 11 1 lines, $ 2 inches 3 line; of L. muisei, cJ 1 inch 11 lines, $ 2 inches." (Fenton, I. c.) "Iburi, Hokkaido, end of July. Colls. Fenton & B.M. " The example sent to us by Mr. Fenton certainly bears out the distinctions laid down in his above description ; and I have little doubt that this is a genuine species." (Butler, P. Z. S.) This very variable species is common all over Japan and Corea. I have received it from the province of Kwei-chow, Western China. All the gradations between typical sinapis and var. amurensis occur, but, as a rule, all the Eastern-Asian forms are less green and have less marking on the under surface. Specimens without any black on apex of primaries, corre- sponding with var. erysimi, are not unusual. Mursei is a modification of the typical form ; the under surface is whitish, and the black spot at apex of primaries above may be large and conspicuous or only faintly indicated. Sinensis is a modification of the long-winged amurensis form ; the type in the National Collection is -without a head, and the apical spot is brown and faded. In Amuiiand both sinapis and var. amurensis are common, and occur together in the same localities. Graeser states that he never met with a specimen which he could consider intermediate between amurensis and sinapis; Staudinger also considers these insects to be distinct species, but Bremer records intermediate forms from Amurland, and Elwes states that such forms exist both in his own and in Mr. Godman's collections. I also have intermediate forms in my own collection. Alpheraky records L. sinapis from Che-pou, in the province of Ivan-sou, and from the plateau of Amdo. He states that the specimens are larger than those from Tiu-kestan and Thian-shan, but do not diflPer in other respects. Distribution. Europe, Western and Central Asia, Siberia, Amurland, Japan, Corea, China, and Thibet. 484 PAPILIOXID.E. Leucophasia gigantea. (Plate XXXVI. figs. 10, ll.) Leucophasia gigantea. Leech, Entomologist^ xxiii. p. 45 (1890). S . White. Primaries with a large black spot on the second disooidal uervule, sometimes extending upwards to the first : a smaller one on the discocellular. Under surface of primaries with the l)lack spots faintly reproduced. Secondaries have an angulated suffused band indicated by a blackish costal streak, and a curved mark between the diseoidal and third median nervules ; a short black bar at end of diseoidal cell ; the venation is dark, especially on the secondaries and outer margin of primaries. Head black ; collar yellow ; thorax black dusted with white ; pectus sprinkled with yellow ; abdomen white. 2 . Under surface of secondaries and apes of primaries tinged with yellowish, the black markings more band-like, with the addition of a zigzag black submarginal line ; all these markings are faintly seen through from above. Expanse, i, I. c.) The above description refers to the male, which sex is very much the commonest. The female is rather larger than the male, and has the wings rounder ; the spots forming the central band are rather larger, especially that on the costa, which is usually qua,drate. Var. contractus, var. nov. (Plate XXXVIII. fig. 9, J .) Rather greyer in colour ; the spots forming the central fascia are narrower and differently shaped, those towards apex are often minute. This form appears constant, and has so far only been met with at Wa-ssu- kow and "\Va-shan in Western China, in which localities the type form does not seem to occur. I met with it commonly about fifteen miles from Gensan at the foot of the mountains ; Fixsen also records it from Corea. In Western China it occurs at Ni-tou, Moupin, Chow-pin-sa, Pu-tsu-fong, Wa-shan (var. contractus), and Wa-ssu-kow (var. contractus). I have also received it from Chang-yang and Kiukiang in Central China and from Ningpo. Achalarus proximus. (Plate XXXVIII. fig. 7, 6 .) Eiidamus proximus. Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 59 (June 1891). Eudamus f rater , Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xv. p. 18, pi. i. fig. 3 (July nee June, 1891). Male. Closely allied to A. nepos, Oberthiir, but can be easily separated by the ground-colour, which is very dark shining brown, instead of being tinged with olive ; the wings are rounder, and the outer margins of secondaries are not so indented ; the position of the two apical spots is also different. The colouring of the under surface more nearly resembles that of A. ger- nianus, Gberth., but the apical spots of primaries and the position of the dark bands on secondaries at once distinguish it from that species. Expanse 48 millim. ACHALARUS. 561 " Voisin de bifasciafus, c;ermnnvs, nepo.% etc. ; mais bien distinct par le rctrc'cisscment des taclies vitreuses aux ailes superieures. Le dessous des ailes inferieixres resemble plus a germanus qu'aux autres especes, c'est-a-dire que les taohcs noir violacc sont cgalement foncees cliez (jermanus et chez f rater ; mais leur position relative est differente, comme aussi la position des taclies vitreuses aux superieures." {ObertJiiir, I. e.) I received this species from Pu-tsu-fong in Western China, where it ^Yas captured in June, and M. Oberthiir records it from Yunnan. Achalarus germanus. Eudamus germanus, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xi. pi. vi. fig. 48 (1886). Very similar to A. bifasciatiis, var. contractus, on the upper surface, but four of the five subapical spots are contiguous and arranged in an oblique line. On the under surface of secondaries the ill-defined bands of bifasciatus are replaced in germanus by series of conspicuous dark irregular-shaped marks, one of -which, the third of submarginal series, is cuneiform. M. Oberthiir does not describe this species, of which he received four examples from Ta-chien-lu. I have specimens from Pu-tsu-fong and Wa-ssu- kow, where they were captured in June and July at an elevation of about 8000 feet in the former locality, and at 5000 feet in the latter. Achalarus nepos. Eudamus nepos, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xi. pi. vi. fig. 49 (1886). Both sexes agree in general characters with A. bifasciatus, var. contractus, but the primaries arc dusted with greyish ; the secondaries are greyish on the disc, broadly bordered with blackish on outer margin ; the third spot of central series on primaries is placed farther apart and appears to connect the five apical spots with the fourth of central series. On the under surface all the wings are greyish, and the bands of secondaries are composed of more or less dark quadrate spots, agreeing somewhat in this respect with A. germanus, but the third of submarginal series is not triangular. M. Oberthiir received two specimens from Ta-chicn-lu, and I have tliree males and one female from Pu-tsu-fong taken at an elevation of about SOOO feet in July. Achalarus simplex. (Plate xxxvill. fig. 12, 6 .) Eudamus simplex, Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 58 (June 1891). Eudamus gener, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Entom. xv. p. 18, pi. i. fig. 2 (July nee June, 1891). Both sexes may be compared with A. bifasciatus, Brem. The wings are much shorter, broader, and rounder in contour; the ground-colour is dark shining brown; the apical spots are confluent, forming a dash. On the under surface the apex of primaries and outer margins 562 HESPEEIID^E. of all the -wings are clouded ■with bluish grey, and the dark transverse bands of tho secondaries are not bordered with paler. The fringes also ars not chequered. Expanse, c? 45, 5 48 millim. " Un peu plus petit que son congdnere bifasciafus, dont il diffil-re par scs ailes inferieures en dessous saupoudre'es le long du bord marginal d'atomes gris violatre, et par ailleurs d'une teinte brun uni, traversee par deux bandes maculaires sinueuses a peine perceptibles, allant du bord costal au bord anal. On ne voit ces bandes, qui ue se distinguent prcsque pas de la couleur du fond, que grace aux lignes fort peu accentuees elles-memes qui les limitent. De plus la frange n'est pas entrecoupee comme chez bifasciatas." (Obertkiir, L c.) Occurs at Ta-chien-lu, Pu-tsu-fong, and Chow-pin-sa, taken in May and June, and at M-tou and Wa-ssu-kow in July and August. M. Oberthiir records specimens from Yunnan. Genus SATARUPA. Satarvpa, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 780 ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 1893, p. 46. ■• Palpi stout, densely pilose, erect, projecting in front of the head ; third joint minute, conical. Antennas moderate. Body very stout. Legs slender ; femora slightly pilose beneath ; hind tibia; pilose at the side and beneath ; middle tibiae with a pair, and hind tibine with two pairs of apical spurs. Wings — fore wing acute ; costa nearly straight, exterior margin oblique ; hind wing rounded exteriorly in the male, angled at the apex, and in the middle of exterior margin of the female." {Aloore, I. c.) " Antennoe : club slender, bent into a hook, terminal portion long. Palpi porrect ; third joint short, bluntly conical. Fore wing : outer margin strongly oblique, inner and outer margins subcqual ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; discocellulars inwardly oblique ; vein 12 reaching costa before the end of cell ; vein 3 shortly before end of cell, twice as far from 2 as from 4 ; vein 2 twice as 'far from end of cell as from base of wing. Hind wing much elongated, outer margin sinuate ; vein 7 well before end of cell, twice as far from 8 as from 6 ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 twice as far from base of wing as from end of cell. '• In the tyjje species vein 5 of the hind wing is well developed, but it is barely traceable in the other species of the genu<. " Hind libiie with two pairs of spurs. In the male the hind tibiffi are fringed along their upper edge, and the inner side of the tibiae is clothed with long coarse recumbent hairs. " Closely allied to Daimio, from which it may be separated by the shape of the T\ings, especially of the hind wing, b)' the much greater length and more decided hook in the terminal portion of the anteunal club, and by the scaling of the hind tiblLC of the male. " Entirely confined to Asia." {Watson, 1. c.) Satarupa nymphalis. Tayiades nymphalis, Speyer, Stett. ent. Zeit. xl. p. 348 (1879) ; Staudinger, Kom. sur Lep. iii. p. 153, pi. viii. fig. 4 (1887). " Xiger, corpore subtus albido s. albo, palpis croceis. apice nigris ; al. anterioribus maculis albis SATARUPA.— DAIMIO. 563 pellucidis : 1 cellulsc mcdiip, 9 in serie curva transversa (5 minoribus apiccm versus, 4 in- ferioribus quadrangulis pone medium) depositis ; al. postcrioribus fascia media lata nivea, subtus in basim virescenti-pilosulam effusa." {Speyer, I. c.) This species greatly resembles Satarupa gopala, Moore, but it is larger and may be distinguished by the following characters : — Primaries : the spot at end of the discoidal cell is rather quadrate than triangular, and the three subapical spots nearest costa are elongate, of almost uniform Avidth, and contiguous. Secondaries : the outer third is black, intersected by a trans- verse, curved, iU-detined, pale line, the portion within this line is more or less broken up into oblong spots ; the white portion of the fringes is very narrowly interrupted with black at extremities of the nerAules. Occurs at moderate elevations in June and July at Omei-shan, Moupin, and Kwei-chow, Western China, and at Chang-yang and Kiukiang, Central China, and also in Northern China. Christoph met with the species at Vladivostock, whence Speyer received the type, and Dorries at Suifun, Amurland. Genus DAIMIO. Daimio, Murray, Ent. Mo. Mag. xi. p. 171 (1875) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lend. 1893, p. 47. " Antennae costse medium superantes, gracillima?, clava fusiformi, hamata. Palpi sat breves, squamosi, articulo ultimo distincto. "I have very briefly characterized this genus, which only contains, at present, a single species, D. tethys. Men. Hitherto this insect has been associated doubtfully with Pyrgus (sect. Erynnis) or with Nisoniades, but it diflfers considerably from both in structure. The antennae are long and very slender, and terminate in a gradually formed hooked fusiform club. They are provided with a tuft of hair at the base. The palpi have the second joint covered beneath with squamous scales, whilst the terminal joint is scantily clothed with short hairs. The fore wings of the male appear to be destitute of the costal fold found both in Pyrgus and Nisoniades." {Murray, I. c.) "Antennae: club moderate, terminal crook bent at about right angles. Palpi porrect ; third joint short, obtusely conical. Foro wing : outer margin slightly oblique ; inner margin longer than outer margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 12 reaching costa before the end of cell ; discoceUulars suberect ; vein 3 close to end of cell, more than twice as far from 2 as from 4 ; vein 2 twice as far from end of cell as from base of wing. 504 HESPEEIID.E. Hind wing hardly elongated, outer margin sinuate ; vein 7 sliortl}' before end of cell, more than twice as far from 8 as from 6 ; diseocellulars ver}- faint, almost erect ; vein 5 barely traceable ; vein 3 shortly before end of cell ; vein 2 twice as far from base of wing as from end of cell. Hind tibiae with two pairs of spurs. " Male without costal fold, but with a tuft of hairs attached to the proximal end of hind tibia;. " Confined to Asia." (Watson, I. c.) Daimio tethys. Pi/rcfus tdhys, Menetries, Cat. Mus. Petr. p. 120, pi. x. fig. 8 (1857); Obcrthiir, Etud. d'Entom. v. p. 24 (1880). Daimio thetys, Fixsen, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 314 (1887) ; Staudinger, op. cit. vi. p. 215 (1892). Daimio tethys, Pryer, Rhop. Nilion. p. 33, pi. x. fig. 6 (1889). ■" Fades de la P. malvce, Fabr. ; ailes brun-fonce en dessus, plus clair en dessous ; les superieures de part et d'autre avec cinq taches blanches transparentes sur leur disque et trois points au sommet ; les inferieures sans taches, mais en dessous avec cinq points blancs sur la frange du bord exterieur. " Cette espece est de la taille et a-peu-pres de la forme de la P. malvte, Fabr., et preseute egale- ment les secondes ailes dente'os a leur bord exterieur. " Les ailes sont en dessus d'un brun tres fence ; les superieures sont ornees sur lour disque de cinq taches blanches transparentes, dont : la premiere etroite et petite, est places au dessus de la nervure costale, sur le bord anterieur ; la seconde, assez grande, carree, est situee au dessous et dans la cellule discoidale ; la troisieme, moins grande, est placee au dessous, et est arrondie inferieurement ; puis, vient un point situe exterieurement, entre ces deux deruieres taches ; enfin, la cinquieme tache placee plus en dedans, et non loin de la troisieme et du bord interne de I'aile. Puis pres du sommet se voient trois petites taches carrees, trans- parentes, placees I'une au dessous de 1' autre ; enfin deux points transparents, tres petits, places un peu plus has, et plus en dehors. Les ailes inferieures ofFrent sur leur disque trois ou quatre taches, tres peu distinctes, et de couleur plus foncce. " En dessous, les ailes superieures ne different point du dessus, mais les inferieures presentent sur la frange du bord externe, cinq traits blancs qui s'avancent un peu entre les nervures et rendent la dentelure dc ce bord plus sensible ; ces traits se reproduisent en dessus mais moins avances sur la surface de I'aile. La frange du reste, est brune, et presente aux ailes superieures un petit point blanc sur chaque echancrure du bord exterieur, et un petit trait blanc pres de Tangle interne. " Cette espece a ete rapportee du Japon par Mr. Goschkevitsch." (Menetries, I. c.) The general absence of a white baud on secondaries is the onlj^ character that separates tet/ri/s from D. siruca. Oberthiir refers to an example of tethys, taken by Abbe David in N. China, which has a well-defined white band, and he states that he has intermediate specimens from Amurland. Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi.) says that he received specimens, similar to those mentioned by Oberthiir, from Herz, who took them in the neighbourhood of Pekin, and DAIMIO. 565 suggests for this form the varietal name chinensis. I have specimens from Corea and Ammiand in which the band is distinctly indicated. Possibly it may ultimately be proved that sinica is an extreme form of tethys, but so far the evidence does not justify their being united. In Fryer's collection there is an extraordinary aberration, in which all the spots on primaries are united, forming an irregular V-shaped patch, interrupted by the nerviures, and a bar at the extremity of the cell. The species is common throughout Japan. Graeser (Berl. ent. Zeit. 1888, p. 101) states that in Amurland this species occurs commonly in woods at Chabarof ka from the middle of May to the end of June, and more rarely at Vladivostock. He met with larvae at the end of August rolled up in oak and hazel leaves, and describes them as light green, thickly covered with short reddish hau-s ; head round and black ; the pupa, which lives through the winter, is dusted vnih. white. Bistrihution. Amurland, Japan, North China, Corea. Saimio sinica. Pterijgospidea sinica, Felder, Wien. ent. Mon. vi. p. 30 (1862) ; Alplieraky, Rom. sur Lep. v. p. 122, pi, v. figs. 9,a,b (1889). Pterygosjndea moori, Mabille, Aim. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1876, p. clii. Daimio felderi, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) vii. p. 140 (1881). " Alis fuscis, anticis maoulis tribus discalibus punctisque quinis subterminalLbus h)-aliiio-albis, fasciola interna alba, posticis fascia subbasali alba, subtus macula subcostali lituraque disco- ceUulari f usco uotata, ibidem maoulis esterioribus obsoletis albidis. (S ■ " Unum specimen circa Ning-po captum Rev. Dom. Mnirhead nobis commisit. Minus est, quam M. japetus, Cram., at vestas, Feld. In India septentrional! similis oceurrit species.'' (Fihhr, I. c.) Var. mOOrei, Mabille. " Nigra, alis anticis ferentibus duas series punctorum, uiiam apicalem trium punctorum subcostalium et duorum iufcrius positorum obliquorumque ; alteram in disco 5 in femina, quatuor in mare (costali in hoc deficienti). Alis posticis unam fasciam albam transversam offerentibus, ad medium dilatatam in mare, punctis nigris inferius nota- tam, 5 numero, et in parte limbi nigra positis ita ut dimidio fere in fasciam albam procedant. Fimbria alba, nigro semiinterrupta, subtus alis concoloribus aut potius fuscis, punctis melius scriptis ; e punctis fascia) alboe posticarum duo in fascia alba posita sunt ; basis earumdem cmereo-cserulea in mare, obscurior in femina, cum 3 punctis nigris ad augulum externum, corpus et pedes cinerco colore ; palpis subtus albidis, articulo ultimo nigro." {MnhiHe, I, c.) Var. felderi, Butler. " Dark brown, with white markings : primaries exactly as in JD. tethys ; secondaries crossed by a white belt, which passes through a nearly complete circular series of black spots ; anal three fourths of fringe and four marginal spots white ; posterior margins 4 F 566 HESPERIID^. of abdominal segments -n-hite. Base of secondaries and bod\- below bluisb gre_y. Expanse of wings 1 inch 0 lines. " A tolerably common species ; its position is between B. tethys and D. sinica of Felder ; it appears to represent the latter in Japan, and differs from it in the smaller spots on the primaries, and in the black spots being visible upon the white belt of the secondaries." (Butler, I. c.) This species varies considerably in size and in the shape, size, and pattern of the subhyaline spots on primaries, especially the subapical ones ; the width of the white band on secondaries is also a variable character, and the base of under sui-face of secondaries is sometimes bluish grey, sometimes fuliginous grey, and sometimes hardly different in colour to the general area. The type of Butler's felderi, which is certainly only a form of sinica, is said to have been taken by Maries at Nikko, but it is more probable that he obtained the specimen at Kiukiang. as no other collector has recorded any form oi sinica from Japan, where it seems to be replaced by tethjs. I found sinica plentiful at Foochau and Ningpo in April, and it appears to have been common at moderate elevations in most of the localities in China visited by my collectors. Mabille's type of moorei was taken at Moupin. Alpheraky records the species from Hou-tchi, N.E. Thibet. Daimio narada. (Plate XXXVIII. fig. 14, var.) Satantpa narada, Moore, Jouru. Asiat. Soc. Beng. 1884, p. 50. Pterygospidea diversa, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 46 (1890). " Upperside purpurascent violet-brown : fore wing with three small upper and two lower sub- apical semidiaphanous white spots, a small erect oval spot at lower end of the cell, a slightly larger quadrate .spot on the disc between upper and middle medians, and a broad band fonned of three quadrate spots increasing in width from end of cell to posterior margin ; hind "wing with a broad white transverse medial band, the outer border with an ill-defined upper spot. Cilia edged with white. Underside marked as above : the hind wing with the band showing a more defined macular outer border and a well-separated upper spot. " Expanse l-j-'L inch." {Moore, I. c.) Var. diversa, Leech. (Plate XXXYIII. fig. 14, (S ■) Brownish black; primaries have three subhyaline spots on the disc, and five very small ones towards apex, the central spots form a triangle, a lunar or linear one at end of discoidal cell, one rather larger and more quadrate beyond, and a still larger one below, of the outer five the second is punctiform and placed inwards, the fourth rather outwards, and the remaining two are directly under the first ; a white spot in the submedian interspace under the larger subhyaline one. Secondaries have a broad white central band terminating on the inner margin opposite a white band on the abdomen, and there are some black spots on its upper external edge. Fringes of primaries black, spotted with white above inner angle ; of secondaries white, tinged with grey, becoming darker towards outer angle, and with a slender blackish line at their base preceded by some DAIMIO.— COLADENIA. 567 white spots. Under surface as above, but the white spot in submedian interspace is rather larger, and is followed by a whitish shade : the central band of secondaries is also wider, and encloses two black spots, there is a faint indication of a palo submarginal line ; there are some bluish-grej- hairs at the base. Head and thorax tinged with yellow. Palpi yellowish, and the pectus tinged with same colour. In MoUer's collection, which I have recently acquii-ed, there is a series of 18 Sikkim examples oi D. narada, Moore, a species I was not previously acquainted with. I now find that the insect I described as " Pterygospidea " diversa is not really specifically distinct from L. narada and can only rank as a local form of that species. I have specimens of var. diversa from Chang-yang, Central China ; Wa-shan, Western China ; and I also met with it at Foochau in April. All these differ from Sikkim specimens in having narrower white bands on secondaries, and the spots on primaries are smaller and less confluent. Distribution. Sikkim ; Western and Central China. Genus COLADENIA. Coladenia, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 180 (1881) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 49. " AntenncE : club rather robust, recurved at tip. Palpi porrect ; third joint short-, obtusely conical. Fore wing : inner and outer margins subequal ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa; vein 12 reaching costa well before the end of cell; disooceUulars suberect, the lower the longer ; vein 3 shortly before the end of cell ; vein 2 more than twice as far from end of cell as from base of wing. Hind wing : outer margin sinuate ; vein 7 very close to end of cell ; discocellulars and vein 5 barely traceable ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 considerably nearer to end of cell than to base of wing. Hind tibise with two pairs of spurs, and in the male with a very long tuft of hair attached to the proximal end. " Type, iiidrani, Moore. " Asiatic and African." ( Watson, I. c.) Coladenia dan. (Plate xxxvill. fig. 10, var.) Papilio dan, Fabricius, Maut. Ins. ii. p. 88 (1787). Hesperia dun, Horsfield & Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p. 253 (1857). Coladenia dan, de Niceville, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. lii. p. 100 (1883) ; Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 398, pi. xxxv. fig. 27 (1886). Hesperia fatih, Kollar, Hiigel's Kaschmir, iv. p. 454, pi. xviii. figs. 5, 6 (1848). " P. P. V. alls ecaudatis obscure cinereis fusco punctatis ; anticis maculis fencslratis. " Habitat Tranqucbarice, Dom. Pflug. " Corpus parvum obscure cinereum, antennis uncinatis uigris. Ala3 omnes obscure cinerea; punctis 4 F 2 568 HESPEEUDJi. strigaque postica fuscis. Anticos in medio maoulis tribus autcriore angulata et punotis quatuor minutis approsimatis ad marginera crassiorem hyalinis. Subtus concolores." (Fahricius, I. c.) " Wings above rufous brown ; anterior wings with four discal greyish-white spots, one largest and sublunate in cell, a smaller spot above it and two beneath cell divided by the second median nervule, obscure dark fascias ; posterior wings with discal and outer marginal dark fascise. Wings beneath as above, but slightly paler. Body and legs more or less concolorous with wings. " Expanse 30 millim." (Distant, J. c.) " Alis fulvo-brunneis ; anticis medio maculis quatuor, adjaccntibus punctis duobus maculisquo tribus minoribus ad apicem albis diaphanis, posticis fasciis duabus obscurioribus obsoletis. "Expans. alar. 1" S^'"." (Kolho; L c.) The female (hitherto unnoticed) is rounder in the wing than the male, and the spots on primaries are subdiaphanous white. Occurs fairly commonly in Western China at Chia-kou-ho, Wa-shan, and Ta-chien-lu. None of the Western Chinese specimens that I have seem to agree exactly with those from Sikkim ; they are more suffused and, as a rule, considerably larger. The most typical example in my Chinese series of C. dan is one taken by myself at Foochau in April. From Moupin, Wa-ssu-kow, and Pu-tsu-fong I have received a form which differs so considerably from the type that I describe it as : — Var. dea, var. nov. (Plate XXXVIII. fig. 10, c? .) Larger than the type. Primaries uniformly darker ; all the hyaline spots much larger, exhibiting a tendency to become confluent ; sub- apical spots elongate and placed obliquely ; sometimes there are one or two small spots below the subapical three. Under surface much brighter than in typical C. dan. The yellow transverse bands on secondaries much more conspicuous ; primaries also more suffused with yellow and the fringes more distinctly chequered with white. Expanse 48 millim. According to Elwes C. dan is common in Sikkim up to 4000 feet from March to October. Distribution. Continental India, N.W. Himalayas, Cachar, Burmah, China, Malay Aixhipelago. Coladenia vitrea, sp. nov. (Plate XLI. fig. 15, 6 .) Male. Blackish grey, with numerous semitransparcnt spots. Primaries have six central and five subapical spots, the first, third, fifth, and sixth of central series small, and the fourth and fifth subapical minute. Secondaries have a subbasal spot, a large almost quadrate central spot with a small linear one below it and a curved series of seven spots beyond it ; the anal fourth of these wings is greyish. Fringes of primaries of the ground-colour; of the secondaries white, except at outer angle, where they are of the ground-colour, spotted with COLADENIA.— CEL.ENOERHINUS. 569 black at ends of tho ncrvulcs. Under surface similar to above, but the basal and inner marginal areas of primaries and the whole of disc of secondaries arc suffused with bluish grey. Expanse 38 millim. Mr. H. Grose Smith has one male specimen, taken at Ta-chien-lu by a native collector; this he has very kindly placed at my disposal to figure and describe. Genus CEL^NOERHINUS. Celcfnorrhinits, Hiibner, Verz. p. 106 (1816) ; de Niceville, Bomb. Nat. Hist. Jouru. iv. p. 177 (1889) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 49. Type, eligius, Cramer. Gehlota, Dolierty, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. Iviii. pt. 2, p. 131 (1889). Type, sumitra, Moore. " Antennae : club moderate, recurved at apes. Palpi subereet, terminal joint minute, second joint pressed close against the face. Fore wiug : inner and outer margins subequal ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 12 reaching oosta almost opposite the end of cell ; discocellulars subereet, the lower the longer ; vein 3 shortly before tho end of cell ; vein 2 more than twice as far from end of cell as from base of wing. Hind wing : outer margin sinuate ; vein 7 well before the end of cell, about twice as far from vein 8 as from 6 ; discocellulars faint, erect ; vein 5 barely traceable ; vein 3 immediately before the end of cell ; vein 2 twice as far from base of wing as from end of cell. Hind tibiie with two pairs of spurs, and in the male with a tuft of hairs attached near the proximal end. " This is a cosmopolitan genus, species belonging to it occurring in Asia, Africa, and South America.'-' ( Watson, I. c.) Celsenorrliiims maculosa. (Plate XXXIX. fig. 2, c? .) Pterygospidea maculosa, Felder, Reise Novara, Lap. iii. p. 538, pi. Ixxiii. fig. 7, $ (1867). Celcenorrhinus maculosa, de Niceville, Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. iv. p. 180 (1889). Mule. " AliE supra fuscis, ad basin cervino pilosae, antiose macula parva rotundata interiore sub- basali, una cellulari, duabus inter ramos medianos, inferiore multo majore, quiuta infra banc parvula, sexta extra eam minoro difformibus, tribus anticis congestis duabusque infra eas prope marginem externum pellucide albis, in certo situ serioeo nitidis, posticas macula sub- costali, duabus in cellula, quinque statim pone banc (secunda majore), altera exteriors rotundata parvula inter ramos subcostales aliisquc sex submargiualibus (supremis duabus punctiforraibus) ochraceo-flavis, ciliis albido intersoctis. '• AliB subtus dilutiores, antioaj insuper striis duabus anticis e basi ochraceis, posticce maculis supernis majoribus, secunda subcostal!, aliis cuneatis basalibus vittaque irregulari interna auctis, paUide ochraceis. " Facias, palpi et pectus pallide oohracea. Abdomen fuseum, ochraceo fasciatum." {Felder, L c.) The commonest species of the genus occurring in China. I have received large numbers from Kiukiang, Omei-shan, and Moupiu. It varies considerably in expanse, also in the size of the spots on primaries. The female only diff"ers from the male in having rounder wings. 570 HESPEEIID.l-:. Celaenorrhinus consanguinea. (Plate XXXIX. fig. 3, d .) Celmiorrhinus consanguinea, Leechj Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 61 (1891). Dark brown, sprinkled with ochreous scales, especially on the basal third of primaries ; tliese wings have a central series of five diaphanous spots and five towards apex ; there is also a spot midwaj- between central series and base of wing. The spots on secondaries are pale orange, and comprise a large one in the centre of the wing, three between it and the abdo- minal margin, and one, or sometimes two, towards the base of the wing, beyond there is a transverse series of seven or eight, but that nearest the oosta is sometimes absent. On the underside of primaries there are two extra spots in the submedian interspace ; on the second- aries all the spots are larger in size and paler in colour, and there are three distinct spots in the basal area. The fringes of the primaries are of ground-colour, spotted and dashed with pale yellowish white, and those of the secondaries are pale yellowish white, with patches of the ground-colour at the extremities of the nervules. Antennce are black, broadly banded with whitish before the club. Expanse 50 millim. This species agrees in many respects with C. 2>ero, de Niceville, Bomb. Xat. Hist. Jom-n. iv. p. 183, pi. B. fig. 12 (1889) ; but apart from the more rounded contour of outer margin of primaries, the diff'erent character of the markings on antennae and fringes of primaries will, in conjunction with the additional spots on the under surface, separate these two closely-allied species. The sexes do not difier in colour or ornamentation. Occurs in June and July at altitudes ranging from 3000 to 6000 feet at Moupiu, Omei-shan, Wa-shan, and Ta-chien-lu in Western China, also at Ichang in Central China. Cel£eiiorrliinus sumitra. (Plate xxxix. fig. l, d .) Plesioneura suinitru, ]Moorc, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 18G5, p. 787. Celanorrhinus sumitra, de Niceville, Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. iv. p. 184 (1889). " Male uni female dark olive-brown, paler at the base. " Male. Fore wing with an oblique discal series of four conjugated semitransparent white spots, the first and second large and quadrate, the other two very small, first one within the extremity of the cell, second and third beneath it, fourth exteriorly before the juncture of the first and second ; a series of five small similar spots obliquely before the apex. Hind wing with a submarginal row and a few discal bright orange-yeUow spots ; cilia of hind wing broadly alternate brown and orange-yellow. Underside as above : the orange-yellow spots on the hind wing more clearly defined. Antennte above silvery white. Palpi and front of thorax beneath pale yellow. Abdomen with narrow orange-yellow segmental bands. " Female as in male, but having also a yellow costal spot above the oblique discal series of white spots. " Expanse, cj 2 inches, J 2| inches. " N.E. Bengal." {Moore, I. c.) Occurs at Omei-shan and Moupin in July at an elevation of from 3000 to 4000 feet. CEL.ENOEEHIXUS. 571 Mr. Elwes says that it is rare in Sikkim, and that he has taken it in the forest near Rikisum, in British Bhotan, at an elevation of fi-otn 5000 to 7000 feet, in Augnst. Celgenorrhinus aspersa. (Plate XXXIX. fig. 4, d .) CeldBnorrhinus aspersa, Leechj Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 61 (1891). Male. Similar to CeTcenorrliinus {Plcri/rjos^ndea) tnantlosa, Feld., but larger, and the outer margin of primaries is straighter ; the antennae are whitish in front ; the spots on the primaries are numerically the same, but those in the median and submedian interspaces are elongated and placed wider apart. On the secondaries the number and arrangement of yellow spots is almost identical in both species, but in C. aspersa they are larger, and the three placed between discal spot and abdominal margin are more or less confluent. On the under surface the basal area of secondaries is dusted with yellowish scales. Fringes of primaries are of the ground-colour, and of the secondaries yellow, except along the costal third of outer margin, where they are of the ground-colour. One specimen from Chia-kou-lio. Taken at an elevation of 2000 feet in July. Celsenorrhinus pluscula, sp. nov. (Plate xxxix fi-. G, ? .) Female. Very similar to the same sex of C. plafjifera, de Niceville*, but on the primaries the costal spot of central series is absent, and on the secondaries there are complete central and submargiual series of yellow spots but only one subbasal spot ; the fringes of these wings are yellow chequered with the ground-colour, except at outer angle, where they appear to be entirely of the ground-colour. The male, of which sex I have only one example, has the primaries rather more pointed, but agrees in other respects with the female. Occurs in Western China at Moupin, Omei-shan, Pu-tsu-fong, and Wa-ssu- kow, in June and July, at firom 5000 to 8000 feet. Celsenorrhinus lucifera, sp. nov. (Plate XXXIX. fig. 5, ? .) Female, fuliginous brown, powdered with ochreous yellow on the basal and inner marginal areas of primaries. Primaries with the markings very similar to those of G. pulomaya, Moore f, but the yellow spot in submedian interspace, one third from base, is clearer. Secondaries have the discal area clothed with long ochreous-yeUow hairs, and are maiked with yellow as follows: — a subbasal spot, a central series of spots, the first transversely elongate and the others obscure, a submargiual series of seven spots. Fringes of primaries hardly paler than the ground-colour, marked with yellowish towards the inner angle ; of secondaries yellowish grey, marked with the ground-colour at extremities of the nervules. Antcnnoe whitish above and blackish beneath ; club whitish streaked with blackish. Expanse 63 millim. * Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. iv. p. 182, pi. B. fig. 13, ^ (1889). t Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 787. 572 HESPEEIID.E. Oue example taken at Moupin in July. This species resembles C. pijrrha, de Niceville*, in the maculation of secondaries, but the markings on primaries are different. Celsenorrhinus omeia, sp. nov. (Plate xxxvill. fig. 5, d .) Ochreous brown, neuration of all the wings blackish ; the primaries are blackish between the costa and subcostal nervure, and sprinkled with blackish scales on the outer third of the wing ; there is a large whitish subhyaline spot at the end of the cell, three others in the interspaces below, the third being the smallest, and three towards apex. Secondaries have a central transverse series of elongate black spots. Under surface ochreous brown, thickly powdered with blackish scales, and tinged with purplish towards margins, the white spots of the primaries are more glassy and there is an extra opaque spot above the cell ; the black spots of secondaries are only seen on the under surface in the female. Fringes brownish grey, darker at their base. Antenuis black : palpi yellow. Expanse, S 60 millim., $ 70 millim. Occurs at Omei-shan in June and July. Although I have placed this species in CeUenonhinus I think that a new genus will have to be created for it and its allies. It appears to be con- generic with C. huchananii, de Nicev. f , and superficially resembles Casyapa phanwiis, Hewitsou %. Celaenorrliiiius davidi. (Plate XXXIX. fig. 9, 6 .) Pteryyospidea davidii, Mabillo, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, 1876, p. liv. Celeenorrhinus davidii, de Niceville, Bomb. Nat. Hist. Jovirn. iv. p. 186 (1889). " Nigra, sed maculis albia ita variegata ut tessellata videatur et paululum generis Melanargw speciem referat. Macula alba in basi anticarum nigrescent!, ovalis, elongata ; fascia 5 macularum albarum in disco ipuirum una linearis ad costam ; secuuda maxima quadrata in cellula, quam exterius punctum triangulare, nigrum, cinereo circumdatum, sequitur; tertia exterior sagittata ; quarta elongata, et quinta quadrata, amboe utrinque emarginatfe ; fascia delude ante-marginalis, sinuata, offerens prius sex puncta bene scripta, alba, 4 subapicalia, et duo majora ad marginem externum, et inferius tria alia obsoleta, quorum ultimum magnum dentatum, ad marginem internum : ante marginem externum : versus apicem sunt tres maculse obsoletae, cinerea;. Aloe posticce fere alba;, et color cineieo-niger in quatuor maculas aut macularum ordines redactus ; scilicet unam basalem maculam, utrinque junctam macularum subbasalium ordini in medio interrupto, et quatuor maculas conglo- meratas habenti : tcrtiiim ordinem macularum minorum in disco, et quartum marginalem majorum et vix nervis divisarum. Margo abdominalis anguste niger. Fimbria anticarum * Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. iv. p. ISl, pi. B. fig. 11, 2 (1SS9). t Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. 18S9, p. 187, pi. B. fig. 2, 2 . t Descr. Hesp. p. 14 (1SG7) : Distant, Ehop. Malay, p. 3SG, pi. xxxv. fig. IS (18S6). CEL^NOERHINUS. — TAGIADES. 573 nigra ut et norvi : posticariim alba. ColLire, palpi aurantiaco colore. Pagina inferior pallidior, maoulis magis separatis : abdomen album, pedes cincrei. Antennae nigroe." {MaUlle, I. c.) Occurs in Western China at Moupin, Wa-ssu-kow, and Chia-kou-ho ; and in Central China at Chang-yang and Kiukiang. Pratt says that it flies around high trees. Two specimens from Kiukiang diff'er from those from the other localities in being larger and in having the ground-colour darker and the spots smaller. I have followed de NiccvUle in referring this species to Celwnorrhinus, but probably a new genus will have to be founded for its reception. Genus TAGIADES. Tagiades, Hiibner, Verz. p. 108 (1816) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 53. Tyiie,japetus, Cram. Pterygospidea, Wallengren, Rhop. Caffr. p. 53 (1857). Type, ^es?/s, Fabr. " Antennae: club slender, bent at about a rigbt angle, terminal portion rather long. Palpi porrect, third joint minute. Fore wing : inner and outer margins subequal ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 12 reaching costa well before end of cell ; disoocellulars subercct, the lower the longer ; vein 3 shortly before end of cell, three times as far from 2 as from 4 ; vein 2 almost twice as far from end of cell as from base of wing ; lower margin of cell between origins of veins 2 and 3 strongly arched. Hind wing evenly rounded ; vein 7 well before the end of cell, about twice as far from 8 as from 6 ; discocellulars and vein 5 very faint; vein 3 shortly before end of cell, twice as far from 2 as from 4; vein 2 considerably nearer to end of cell than to base of wing. Hind tibiae fringed, and with two pairs of spurs. " It is quite impracticable to separate Pterygosjiidea from Tagiades, the only difference being that in fiesas the outer margin of the fore wing is slightly excavated just above the outer angle, which is not the case injapetus ; when, however, one tries to apply this diff"erence to other species it is found to be a vanishing quantity, and quite valueless as a generic character." [Watson, I. c.\ Tagiades atticus. (Plate xxxviii. fig. 13, 6 .) Hesperia atticus, Fabricins, Eut. Syst. III. i. p. 339 (1793). Tagiades atticus, Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 457. " H. U. alis rotundatis: anticis fuscis nigro maculatis punctisque fenestratis, posticis hyalinis atro maculatis. " Habitat in India Dom. Lund. 4g 574 IIESPERIID.E. " iStatura omuino pra^cedentis [Cicera, Fiihr.^. AIsp anticae obscuroe maoulis aliquot disci uigris punctisque quatuor aut quinque minutis, hyalinis, subtus fuscae puuctis hyaliiiis. Postica' rotundate, hyalinae maculis disci atris, subtus pallidiores maculis aliquot nigris. Antenna; uncinatae." {Fabrichts, 1. c.) Occurs in Western China at Omei-shan, Chia-ting-fu, and Chia-kou-ho. Except that they are rather larger, Chinese specimens are identical with those from Sikkim and exhibit the same range of variation. The primaries are sometimes traversed by a series of subdiaphanous white spots extending from costa to inner margin. In a few specimens the black spots on lower two thirds of submarginal area of secondaries are Avell separated and clearly defined, but usually the spots are confluent and form a broad submarginal band. Elwes says that the species occurs all along the Himalayas and is found in Sikkim up to 4000 feet, from March to December. In the Malay Peninsula it is represented by a form which Butler has named calligana (Trans. Linn. Soc. (2), Zool. i. p. 556, pi. Ixix. fig. 11 ; Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 387, pi. xxxiv. fig. 6.) Distrihution. Continental India, Ceylon, Malacca, Malay Peninsula, and AVestern China. Genus CTENOPTILUM. Ctenoptilum, de Nieeville, Jouru. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc. 1890, p. 220 ; Watson, Proc Zool. Soc. Loud. 1893, p. 60. " Fore wing narrow, elongated ; costa arched at base, then straight to apex ; apex acute ; outer margin at right angles to costa from apex to termination of third median nervule, this portion also being slightly excavated, from third median ner-vule to inner angle strongly inwardly oblique, also slightly concave ; inner angle rather acute ; inner margin siniious ; costal nervure very short, not nearly reaching opposite to the apex of the discoidal cell ; first, second, and third subcostal nervules also very short, rapidly reaching the costa, fourth subcostal long, extending to apex of wing, the bases of all the subcostals nearly equi- distant ; terminal portion of subcostal nervure reaching outer margin below apex of wing ; discoidal cell long, narrow, reaching to more than half though less than two thirds the length of the wing ; upper discocellular nervule short, straight, outwardly oblique ; middle and lower discocellulars straight, slightly inwardly oblique, the lower a little longer than the middle ; second median nervule arising considerably before the lower end of the cell ; first median arising much nearer to the base of the wing than to the lower end of the cell ; submedian nervure sinuous, following the outline of the inner margin ; internal nervure short, running to the submedian nervure as usual. Hind wing with the base of the costa much produced, thence gently curviug to apex ; outer margin slightly produced, tooth-like at apex of first subcostal nervule, very strongly at third median nervule, thence inwardly CTEXOPTILUir.— HESPEEIA. 575 oblique to anal angle and slightly concave ; anal angle ronndod ; inner margin neatly straight ; costal nervure curved, reaching the apex of the wing ; first subcostal nervule originating long before the apex of the discoidal cell; discocellnlar nervules of equal length, almost straight, slightly outwardly oblique; discoidal nervule fine but distinct; second median nervule given off close to the lower end of the cell : first median arising nearer to lower end of the cell than to the base of the wing; submedian and internal nervure almost straight. Antennae about half as long as the costa of fore wing, with a well-formed club; thorax rather stout; abdomen rather slender, not quite reaching to anal angle of hind wing. " Male with no secondary sexual characters on the wings, but with a dense tuft of hairs attached to the anterior end of the tibia of the hind legs, the hairs extending to the apex of the first joint of the tarsus. Female like the male, except that the wings are rather longer and broader. " Type ' AchJi/odi's ' vasciva, Moore." (de SicevUle, I. c.) Ctenoptilum vasava. (Plate XLI. fig. 13, d .) Achhjodes vasava, Moore, Cat. Lejo. Miis. E. I. C. i. p. 252 (1857) ; Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 18()5, p. 786. AntigoHUS vasava, Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. LonJ. 1888, p. 458. " Upperside dull ferruginous, palest on the hind wing : fore wing slightly suffused with blackish along the posterior margin, an irregular series of various shaped semitransparent spots disposed across the disk, with an exterior blackish transverse streak ; hind wing with the base suffused with blackish ; a subbasal agglomerated series of irregular- shaped semi- transparent spots. Underside paler, marked as above, but without the transverse black outer streak on the fore wing. Palpi and body beneath whitish. Legs ferruginous. " Expanse 1| inch." {Moore, I. c.) I met with this insect at Ningpo in April, and Pratt obtained it in May at Kinkiang. Both Pratt and Ivricheldorff failed to meet with it in any other locality in China that they visited. The Chinese specimens are larger than those from Sikkim and have the subhyaline spots better developed, but do not difi'er from them in any other respect. The sexes are alike in colour and pattern. Elwes says that in Sikkim C. vasava is common in April and May up to about 3000 feet. Genus HESPEEIA. Hesperia, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. vol. i. p. 258 (1793) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 64. Type, malvce, Linn. Pyrgus, Hiibner, Verz. p. 109 (1816). Type, syrichtus, Fabr. Scelothrix, Rambur, Cat. Lep. Andal. i. p. 63 (1858). Type, carthami, Hiibn. Syrichtus, Boisduval, Icones, p. 230 (1832-33). Name sinks, being derived from species in genus. 4g 2 576 hesperiim:. '•AntennEe: club robust, arcuate, blunt at tbe tip, no terminal crook. Palpi suberect : second joint laxly clothed with longish scales ; third joint slender, blunt, almost concealed in scaling of second joint. Fore wing : inner and outer margins subeqiial ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 12 reaching costa well before the end of cell ; discoeellulars suberect, the lower the longer ; vein 3 shortly before end of cell, more than twice as far from 2 as from 4 ; vein 2 nearer base of wing than to end of cell. Hind wing usually evenly rounded, occasionally slightly crenulate ; vein 7 very shortly before end of cell ; discoeellulars and vein 5 very faint ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 nearly equidistant from base of wing and end of cell. Hind tibiae with two pairs of spurs." (Watson, 1. c.) Hesperia maculata. (Plate XLI. fig. 2, d .) Si/richthus macii/afiis, Bremer & Grey, Sclimett. N. China's, p. 11, pi. iii. fig. 6 (1853) ; Pryer, Rliop. Nihon. p. 35, pi. x. fig. 21 (1889). Pyrgus maculatus, Meu^tries, Cat. Mus. Petr. pi. v. fig. 5 (1855). " Alls supra : nigrescentibus, anticLs faseiis duabus interruptis et lunula mediana alba ; posticis punctis albis biserialibus ; subtus anticis iisdem ut supra, attamen apice eastaneo : posticis castaneo alboque fasciatis. " Expans. alar, antic, unc. 1]."' {Brema- J,- Grey, J. c.) The larva, which Graeser fouud commouly in September enclosed between leaves of raspberry and Spirea, is of a uniformly light green with a few short white hairs, the second segment and first pair of legs are red-brown, and the other legs are light green with black claw^s ; head round and velvety black. The pupa is dusted with bluish white. This species, which was described from a Pekin specimen, occurs in Western China at Chia-ting-fu ; at Ichang, Chang-yang, and Kiukiang in Central China ; and in Japan. Maculata can easily be separated from H. zona by the following characters : — The ground-colour is blacker, the maculation more prominent, and the fringes are more distinctly chequered. On the secondaries there are always two bands of spots, the outer of which is often very well defined and angulated. In H. zona this second band is occasionally faintly indicated. On the under surface the apex of primaries and disc of secondaries are brightly marked with castaneous, whereas in //. zona the colour- is more olive and there is a dark submarginal band on secondaries which is not found in H. maculata. In my paper on the " Butterflies of Japan and Corea " (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1887), I eiToneously included '■Pyrgus' sinicus, Butler, as a synonym of //. maculata, and I regret to find that Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 217) has perpetuated this error. His remarks on wiiat he considers to be the HESPERIA. 577 typical form of//, macuhda clearly indicate that he had 'P.' sinicus=Il. zona under observation, and his description of macidata, var. amurcnsis, really refers to typical //. maculata. My examples from Amurland do not differ from Chinese or Japanese specimens, nor from specimens taken in the Tetung Mountains, Thibet, which were sent to me by M. Grum-Grshimailo. Distribution. North, Central, and Western China, Japan, Amurland, and Thibet. Hesperia zona. (Plate XLI. figs, l, 3, vars.) Scelothr'i.v zona, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1875, p. ccxiv. Scelothrix [Pyrgus) albistriga, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1876, p. xxvii. Pyrgus sinicus, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4) xix. p. 96 (1877). Syrichthus sinicus, Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 35, pi. x. fig. 2.2 (1889). " Subsimilis .S. maculato, Brem., alls fusco-nigris ; anticis cum duabus lineis punctorum albonim, altera in disco 4 puncta prajferena, quorum duo superiora geminata ; eorum alteram ad costam minimum, alteram in cellula majus cum macula nigra anterius albo circumdata juuctura ; altera autem liuea novem punctorum, quorum medium minus. Alls posticis con- coloribus cum 2 maculis albis elongatis in media ala. Fimbria albida vix iutersecta. Alis anticis subtus concoloribus margins albescenti, basi et costse dimidio ciuerascentibus. Posticis basi usque ad medium albescenti cum macula punetum album parvum claudenti ad marginem superiorem ; zona nigra margiui exterior! parallela vel fascia sat lata. Margo ipse griseus. In disco fascia alba fere transluoida puncta paginse superioris referens. ■' Ex Asia centrali ad orientem ; Peking?" {Malille, I.e.) Yar. albistriga, Mabille. (Plate XLI. fig. 1, d-) " SimiUimus S. zona; P. Mab., et S. maca- Icito, Brem., sed paulo minor ; in alis posticis ad basim tria puncta alba vel interduni quatuor. Subtus ala3 omnes fuscce, inferiores zona alba ad costam inrerrui)ta divisie et puncto albo siguatae ad costam proximo basim ; basis inferiorum et costa supcriorum ad basim cinerascunt. " Ex Asia orientali." {Mahille, 1. c.) P. sinicHs, Butler. — "Allied to P. maculatus ; primaries the same ; secondaries above with the central transverse interrupted streak composed of only three well-separated white spots, the outer or discal series of five spots all small: secondaries below ver)' different from P. macidatits, sordid white ; a rather broad olive-brown band, shorter than the darker band of P. maculatus, and crossed by white veins, indistinctly bordered with white internally, and broadly white- bordered externally ; the interno-mcdian, first median, and diseoidal interspaces irrorated with the same brown (beyond the whif;e border); external area broadly brown, its inner half blackish ; no trace of the angulated submarginal white streak common to P. maculatas : fringe white, spotted with brown. Expanse of wings 1 inch 3 lines.'' {Butler, I. c.) This species is common in Central and Soutliern Japan and at Gensan in 578 HESPEEIID.E. tlie Corea. It also occurs iu Central China at Cliang-yang and Kiukiaiiji-, and in Western China at Chia-ting-fu. I have beautifully executed drawings of the types of zona and albistriqa, Mabille, and consider that both, together with siniciis, Butler, are referable to one species. Zo)ia^sinicus is the usual form met with, and has the dark submarginal band on under surface of secondaries well developed ; var. al/j/- ■sfn'ga is a slightly smaller form, in which the ground-colour of under surface is more uniform in tint and the black submarginal band does not extend far beyond the anal angle. In some specimens the dark central band on under surface of secondaries is entirely obliterated as in fig. 3. Hesperia thibetana. Si/ric/it/iiis maculatiis, var. thlbetatnis, Obertliiir, Etiul. d'Eatom. xv. p. 20, pi. iii. fig. 27 (1891). Yc-iy similar to H. maculata on the upper surface, but the white spots are generally rather smaller and the outer band of spots on secondaries is not elbowed. Oq the under surface the apex of primaries is white enclosing a dash of olivaceous brown, instead of being entirel_v brown ; the pattern on secondaries is similar to that of maculata, but the colour of ground and markings is the same as in //. hieti. Expanse 32-36 millim. Of this species, Avhich M. Oberthiir has considered to be a form of II. maculata, I have examples from Ta-chien-lu and AVa-ssu-kow in Western China, Avhere they were taken in May and June. Hesperia bieti. Sijrkhthus bieti, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Eiitom. xi. p. 20, pi. vi. fig. 50 (188G). " Voisin de macidatus dont il diffcre peu en dessus, mais tres distinct en dessous par les dessins gris jaunatre de ses ailes inferieures. " Le dessous de I'abdomen est blanchatre." {Oberthiir, 1. c.) This species is fiiirly plentiful at Ta-chieu-lu and Wa-ssu-kow, Western China, in May and June. Alpheraky * records ^S*. bifti from Tangout, plateau of xlmdo. AI. Grum- Grshimailo sent me a specimen as this species from the Nian-shan mountains, Thibet ; but it is quite diiferent to any Hesj^eria with which I am acquainted, and will probably prove to be ncAv. * Eom. sur Lep. v. p. 122. HESPERIA. 57!) Hesperia obertliuri. (riate XLI. fig. 5, 6 .) Stjr'ichthus oberthiln, Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 59 (June 1891). Syrichthus delavayi, Obertliiir, Etud. d'Entoni. xv. p. 20 (July nee June, 1891). Closel)' allied to Hesperia maculafa, Brem., with which it agrees almost exactly in colour and ornamentation of upper surface, hut the outer macular hand is less augulated. The under surface of secoiuhiries is olive-green or grey, with white basal and central bands formed of connected sjjots, which in the central series are of various shapes — one of these below costa is bar-shaped : between the bands the costa is white, with a round spot below of the same colour ; the submarginal line is also white, waved, and interrupted. Expanse 33-35 millim. " En effet ses caracteres distinctifs consistent dans I'acoentuation des taches blanches en dessus, dans un seul changement, quant a la disposition generale de ces taches qui sont en serie plus droite et-moins echelonnee ; et en dessons dans I'accentuation egalement plus grande de tous les dessins et taches qui sont plus nets, avec des contours tres arretes et comme circonscrits par un trait noinUre extremement fin. La couleur generale des taches en dessous est grisatre, sans tendance au rougeatre, comme cela se remarque dans le bieti du Yunnan." (Oherth'ur, I.e.) A good series from Wa-ssu-kow, taken at an elevation of 5000 feet in ^lay and June. M. Oberthiir considers this to be a local form of *S'. lieti, but both species occur together at Wa-ssu-kow. Obertliuri may be distinguished from bieti by its brown rather than black coloration, and by the more complete, curved, and more angulated bauds of secondaries ; the under surface also exiiibits important differences. Hesperia alveus. Papilio alveus, Hiibner, Eur. Schmett. i. figs. 461— 1G3 (1798-1803). Hesperia alveus, Rambur, Faun. And. pi. viii. fig. Ill (1839). Syrichthus alveus, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 311, pi. Ixxix. fig. ] (1881). " Expands from 1 to 1-10 in. Brown. Fore wings with a white discal spot and a submarginal row ; there is a small white dot near the centre of the inner margin and the usual tripartite costal spot. Hind wings as in cartlutmi, but even less distinctly marked; fringes brown and white. Underside : fore wings grey with white spots, as above, but suffused ; hind margin brownish or greenish. Hind wing white, with central and submarginal greenish hands, irregular in shape ; there is a basal spot of the same colour as the bands." {Lanrj, I.e.) This appears to be a scarce species in China. I received three specimens from How-kow, where they were taken at an elevation of 10,000 feet. M. Grum-Grshimailo sent me a specimen from Koko-noor which agrees exactly with these examples, and I have individuals in my European series 580 HESPEEIID.E. (if //. aheus which also agree with them. M. Grum-Grshimailo has described this form as '■Pyrgus ' alveus, var. sifanicits *. Graeser met with the species commonly at Pokrofka in June, and Standinger records var. fritillum, Hiibner, from Minussinsk, Saissan, and Lepsa in North-central Asia. Distribution. Central Europe, Spain, Italy, South Russia, Asia Minor, Syria, Armenia, Persia, Amurland, Central Asia, Western China. Genus THANAOS. riianaos, Boisduval, Icones, 240 (1832-33) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 69. Type, tages, Linn. •' Autennse : club moderate, more or less bent into a curve, bluntly pointed. Palpi porrect : ■second joint laxly clothed ; third joint almost concealed, bluntly conical. Fore wing: inner margin longer than outer margin ; male with a costal fold ; cell of fore wing less than two- thirds the length of costa ; discoceUulars slightly inwardly oblique, the lower the longer ; vein 3 shortly before the end of cell ; vein 2 slightly nearer to base of wing than to end of cell. Hind wing : outer margin evenly rounded ; vein 7 very close to end of cell ; disco- ceUulars and vein 5 faint ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 almost equidistant from end of cell and base of wiug. Hind tibise fringed and with two pairs of spines, the upper pair minute. " This genus as it stands at present includes many species which are certainly not congeneric. The above description is taken from the type species. "Found in Europe and North America." [Watson, I. c.) Thanaos montanus. (Plate XLll. fig. 2, var.) Viiryus montanus, Bremer, Bull. Acad. Petr. ill. p. 473 (18G1) ; Lep. Ost-Sib. p. 31, pi. ii. fig. 4 (1864J. Nisoniades montanus, Pryer, Rhop. Xilion. p. 35, pi. x. fig. 23 (1S89). Thanaos rusticanus, Butler, Journ. Linn. Soc., Zool. ix. p. 58 (1866). '■ Alse anticse supra grisescenti-olivaeeoe, maculi basali, fasciis duabus obliquis (interiore soepe interrupta et obsoleta, exteriore sinuato-dentata) lunulisque marginalibus, seriatim dispositis, oiivaceo-fuscis ; punotis margiuis anterioris tribus albidis ; posticiE nigro-fuscK lunula vcl striga media, maoulis seriei externse flexuosse serieique marginalis flavis. " Aloe anticse subtus nigro-fuscas, seriebus macularum flavarum tribus ; posticse subtus sieut supra. 34-37 m." {Bremer, I. c.) * " Alls supra ct subtus dilutioribus, maeulis uiinoribus." (Gr.-Gr. Hor. Soc. Eut. lloss. 1S91, p. 459.) THANAOS. 581 T. rmticiCMta, Butler. — " Alie antioce supra basi cinereo-fuscos, lunula nigra apud basim cella inclusa, fascia media extus ochrco-pallido intus olivaceo-fusoa lincis nigris marginata et divisa, area apicali einerco-fusca fasciis olivaceo-fiiscis varicgata, linea submarginali luuulata pallida ; posticoB nigro-fuscse, macula media oblonga brevi ochrea macularumque seriebus duabus submarginalium. Corpus nigro-fuscum. " Aloe anticse subtus basi fuscesoentes, fasciis duabus fusois obsoletis post ccllam positis et apud raarginem interiorem conjunctis, marginc postico linea fusca lunulata submarginato ; posticce velut supra. Corpus fuscum. " Alar. exp. unc. Ij'g." (Butler, I. c.) Pryer states that the larva feeds upon oak. Common in most parts of Japan in May. I also took it at Ningpo in April, and Pratt met with it at Ichang, Central China. It is fairly plentiful in Amurland and Fixsen records it from Corea. The only localities in Western China from which I have received specimens are Wa-ssu-kow and Ta-chien-lu, where it occurs in May and June. The specimens from these places are smaller and darker than the type, and the inner edge of the central band of primaries is not indented ; the yellow spots on secondaries are smaller, not always well defined, and in one specimen almost entirely obscured by the dark ground-colour. This form may be known as var. nigrescens (Plate XLII. fig. 2, 6 ). Thanaos pelias. (Plate XLII. fig. 3, j .) Nisoniades lieJidS, Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 60 (June 1891). Nisoniades erebus, Grum-Grshimailo, Horse Soc. Ent. Ross. x.\v. p. 4G1 (1891). Primaries grey, the basal half thickly, and the outer half sparingly, sprinkled with blackish ; there are three transverse black lines, the first is not well defined, the second is slightly curved and indented, and the third is serrated ; the space between the second and third lines appears to be darker, and there is a white spot on the costa. Secondaries fuliginous, with faint indications of a pale transverse line beyond the centre of the wing. Under surface fuliginous ; the primaries have a short white macular band from the costa, and the apices are tinged with grey ; transverse band on secondaries indicated as above. Fringes dark grey, paler towards extremities. Expanse, S 36 millim., $ 40 millim. Agrees with T. marloyi, Boisd., in size and in the abbreviated band on the under surface of primaries, but on the upper surface the markings are not very dissimilar to those of T. tagcs, L. Var. erebus, Gmm-Grshimailo. " S\ipra alis anticis cinereo-griseis, basin versus obscurioribus et fusco mixtis, litura marginali cinerea, ad discum obscurius adumbrata, duabus fasciis trans- versis obscure griseis, nigro serrato-marginatis ; posticis nigro-fuscis. 4 n 582 HESPEEIID^. " Subtus alis nigro-fuscis, anticis costa apiceque griseo-atomatis, punctis tribus subcostalibus mimisculis albis ornatis. Fimbria obscure grisea. not traceable ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 twice as far from base of wings as from end of cell. Hind tibia; with two pairs of spurs. " This is a genus of very numerous species, Avhich ranges from India through the Malay Archipelago to Australia, appearing to reach its greatest development in the islands of the Archipelago ; the peculiar form of the antennal club readily distinguishes it." {Watson, I. c.) 4 I 590 HESPEEIID.E. Taractrocera flavoides, sp. nov. (Plate XL. figs. 10 2, 11 s .) 31ale. Primaries pale fulvous, shaded with blackish on basal area ; below the outer extremity of discoidal cell there is a large black spot, -n-hich is connected by a black streak -with a large curved black spot on costal area ; outer margin broadly bordered with black, the inner edge with a quadrate indentation towards apex. Secondaries black, with a pale fulvous subbasal spot and a broad central maculated band of the same colour extending from costal to submedian nervure, the second spot is more or less quadrate in shape, and is placed out of line with the others forming the band. Fringes pale fulvous. Under surface: primaries blackish, suffused with yellowish on apical area, and narrowly along outer margin ; the costa is pale fulvous from base to beyond the middle, where it unites with a patch of the same colour in discoidal cell ; beyond is a pale fulvous macular band, the second spot placed out of line with the rest : secondaries blackish suffused with yellowish except in abdominal fold ; there are two transverse yellow bands ; the edges of both are dentate and marked with black. Fringes yellow. In the female the yellow markings are narrower. Expanse 28 millim. In general appearance this species, which so far has only occuiTed at Chow-pin-sa and Omei-shan, is very like Padraona Jlava, for which it might easily be overlooked. The antennee, however are not hooked at the tip, but have spoon-shaped clubs. Its nearest ally appears to be T. vigrolim- hatus, Snellen *, from Batavia. Genus ADOP.EA. Adopaa, Billb. Enum. Ins. p. 81 (18.20) ; Watsou, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 98. Type, ihaumas, Hufn. Pelion, Kirhj, List Brit. Rhop. (1858). Type, thaumas, Hufn. " Antennffi short, less than half the length of costa ; club elongate, straight or slightly arcuate, tip blunt. Palpi : second joint clothed with laxly-set scales ; third joint long, slender, suberect. Pore wing : inner margin longer than outer margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; middle discocellular more than twice as long as lower ; vein 5 from close to bottom of cell ; vein 3 close to end of cell ; vein 2 (in botli sexes) slightly nearer to base of wing than to end of cell. Hind wing : outer margin even, slightly excised at vein 2 ; vein 7 well before end of cell, only slightly nearer to 6 than to 8 ; discocellulars very faint, vein 5 not traceable ; vein 3 immediately before end of cell ; vein 2 more than twice as far from base of wing as from end of cell. Hind tibice with two pairs of spurs. Abdomen slender, extending beyond anal angle of hind wings. " Male with a linear discal stigma on the fore wing, in two portions— the upper portion long, lying below the inner margin of cell, from the origin of vein 3 to as far as vein 2 ; the lower portion short, in continuation of the upper portion, from below vein 2 to not quite as far as vein 1. " Distrilution. Holarctic." {Watson, I. c.) * Tijds. V. Entora. xix. p. 165, pi. vii. fig. 5 (1S76). ADOP.^A. 591 Adopsea sylvatica. (Plate XL. figs. 5 (^ , 8, var. 2 .) Pamphila sylvatica, Bremer, Bull. Acad. Pttr. iii. p. 474 (1861); Lep. Ost-Sib. p. 34. pi. iii. fig. 10 (1864). " Alfe supra ochracese late fusco-marginataj, ncrvis fuscis ; antica; macula media fusea. "Alfe subtus ochraceoe nervis fuscis, ad basim fusoescentes ; anticae macula obaoleta apud augulum interiorcm fusccscenti. 26 m." (Bremer, 1. c.) I met with this species at Gensan, Corea, in June, and at Hakodate, Japan, in Angust. Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi. p. 210) states that Japanese examples do not differ from those from Corea. The female only differs from the male in being larger. The form of A. si/hatica occurring in Western China is so uniformly different that I describe it as Var. OCCidentalis, var. nov. (Plate XL. fig. 8 5 .) Male agrees in coloration with typical A. sylvatica, but the wings are more suffused with darker scales. Female. Ground-colour almost black, the pale fulvous markings being much reduced in size, and the central series of primaries is much straighter towards inner margin ; tlie under surface is more suffused, especially the secondaries, which have indications of a central series of pale spots. This form occurs at Ta-chien-lu and Chia-kou-ho. Adopaea tenebrosa, sp. nov. (Plate XL. figs. G d , 9 2 .) Male, upper surface brownish black, with a purplish reflection in certain lights. Primaries are streaked obliquely on the costa with pale fulvous ; there are three linear fulvous spots and one round one, forming an outwardly oblique series from the costa, and five larger pale fulvous spots and dashes, forming an inwardly oblique series to inner margin ; two contiguous pale fulvous bars at end of discoidal cell. Secondaries clothed with olivaceous hairs on basal area ; central area traversed by a series of pale fulvous elongated spots. Under surface deep fulvous ; neuration of all the wings strongly marked with black ; there is a black cloud towards outer angle of primaries, and the basal area is also suffused with black ; the dis- coidal cell is closed by a black bar, and there is a black oblique streak above it running in the direction of the apex of the wing : secondaries slightly suffused with greenish-grey scales, especially along the abdominal fold ; in some specimens there are indications of the pale fulvous central spots of upper surface. Female. Similar to the male, but rather darker on the under surface. I was disposed to consider this species to be a form of A. sylvatica, but it can readily be separated by the purplish reflection of the ground-colour, by the neuration on under surface being more broadly black, and by the black oblique streak from upper angle of the discoidal cell ; the fulvous markings are also much paler. 4 I 2 592 HESPEEIID.E. I have only received this insect from Kiukiang, Central China, Avhere Pratt met with it commonly in June and July. Adopaea nervulata. (Plate XL. fig. 3, c? .) PuiiijMla iwri-iilata, ]Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. France^ 1876, p. Ivi. "Mas alis anticis nitide flavis, posticis obscurioribus, nigro circumdatis, nervis omnibus nigro scriptis, striga anticarum sexuali nigra, filiformi ; cellula striga supradiota, nervula, et nervo, omnibus nigris clausa. Subtus ate pallidiores sunt ; margo internus anticarum albeaoit, et nisi ad hunc angulum, nusquam ala3 nigro ciroumdatiE, basis anticarum nigra, ct nervi nitide scripta. " Femina obscurior ; latins aloe nigro-circumdatoe, ante ceUulam umbra nigra, triangularis, et loco strigoe, macula oblonga, nigra. " Moupin (Abb. Arm. David), Mus. Nat. Peking." {Mahille, I. c.) Although closely allied to A. sylvatica, Bremer A. nerindata differs in being smaller and broader in the wing ; tlie discoidal cell of primaries is not traversed by a heavily scaled longitudinal line, and the outer marginal borders are much narrower. It does not appear to be a common species. I have only received a dozen specimens, which were taken in June and July at Moupin, Ta-chien-lu, and Wa-ssu-kow. AdopSBa leonina. (Plate XL. figs. 1 d , 2 ? , 4 & 7 vars.) Puiiqjhila leonina, Butler, Cist. Entom. ii. p 286 (1878). Hesperia leonina, Pryer, Rhop. Nilion. p. 34, pi. x. figs. 18 (J, 15 ? ? (1889). Thymelicus leonina, Staudinger, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 151, \)\. viii. fig. .2, ,$ (1887) ; vi. p. 210 (1892). " Brigbt fulvous, with black veins and moderately broad purplish-brown outer borders (narrower than in A. si/lvatica) ; primaries, with a slender, oblique, linear, black brand ; secondaries with the basal area and abdominal border dusky ; wings below clearer than above, with black veins and linear black margin : primaries with the base (excepting upon the costa and brand) as above, black ; legs and front of palpi yellow, hinder part of palpi and venter white. " Expanse of wings 1 inch 3 lines. " This species is allied to P. si/lvafica, but markedly distinct ; it is frecpiently mistaken for P. venatit of brem., biit (as I believe) simply because it has black veins ; in the form of its wings it is totally dissimilar." (Buthr, I. c.) Formerly I considered A. leonina to be synonymous with A. (P.) sylvatica, but now that I have a much larger amount of material available for exam- ination I find that it is quite distinct. The males of A. leonina are much ADOP.EA.— EETXXIS. oil:] lighter coloured than those of A. sjjlvatica, and there is a conspicuous sexual brand on primaries similar to that oiA. thaumas. The females are exceedingly like those of A. sylmtica, but the pale markings are more distinctly defined. On the under surface both sexes are very similar to A. sylvatica, but the malr is distinguished by the sexual brand as above, and both sexes of this species have the brownish patch towards outer angle of primaries much smaller, and it does not extend to inner margin as in A. sylvatica. Occurs in the mountainous parts of Central Japan, in Yesso, and at Gensan, in Corea. Dorries found it at Baranowka and in the district of Sutschan. In Western China my collectors met with specimens at Wa-shan and Ta-chien-lu, which only appear to differ from Japanese examples in beinii- slightly smaller (Plate XL. fig. 4, c? ) ; but at Chang-yang, Central China, a remarkable form, for which I propose the varietal name astigmata, occurs (Plate XL. fig. 7, <5 ), in which the sexual brand of the male is entirely wanting. In other respects this form does not differ from the type, except in being rather more suffused with black, xis I thought this insect might be the male of a distinct species, I had the genital armature prepared and mounted for microscopical examination, and find that it is identical in shape and structure with that of ^. leonina from Western China. Distribution. Japan, Corea, Amurland, Western and Central China. Genus ERYNNIS. Erynnis, Schrauk, Fauna Boica, ii. 1, p. 157 (1801); Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lund. 18.93, p. 99. Type, comma, Linn. Ocytes, Scudcler, Syst. Rev. p. 55 (1872). Type, metea, Scudd. " Antennse short, less than half the length of costa ; club short, robust, terminal crook exceedin'tly minute. Palpi as in HyJepldla. Neuration as in Hylephila except that vein 2 of the fore wing is much nearer to the base of the wing in the male, and vein 7 of the hind wing is slightly nearer the base of the wing in both sexes ; the stigma on the fore wing is very similar to that of Hylephila, except that it entirely fills the angle at the bifurcation of vein i', while in Hylephila the discal stigma crosses the interspace beyond the origin of vein 2. "■Bistrihution. Holarctic." [Watson, I. c.) Erynnis comma. (Plate XLI. figs. 12 & 17, vars.) PapUlo comma, Liinueus, Syst. Nat. i. 2, p. 793 (17671. Hesperia comma, Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 353, pi. l.wxii. fig. 2 (1881). 594 HESPEEIID.E. Pamjjhila florinda, Butler, Cist. Eutom. ii. p. 285 (1878). Hesperia comma, Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 34, pi. x. figs. 14 « $ , 14 6 cj (1889). " Expands from 1-20 to 1-40 in. About the size of H. st/Ivanus, but has tbe bind margins more inclined to concavity in outline, especially in tbe male. The male has the basal and discal portions of tbe fore wing fulvous ; the bind margin and apex are dark brown ; there are some square fulvous spots near the apex ; the black line is very distinct, and is straighter than in H. sylvanus. Hind wings dark brown, with a submarginal row of fulvous spots, and a ful- vous spot near tbe base. The female is larger than the male, and is somewhat variable as regards the ground-colour, which ranges from dull fulvous to dark greenish brown : tbe fulvous spots are more discrete than in the male, and the black streak is absent from tbe fore wings. Underside: fore wings as above, but greenish towards the apex. Hind wings greenish or yellowish grey, with a submarginal row of seven or eight pure white spots, rather square in shape, and often outlined with blackish ; near tbe base are two or three similar spots. Clubs of antenna3 terminating in a hook. "Larva. Olive-green. Head large and black. There are two white spots on each side of the tenth and eleventh segments. Feeds on Coronilla, Ornilhoptis, Lotus, and other Leguminosa^. in June and July." {Liuvj, 1. c.) Var. florinda, Butler, (riate XLI. fig. 17, 6-) "6 2 a^o^e like P. comma, but deeper in colour ; below altogether redder in tint, with scarcely a trace of pale spots, only two or three being indistinctly traceable in the secondaries ; the veins also not tipped with black. " Expanse of wings c? 1 inch 6 lines, $ 1 inch 5 lines. " There is the same difference between the sexes as in the European insect, the male being tawny with purplish-brown borders and grey-streaked oblique black brand, the female purplish brown with the usual straw-yellow or ochreous spots ; the position of the species will be between P. comma and the P. si/Ivanus of Japan." {Biitlei-, I.e.) Occurs in the central parts of Japan, and I believe also in Yesso. Herz records typical specimens of E. comma from Corea, but at Gensan I only met with y^x. florinda. E. comma seems to be a scarce insect in Amurland, and Staudiuger (Rom. surLep. p. 211) describes a form from that region under the name repugnans, Avhich he says differs principally from the type on the under surface of secondaries, Avhere the pale spots are very small, and almost entirely oblite- rated by the yeUow ground-colour. The males on the upper siu-face have much darker, almost black, outer margins ; the females are hardly darker than typical comma. Some specimens taken by Herz in tlie neighbourhood of Pekin are con- sidered by Dr. Staudinger to be near his var. repugnans, which I believe to be s^Tionymous with var. florinda, Butler, an insect which Dr. Staudinger erroneously identifies as a form of A. (P.) sijhanus. I also formerly considered florinda to be a form of A. syhanus, on account of its resemblance on the ERYNXIS.— PADliAOXA. 51)5 under surface to that species ; but now that I have seeu a larger number of specimens, I find ilmiflorinda is undoubtedly a form of E. comma. I have seen the type of <■ Pamphila ' mikado, Mabille MS., and consider it to be a very worn specimen of -E*. comma, yar. ^orinda, Butler. Mr. Elwes states that specimens from Amurland seem to agree with Japanese examples. In India E. comma is represented by a form which INIoore has described as distinct under the name Pampldla dimila *. A specimen agreeing exactly with this Indian form has been received from Ta-chien-lu, Western China, by Mr. Grose Smith, and is figured in the present Avork (Plate XLI. fig. 12, c? ). "■ Pampldla' comma, var. ? Iato-\, Grum-Grshimailo, from the Dshachar Mountains, is probably referable to this form. Distribution. Europe, Amurland, Corea, Japan, N.W. Himalayas, N. & W. C'liina. Genus PADRAONA. Pudraona, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 170 (1881) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. See. Loiul. 1893, p. 101. Type, mcesa, Moore. " Antenna? : club moderate, elongate, with a short terminal crook. I'alpi : second joint densely scaled; third joint short, slender, suberect, obtusely conical. Fore wing: inner margin longer than outer margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; middle discocellular about twice as long as lower ; vein 5 considerably nearer to 4 than to 6 ; vein 3 immediately * Pamphila dimila, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soo. Lond. 1874, p. 576. " Allied to P. comma. '■'Male and Female. Upperside testaceous ; exterior border broadly fuliginous brown ; apex of fore wing brownish testaceous. Cilia whitish testaceous : fore wing with a series of small yellow apical spots ; male with an oblique silvery-lined black streak below the cell ; hind wing with a yellow spot within the cell, and a curved discal series of four quadrate spots. Underside : fore wing pale testaceous ; apical spots as above ; hind wing with basal portion greenish brown ; three prominent white subbasal spots disposed above, below, and at end of the cell ; a curved discal series of six quadrate white spots. " Expanse, c? 1|, $ If inch." {Moore, I. c.) t Pamphila comma, var.? lato, Grum-Grshimailo, Horee See. Ent. Ross. 1891, p. 459. " Supra alis multo obscurioribus, nigro-fiiscis, basin versus fiilvescentibus, maculis fulvis ; subtus anticis fulvo-rubescentibus, ad marginem internum pallidioribus, areis basali et interna uigris, costa apiceque viridibus, maculis quinque apicalibus flavis, duabus disci dilute fulvis, extus late nigrescenti adumbratis ; posticis viridibus, ad angulum analem fulvis, macnhs quadrangularibus, magis a margine externo distantibus, albis. Fimbria flavida. Antennis obscurioribus. " Specimen unicum in montibus Dshachar coUectum." (Gnim-Grslumailo, I. c.) 5DG HESPERIID.E. before end of cell ; vein 2 almost equidistant from end of cell and base of wing, slightly nearer to end of cell. Hind wing: outer margin even, slightly excised between veins 2 and 1 h ; vein 7 well before the end of cell ; discocellulars very faint, vein 5 wanting ; vein 3 close to end of cell, twice as far from 2 as from 4 ; vein 2 considerably nearer to end of cell than to base of wing. In the males of some of the species there is a short and very incon- spicuous glandular streak, situated immediately above the centre of vein 1 on the upperside of the fore wing. Hind tibite with two pairs of spurs. " This genus is apparently confined to the Asiatic and Australian regions, with the exception of coroller from Madagascar, and epictetus from tropical America ; these two species are possibly not correctly assigned to Padraona, though I am unable to point out how they can be separated from it." {Wed son, I. c.) Padraona dara. (Plate XL. figs. 1.3 & 14, vars.) Ilcsperia dara, Kollar^ Hiig. Kaschm. iv. 2, p. 455 (1848). Pamphila confucius, Felder, Wien. eut. Mon. vi. p. 29 (1862). Pamphila flava, Murray, Eut. Mo. Mag. xii. p. 4 (1875). Hesperia dara, ya,v. flava, Fixsen, Bom. sur Lep. iii. p. 318, pi. xiv. fi^'. G (I88~). Hesperia Jlava, Pryer, Rhop. Nllion. p. 35, pi. x. fig. 17 (1889). " Alls supra fuscis, stria latiore costse, fascia macular! obliqua maculaque subquadrata apiois anti- carum flavis ; posticis supra puncto medio fasciaque transversa, subtus totis flavis, fusco subtesselatis, margiue interne fusco. — Expans. alar. unc. 1." " Habit, in Himalaya." {Kollar, I. c.) XhT. confucius, Felder. " Alls supra saturate fuscis, anticarum vitta costali fasciaque exteriore subrefracta, posticis macula elongata cellute fasciaque pone discum irregular! utrinque fulvis, subtus anticarum extimo posticarumque pagina omni pallide fulvis, his regione auali nigricante. (J . " Ning-po. — P. augiadi, Linn, affinis, aloe posticoe vero apud angulum aualom minus productfe. Magnitude eadcra." (Ftlder, J. c.) Var. flava, Murray. (Plate XL. fig. 13, $ .) " Alis supra brunneis flavo-notatis : subtus pallidi- oribus, posticis flavis, bruunco-maculatis. Anteunis hamatis. Exp. alar., 1" 2"'-l" 4'". " Hub. Japonia. " Upperside. Fore wings dark brown : base dusted with yellow ; costal, inner marginal and median yellow streaks from the base, the latter expanding into a rather large yellow spot at the end of cell, above which are two yellow dashes, bordering the first subcostal nervule. Beyond the middle is a conspicuous yellow band, divided into spots by the veins ; the fourth and fifth are displaced, as in the allied species, and situated much nearer the hind margin. Hind wing dark brown : a yellow spot near base, and a smaller one above it, near the costa ; a conspicuous yellow band beyond the middle, reaching from submedian to subcostal ncrvures. The small costal spot before-mentioned may be considered as an upward continua- tion of this band. The brown portions of both win^^s are more or less dusted with vellow. Fringe yellow, cut with fuscous, especially on fore wing. PADRAONA. 597 " Uudcrside. Fore -n-ing paler than above: onlj- the costal streak from base present, which reaches to the subcostal dashea corresponding to those existing on the upper surface ; discoidal nervule bordered, often broadly, with ochreous, along the basal half of its course ; apical portion of hind margin ochreous. Hind wing brown, thickly dusted with ochreous except at anal angle, where is a large brown patch, extending in a narrow streak to the base. Spots as above, but with an additional basal spot above the cell. The transverse band is bounded outwardly by a more or less distinct zizgag brown line. " AUicd to P. aiujias, L. " This is the species referred to in my former paper as P. dara (?), KoU. Further investigation has convinced me that it is distinct; nor can I find it described by any other author. It seems to be a common species near Yokohama." (Murray, I. c.) This species appears to be common throughout the regiou dealt with in the present work. Confucius of Felder is identical with var. /lava, and has nothing to do witli augias. There are two forms in China which may possibly be seasonal ; one of these is of the confucius=flava form (Plate XL. fig. 13, $ ), and the other is characterized by having more yellow on upper surface and the absence of greenish suffusion on under surface of secondaries (Plate XL. fig. 14, 6 ). According to Elwes (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 451) P. dara is common in Sikkim up to 5000 feet from April to December. He adds : — " After comparing a long series of this species, namely, twelve from the North-west Hirrialayas (nia>sa, Moore); eight from Sikkim, one named m(Bsa by Moore ; four from Khasias taken by myself, three fi-om Japan, and three from China, I believe they are all the same species ; and I see that in Moore's paper on Hocking's Kangra collection he has identified mcesa with dara." Staudinger states that Dorries brought specimens from Amurland which do not differ from Japanese examples. I have not seen the type of Pampliila japonica, Mabille*, but from the * Pamphila japonica, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xxvii. p. Ixxiii (1883). " Praecedenti similis [P. hetcerus, Mab.] ; sed magis niger. Costa macdam flavam longiorem habet, et strigam similem in basi ; vitta nigra vix tangit margiuis tseniam nigram et vitta flava a costa et apice continua est, ut in P. siiiiia, Feld. A quo recedit pagina inferiore posticarum alarum, quse lutea est, cum margine abdominali luteo, vix ad angulum infuscato. " Cette espece resemble beaucoup au P. sunias, Feld., et au precedent [P. Jieieerus']. La bande noire des ailes superieurcs n'est pas bifurquee et ne louche pas la bordure au-dessous de I'apex. La cote a un trait jaune a la base et une tache tres allonge'e. La bandelette fauve du disque est continue, elle commence a la cote, fait un coude et revient vers lo bord interne. La bande jaune des ailes inferieures se I'ejoint au point jaune du bord antdrieur, et le dessous des memes ailes est tout entier jaune ; une serie de points noirs indique la bande du dessus, reproduite un pen en clair. Les palpcs sont d'un jaune soufre, avec le dernier article aciculaire, long et noiratre. Japon." {Mahille, I. c.) 4 K 598 HESPEKIID-E. (lescriptiou I am disposed to consider that it is identical with the Japanese form of F. dara, i. e.flava, MuiTay, as that is the only species of Padraona met with in Japan. Padraona gola. (Plate XL. fig. 12, d .) Pamphila gola, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1877, p. 594, pi. Iviii. fig. 9, S ■ " Male. Upperside dark vinous brown : fore wing with an oblique disoal irregular sinuous- bordered golden-yellow band, the band bent before the apex and indented at end of the cell ; hind wing with a median discal golden-)-ellow band, and a few hairs of the same colour at the base ; cilia edged with golden yellow. Front of head, palpi, and legs golden. Underside with the bands as above : costa and apex of fore wing and the hind wing suffused with yellow ; both wings with a blackish streak at end of cell. " Expanse 1 inch. " S. Andamans." (Moore, 1. c.) I received one male example from Kiukiang, Central China, where it was captured in June. It is rather more fulvous on upper surface, but in all other respects it agrees with Sikkim specimens. The under surface of second- aries is rather darker than the type in Mr. Moore's collection. Elwes says that he has a specimen from Buxa, Bhotan, which has been identifi^ed as P. gola by Mr. Moore. Wood-Mason and de Niceville record thirty-seven specimens in both sexes taken in and around Silcuri, Cachar, captured between 25th May and 5th August. Padraona virgata. (Plate XL. fig. 15, d .) Pamphila virgata, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 47 (1890). Male. Dark brown. Primaries have a fulvous streak from base parallel with costa to beyond the middle, this streak is broken up by the subcostal nervulesinto linear spots, its outer extremity curving downwards, and terminating directly over four fulvous spots placed in the median and submedian interspaces, there are two more or less confluent yellow dashes in the discoidal' cell, and the base and inner margin are streaked with fulvous scales. Secondaries tinged with fulvous towards base, with some fulvous central dashes. Fringes yellow, chequered with dark brown. Under surface of primaries blackish, with centre spots as above, but the costal streak and discoidal spots are not so clearly defined, the apical half of outer margin is suffused with yellow, but the base is not sprinkled with yellow scales. Secondaries yellow, with some spots at the base, an indistinct central band, and two parallel transverse series of spots before the outer margin, black, more or less obscured with yellow ; the abdominal fold is streaked with blackish. Female. Similar in ground-colour to the male, but the yellow costal streak is ill defined, except above the one discoidal spot, the central spots are smaller, and all are pale in colour. Expanse 30-32 millim. PADEAONA. 599 A fine series from Chang-yaDg and Ichang, Central China, taken in June a nd July. I have also received specimens from Moupin in Western China, and I took examples of each sex at Foochau in April 1886. Kricheldorff informs me that this insect is fond of settling in damp places on paths. The type specimen is rather paler on the under surface than the example figured, which represents the usual form of the species. Padraona maga. (Plate XL. fig. is, j .) Pamphila maga, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 48 (1890). Male. Superficially resembles P. virgatn, but the thorax is much stouter, and the primaries are without the yellow costal streak of that species, there are two yellow spots in discoidal cell, the lower of which is oblong and much the larger; beyond are six other yellow spots forming a transverse series, three of those are close together near the costa, one in each median interspace, and one near the submedian nervure. Secondaries have one spot iu each median interspace. Under surface of primaries blackish : costa and upper portion of outer margin broadly suffused with yellow ; the yellow spots of the upper surface are, with tho exception of the sixth, reproduced, the second to fourth each followed by a black spot, and there is a submarginal series of indistinct black spots between apex and first median nervule ; a projection from the yellow marginal border passes between the costal and central spots. Expanse 32 miUim. One male example taken at Ichang in June, and I captured two specimens of the same sex at Ningpo in April, 1886. Padraona trimacula. (Plate XL. fig. 17, c^ .) Taractrocera trimacula, Leech, Entomologist, xxiv., Suppl. p. 60 (1891). JSlale. Fuliginous ; the primaries with three large yellow spots, one in the cell and two beyond, and a short yellow dash along the subcostal nervure ; the secondaries have a yellow central spot. Fringes of all the veins yellow, narrowly chequered with black at the ends of the veins. On the under surface the markings are much as above, but the streak on subcostal nervure extends from base to the upper yellow spot, and there is a yellow subapical dash ; the secondaries are yellow, with a large black spot about middle of costa, and some blackish markings on the centre of the wing, and along the abdominal and outer margins. Expanse 30 millim. One male specimen from Wa-ssu-kow captured in June. This and the two previous species are only placed provisionally iu Padraona. Probably it may be found necessary to erect one or more new genera for their reception. 4k2 600 HESPEKIID.i:. Genus TELICOTA. Astycus, Hiibner, Catal. Frank, p. 185 (1825). Type, augias, Linn. Telicota, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. vol. i.p. 169 (1881); Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1893, p. 102. Tvpe, augias, Linn. " Antennae : club stout, elongate, terminal crook short. Palpi : second joint laxly scaled, third joint suberect, bluntly conical. Fore wing : inner margin longer than out«r margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa; vein 5 close to bottom of cell. lu the male ; vein 3 is well before the end of cell, considerably nearer to vein 2 than to 4, and vein 2 is nearer to the end of the cell than to the base of the wing. In the female vein 3 is immediately before the end of the cell, and vein 2 is nearer to the base of the wing than to the end of the ceU. Hind wing : vein 7 well before the end of cell, the upper margin of cell being bent down- wards at its origin ; discocellulars faint ; vein 5 not traceable ; veins 2, 3, and 4 all close together ; vein 3 about twice as far from 2 as from 4. Hind tibiae with two pairs of spurs. Male with a linear discal stigma on the upperside of the fore wing, extending from the base of vein 4 to as far as the submedian, being twice interrupted at veins 2 and 3. " Scott, in his ' Australian Lepidoptera,' has figured what he identifies as the two sexes oi phineiis, Cramer ; the male figured is the female of augiades, and the female appears to be a bad figure of Fadraona priiskis, Felder. The [rue 2}f>i)ieus, described from Surinam, is in the British Museum from Ecuador and Bolivia, and is the type of a distinct genus. Mr. Butler has also wrongly identified jyhineiis and records it from Amboina. " Hiibner's name Astycus has not been adopted for this genus, as it has uever been characterized, and was only published in a sale-list of Frank's collection ; the twenty-two species enumerated under it belong to at least thirteen different genera. "This genus ranges from India to Australia." [Watson, I. c.) Telicota bambusae. Pcuiiphila bainbusce, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1878, p. 691, pi. xiv. figs. \\ S > 12 ?. Telicota bambusce, Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 382, pi. xxxv. fig. 12 (1886). " AUied to P. augias, Linn., from typical Java specimens of which it differs in its somewhat broader and less pointed wings. Markings above similar, but more defined, the borders of the wings blacker, the basal yellow streak on the hind wing confined to a terminal spot at the end of the cell, and the abdominal border black. On the underside the markings are also more clearly defined and the interspaces blacker. "Expanse, ,5 1|, $ 1 A inch. " ' Larva feeds on the bamboo.' {Atkinson, MH. note.)" (Moore, L c.) I have only received two specimens of this species from China. They TELICOTA.— AUGIADES. 601 were both taken at Cliangyang in Juue, and agree very well with Sikkiiii examples. De "Niceville (Jourii. Asiat. Soc. Beug. liv. p. 53, Iv. p. 384) records it as common iu all seasons in the neighbourhood of Calcutta and plentiful in Cachar. Elwes (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 450) states that in Sikkini it occurs at elevations up to 5U0U feet from April to December, but is not common. I met witli an allied species, T. augias, Linnaeus, at Foochau in April ; but, so far as I know, it has not been taken within the region here dealt with. Genus AUGIADES. Augiades, Hiibner, Verz. p. 112 (181G) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 189.3, p. lOo. Type, sylvaniis, Esper. " Aiitenn* : club robust, elongate, terminal crook short. Palpi : second joint laxly sealed, third joint short, obtusely conical. Fore wing : inner margin slightly longer than outer margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 5 from close to bottom of cell ; vein .'i immediately before the end of cell ; vein 2, in male considerably, in female slightly nearer to base of wing than to end of cell. Hind wing : vein 7 well before the end of cell ; disco- cellulars faint ; vein 5 not traceable ; vein 3 immediately before the end of cell, many times farther from 2 than from 4 ; vein 2 considerably nearer to end of cell than to base of wing. Hind tibiie with a long fringe and with two pairs of spurs. Male with a linear discal stigma on fore wing extending from origin of vein 3 to as far as vein 1."' ( Watson, I. c.) Augiades sylvanus. Pupllio sylvnmis, Esper, Scliinctt. i. 1, pi. xxxvi. fig. 1 (1778?). Hesperia sijlvamis, Latreille, Enc. Meth. ix. p. 770 (18:23) ; Lang, Butt. Eur. p. 35:2, pi. Ixxxii. fig. I (1884.) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 34, pi. x. figs. 13a, 136 (1889). Hesperia venaf a, Bremer & Grey, Schmett. N. China's, p. 11, pi. iii. fig. 5 (1853); Meuetries, Cat. Mas. Petr. Lep. i. pi. v. fig. 8 (1855). Famphila htrculea, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) vii. p. 140 (18S1). Pamphila selas, Mabille, Pet. Nouv. ii. p. 233 (1878). " Expands from 1-20 to 1-40 in. The male is fulvous ; the hind margins of the fore wings and all the marginal portions of the hind wings brownish fuscous. The fore wings have the discal black line very distinct. Underside : hind wings yellowish, with some very indistinct central markings ; the inner margin tinged with fulvous. The female is somewhat larger than the male; the wings are brownish. Fore wings without the sub-discoidal black streak, with a suhmarginal row of lai-ge fulvous spots ; the basal portion is fulvou? towards the costa. Hind wings with a row of fulvous spots forming a band. The aiiteunie have clubs hooked at the extremities. " Larva. Dull green, dorsal stripe darker, dotted with black. Head large and brown. Feeds in April on Triticimi repeiis, Iloh-us lauatas, and other grasses." (Lciii/, I.e.) 602 HESPEKIID.E. Var. VenatEj Bremer & Grey. — " Alis supra : fiilvo-ocliraceis, nigro-marginatis at venatis, ajiice non nihil obscuriori, linea discoidali nigra ; subtus : omnibus fulvo-ochraceis, anticis basi nigra. " Espans. alar, antic, unc. 1|." (Brtmer 4' Gretj, 1. c.) This is simply an occasional aberration of si/lvaniis, and gradations between it and the next form, var. herculea, occur. Var. herculea, Butler. " Allied to F. n/lvamis, considerably larger ; the male of a clearer, more ochraceous colour above, and on the under surface of a more uniformly tawny colour ; the secondaries not yellowish, as in P. sylvanus ; pattern similar. Expanse of wings 1 inch 7 lines. '■ Fi-male. Above bronzy brown or chocolate-brown, with cupreous reflections : primaries with a yellow dot just above the basal third of submediau vein ; a cuneiform spot filling the base of the first median interspace ; a bifid spot at the end of the cell ; a series of five quadrate spots, excised in front, crossing the disc obliquely from submedian to upper radial vein, and a trifld spot across the subcostal branches, halfway between the cell and the apex, bufi': secondaries with an angular discal series of five ochreous spots. Wings below with the markings paler than above, the spots creamy whitish or pale bone-yellow ; disc of primaries round the borders of the oblique series of spots olive-brown ; external angle and outer border whity brown : secondaries brouzy olive-brown, the discal series consisting of six spots ; anal angle broadly ochreous ; outer border tinted with ochraceous ; palpi white ; body below bluish grey. Expanse of wings 1 inch 7j lines. '• One pair only was obtained. Xikko." (Butler, J. c.) A. sylvanus appears to be a common insect in Japan, Corea, North and Central China, and also in Amiuiand. It exhibits considerable variation, and the specimens are nearly always larger than those from Europe. Selas, Mabille, from Thibet, is a form of A. syhamis with the upper surface of the fore wings unicolorous, as in var. venata, Bremer; the under surface is also almost destitute of markings. Tlie same form occurs as an aberration in China and Corea. Amurensis, Mabille, is a very worn example of yi. si/lcanus, and wlieu fresh probably represented the form described by Butler as herculea. iJistribution. Europe, Northern and Western Asia, the Altai, Amurland, Japan, Corea, North and Central China. Aiigiades subhyalina. (Plate XLl. fig. 8, 6.) Htspenu su/i/ii/aiinii, Breiuer & Grey, Schmett. N. China's, p. 10, pi. iii. fig. 4 (1853). Pampkila subhyalina, Meuetries, Cat. Mus. Petr. Lej). i. pi. v. fig. 7 (1855). Pamphila subhyalina, var. thibetana, Oberthiir, Etud. d'Eutom. xi. p. 28, pi. vi. tig. 45 (1886). AUGIADES. 608 " Alis supra : fulvis, venis mnrginibusciue fusois, punetis inaculisque flavis, iisque in ala antica pane hyalinis, linea discoidali crassa nigra ; subtus : fulvis, maeulis flavis, fasciatis, margine interne nigro ; posticis fulvis, flavo-maeulatis. " Expans. alar, antic, unc. IL" (Bremer ^ &Vcy, 1. c.) Female. The spots are more transparent, and the primaries rather rounder on outer margin. Var. thibetana, Oberthiir. " Cette variete eonstante est plus petite, le dessous des ailes inferieurcs est plus obscur et le nombre des taches plus claires y est reduit." (OherthUr, I. c.) This form is chiefly distinguished from typical sul/it/aUna by its smaller size and the darker coloration of both surfaces. It is common in Western and Central China, whence I have also received specimens which are intermediate between thibetana and subhyalina. I met with A. subhyalina commonly in June at Gensan and Fusan in the Corea. Herz also took it in Corea and in the neighbourhood of Pekin. It is found in Amurland, in Yesso, and probably in the mountainous parts of Central Japan. The subhyaline spots of primaries and more prominent white spots on under surface of secondaries wiU at once separate this species from sylvanus. Distributioyi. Northern, Western, and Central China, Japan, Corea, Amurland. Augiades crataeis, sp. nov. (Plate XLI. figs. 9 ? , ll d .) Male. Very similar to the same sex of A. suh/iyctlina, but larger. The spots on primaries are more transparent, and the sexual mark is traversed by a whitish line interrupted by the first median nervule. The fourth and fifth spots on secondaries are bolder, and the second and third are either faint or entirely absent. Female. Darker than the male; all the spots on primaries are larger and whiter; those on secondaries are paler. Under surface in both sexes browner than in either A. suhhi/aJiiui or var. thibetana. Expanse, d 43-4-5 millim., $ 44-47 millim. Occurs commonly at Omci-shan in July and August ; 1 have also received it from Chia-kou-ho. Augiades bouddha. (Plate XLI. figs. 7 $,14 c?,10 9 var.) Pamphila bouddtia, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, 1876, p. hi. " Alis nigro-fuscis, basi et costa fulvescentibus, fimbria fulva. Anticis octo puucta fercntibus, tria ad apicem coadunata, duo in cellula in uuum confusa, et tria obliqua posita, unum versus marginem mediocre, secundum triangulare, magnum, tertium elongatum, omnia hyalino-fulva, et strigam, sexus indicem, spissam nigram a puncto geminato celluliE obliquam usque ad GOi IIESPERIID.E. puncfum elnn<;atiim. Alis posticis disco obscure fulvescente, cum tribus punctis rotuiulatis, pallide fulvis, uno ad angulum apicalem et duobus approximatis in disco. .Subtus alis anticis griseo-fulvescentibus, nisi ad marginem internum, ubi in spatio nigrescenti macula3 albescuut ; posticis rufo-virentibus, cum punctis albidis. " femina a mare differt, striga anticarum nulla punctis minoribus in cellula scparatis, albesceutibus, puncto niarginis interni parvo, triangulari, solo lutescenti. Alis posticis disco fulvescente cum puncto baseos fulvo, et serie incurva 4 punctorum fulvorum in disco, alis posticis subtus magis virentibus. Antennce apice nigroe, basi fulva. " Kevocat P. siihhyaJinam Brem. Amurensem." (Mabille, I. c.) This species is closely allied to A. suhliyalina, var. thibetana, but is readily separated therefrom by the discal spots on secondaries. The male type here figured (Plate XLI. fig. 14), kindly lent to me by M. Mabille, was taken by I'Abbe David in Moupin. My collectors failed to meet with this sex, but I received a female example from Omei-shan (Plate XLI. fig. 7), which seems to agree very well with the description of that sex, and another female from Moupin (Plate XLI. fig. 10) which agrees better with the male in the colour of the spots on secondaries, as these are white instead of yellow. 1 propose that this form be known as var. consors. Augiades sylvanoides, sp. nov. (Plate XLI. fig. 4, 6.) In general characters this species resembles A. suhhijallna, but it is smaller and has no semi- transparent spots, in which respect it agrees with A. sylvaiius. Male. Fuliginous brown. Primaries are ornamented with fulvous as follows : — a streak along the costa extending from base of the wing to the first of three subapical elongate spots ; a streak in discoidal cell along median nervure surmounted by a linear sjjot at end of cell ; below the subapical spots are two round ones, and placed obliquely under these are three other spots, the first triangular, the second quadrate, the third oblong and only separated from a basal cuneiform dash by the lower portion of the black sexual brand, which is similar in shape to that of male A. suh]u,alina. Secondaries fuliginous, slightly suffused with fulvous on the basal area ; five fulvous spots, arranged as in A. suhhyaUna, but more clearly defined ; central spot fulvous, not always distinct. Fringes fulvous grey, those of primaries tinged with dusky. Under surface similar to that of A. suhhyaUna, but the secondaries have a slight greenish tinge, and, as on upper surface, there are no semitransparent spots on primaries. Female. Almost black ; bases of all the wings, especially of the secondaries, dusted with fulvous ; primaries have a double fulvous spot at eud of discoidal ceil and a punctiform spot in the first median fork ; beyond there is a series of fulvous spots as in the male ; the markings on secondaries are similar to those of A. snbhyalina, var. thibetana, on the upper surface, but are identical with the male on under surface. Expanse 33-35 millim. Not uncommon at Ta-chieu-lu and Wa-ssu-kow in June and July. AUGIADES. 605 Augiades Similis, sp. nov. (Plate XLI. fig. 6, cT.) Male. Blackish, suffused with fulvous on the basal area of all the wings, but especially on primaries; sexual brand similar to that of A. si/lvanoides. Primaries have the following fulvous markings : — a streak in the disooidal cell, uniting at its outer extremity with an oblong spot ; beyond the cell there is a series of eight spots, the fourth and fifth small and round, forming a colon-like mark between three elongate subapical spots, and three quadrate ones forming an inwardly oblique series to inner margin ; the last of these eight spots is sometimes divided. Secondaries have a central band of five fulvous spots, the second and third hardly separate. Fringes fuscous grey, paler towards anal angle. Female. Similar to the male, but the streak in discoidal cell is linear, sometimes interrupted, and there are sometimes two extra spots, a triangular one in the first median fork and a round one below it on submedian nervure. Under surface in both sexes as in A. si/lvanoides, but generally darker, and the spots on secondaries are more distinct. Expanse 34 millim. Occurs in Western China at Ta-chien-lu, Moupin, and Wa-shan in June and July. Apart from the different markings this species may be distinguislied from A. sylvanoides by the more acute apex of primaries and distinctly produced anal angle of secondaries. Augiades ochracea. Pamphila ochracea, Bremer^ Bull. Acad. Pet. iii. p. 473 (18G1) ; Lep. Ost-Sib. p. 33, pi. i. fig. 11 (1864). Pamphila rikuchina, Butler, Cist. Entom. ii. p. 285 (1878). Hesperia rikuchina, Pryer, Rhop-. Nihon. p. 34, pi. x. figs. 16 a ? , 16 6 c? (1889). " Alae supra ochraceae, nervis nigris. "AlsB antic® margine posteriore late fusco vittaque transversa fusca a margine anteriore ad marginem interiorcm ducta ; alae postica3 late fusco-marginatse. " Alse subtiis sicut supra, sed dilutiores. 2.5 m." {Bremer, I. c.) Var. rikuchina, Butler. " Deep purplish brown, the basal area of the wings clothed with tawny scales ; fringes oehreoiis, especially at the anal angle ; primaries with two ochreous spots at the end of the cell (the upper one punctiform) ; a rather broad irregular angulated discal ochreous belt, not reaching the inner margin, and divided into nine spots by the veins, which are black ; secondaries with an arched series of five ochreous spots on the disc ; body olivaceous, abdomen clothed with ochraceous hair-scales ; palpi pale greenish yellow ; wings below paler than above, more broadly and densely sprinkled with ochraceous scales ; the Beoondaries with the abdominal area, particularly at anal angle, broadly ochraceous ; body below greenish grey. " Expanse of wings 1 inch 4 lines. Occurs at ' Kikuchin.' " (Butler, I. c.) The above description by Butler refers to the Japanese representative 4 L 606 HESPERIID.^^. of ochracea, but although larger this does not differ in any important character from the Amurland type. The under surface of secondaries is liable to vary in the male ; sometimes this is of an almost uniform yellow, and sometimes it is strongly tinged with green, and the pale spots are well developed. I met with this species in the Corea in June and in Central Japan in July. Oberthiir records it from the Isle of Askold. Bistrihntion. Amurland, Askold, Corea, and Japan. Genus PARNARA. Parnara, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 16(5 (1881) ; Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loiid. 1893, p. 105. Type, ^w««/«, Brem. Chapra, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 1G9 (1881). Type, mat Mas, Fabr. " Antenna; : club short and stout, terminal crook very short, tip acuminate. Palpi as in Baoris. Fore wing: inner margin longer than outer margin ; cell less than two thirds the length of costa ; vein 12 reaching costa well before end of cell ; upper diseocellular minute, middle very long, lower very short ; vein 5 from close to bottom of cell ; neuration entirely as in Boaris. Hind tibiee with two pairs of spurs. Male in some species with a linear discal streak on the fore wing, situated obliquely between veins 2 and 1. " The sole difference between the two genera Chajjra and Farnara is the presence or absence of the sexual streak of the fore wing, a character which is certainly of no value in this genus, as it would assign two such closely allied species as borbonica and matldas to two separate genera. " This genus is closely allied to Baoris, from Avhich it may be separated by the shape of the antennal club. " African and Asiatic." ( Watson, I. c.) Parnara matliias. Hesperia mathias, Fabricius, P]nt. Syst. Suppl. p. 433 (1798). Eparyijreus mathias, Butl. Cat. Fabr. Lep. p. 275, pi. ill. fig. G (1870). Pamphila mathias, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loncl. 1870, p. 728; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 33, pi. X. fig. 7, ? (1889). Chapra mathias, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 169, pi. Ixx. tigs. 1, 1« (1881). Parnara mathias, Butler, Proc, Zool. Soc. Loud. 1884, p. 493. Baoris mathias, Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 380, pi. xxxv. fig. 10 (1886). "Alls ecaudatis, fuscis ; anticis utrinque hyaline maoulatis ; posticis subtus punctis albis." (Fabricius, I. c.) " Wings above vinous brown, the fringe greyish ; anterior wings with eight small greyish spots, PAEXAEA. 607 situate two in cell, three in suberect and subapical series beyond cell, and three in oblique series, of which the uppermost is smallest, divided by the first and second median nervules ; between the lowermost spot and the submedian nervure is a narrow, transverse, linear, greyish impression. "Wings beneath paler than above ; anterior wings spotted as above, but the spots a little darker in hue ; posterior wings with a small pale spot in cell, and a curved diseal series of small pale spots situate between the costal nervure and the lower median nervule. Body above more or less concolorous with wings ; palpi and abdomen beneath greyish. "Expanse 31-33 milllm." {Distant, I. c.) This species is common in Central and Southern Japan. It is also recorded from Ningpo, and I have received it from Chia-tiug-fu, Western China. According to Elwes (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 444) it is frequent in Sikkim from April to December up to 7000 or 8000 feet. The same writer also states that it is common in most parts of India, and adds that F. (H.) agna, Moore (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 791), is probably a synonym. In the National Collection at South Kensington specimens from China and Japan, identical with my examples from those countries, are placed with Indian specimens under P. agna. Mr. Forsyth (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1884, p. 387) states that two larvae found on August 27th became pupae on September 3rd, and the perfect insects emerged on September loth. He describes the larva and pupa as follows : — Larva. " Head triangular, on a neck ; a brown line along the margin of head. Body grass- green, with light yellow bars across back. A whitish line along either side above the origin of legs. Legs 6, 8, 2. Found on long, coarse, green meadow-grass in August." Pa^a. "Along a blade of grass, attached by a band across thorax and also at tail. Head generally points upwards. Body of a translucent green colour, quite naked, and unenclosed in a covering of any description." Distribution. Aden ; Continental India ; Ceylon ; Nicobar Islands ; Burma ; Tenasserim ; Malay Peninsula ; Siam ; Nias Island ; Java ; Formosa ; Chin-Lushai ; China ; Japan. Parnara mencia. (Plate XLII. fig. 14, c^ .) Pamphila mencia, Moore, Anu. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4) xx. p. 52 (1877). " Male and female. Upperside dark glossy olive-brown : fore wing of male with a curved diseal series of five small yellowish spots, and with a contiguous oblique prominent narrow sfreak ; two small spots also at end of the cell : hind wing with a diseal series of three indistinct spots. Female differs in the absence of the oblique narrow diseal streak i>n fore wing, and 4l2 608 HESPEEIID.E. the spots on the hind wing. Underside paler, longitudinally streaked with grey : spots the same ; sexual streak on male not visible. Exp. lyl^ inch. " Shanghai. " Wings much broader than in P. sinensis, Mabille, and the hind wing is not lobed as in that species." {Alooi-e, I. c.) I have received this species from Kiukiang, and also fr'om Niugpo, occuning in April in the latter place. There are specimens fr-om Shanghai and Nan- kow in the National Collection. Parnara sinensis. (Plate XLll. fig. 11, j .) Gegenes sinensis, IMabille, Bull. Soc. Zool. Fr. 1877, p. 232 Chapra jjromjnens, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1882, p. 261. PampMla similis, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 48 (1890). Oeyenes sinensis, MabiUe. — " Male tres-grand (44 mill. Femelle 46-48 mill.), d'un brun obscur, avec la disque lave de roux ; sur les premieres ailes, deux taehes oblongues dans la cellule, trois petites et carrees devant I'apex, et trois autres plus grosses en avant do la cellule, faisant suite aux trois precedentes et formant avec elles una ligne courbe, puis oblique. Un fort trait gris jaunatre ombre de noir en dessus part de la derniere des taohes et va s'arreter sur la simple inferieure. An lieu de ce trait, la femelle a une tache de plus jaunatre ; toutes les autres sont blanchatres et semi-transparentes. Inferieures ayaut une ligne de quatre points semblables, tres petits en face de la cellule et pres du bord exterue. Le dessous des superieures a le meme dessiu, mais il est seme d'ecailles jaunatres. Celui des inferieures est d'un brun verdatre avec les quatre points du dessus et uu de plus an milieu de la cellule ; la tete et la poitrine sont jaunatre clair ; les palpes sont jaunos en dessous. " De la Chine septentrionale." {Mahille, I. c.) " Male and female. Upperside dark olive-brown, basal area brighter olive. Male — fore wing with eight rather large ijuadrate yellowish semidiaphanous spots, three being disposed before the apex, three discal, and two very obliquely at end of the cell ; a prominent narrow oblique yeUow brand or streak below the cell, which in the female is replaced by two spots, the upper one of which is very small : hind wing with four yellow semidiaphanous contiguous spots. Underside paler ; spots on fore wing as above, the brand showing a.s a diflfused yellow patch from its outer edge ; the series of spots on hind wing more prominently white, with a fifth spot at the upper end, and one also at the upper end of the cell. " Expanse |- inch. "Hah. N.W. Himalaya : Tonse valley, 6000 feet; Gurwhal (Lanr/), Kussowlee ; Kangra. In coU. E. Moore, Major Lang, and British Museum." (Moore, 1. c.) I have now a fine series of the species which I described as " Pamphila similis," and find that the example from Chang-yang, which I eiToueously considered to be a female, is really a male. I also find that the specimens are referable to sinensis, Mabille, of which j^^'ominens, Moore, is also a synonym. Sikkim specimens agree with those from China : in the latter the spots on PARNAEA. 609 secondaries vary in number from three to five, and they may be either white on the under surface or subhyaline ; in the example figured (Plate XLII. fig. 11) they are white, and the second and third spots are confluent. Elwes states that it is common in Sikkim up to an elevation of 5000 feet from April to October. Occurs in Western China at Chia-ting-fu, Wa-ssu-kow, Moupin, Pu-tsu- fong, Chia-kou-ho, and Omei-shan ; and at Kiukiang, Ichang, and Chang- yang in Central China. Parnara guttata. Eudamus guttatus, Bremer & Grey, Scbmett. N. China's, p. 10, pi. iii. fig. 2 (1853). Goniloba guttatus, Menetries, Cat, Mus. Petr. Lep. i. pi. v. fig. 4 (1855). Pamphila guttata, Pryer, Rliop. Nihon. p. 34, pi. x. fig. 10 (1889). Parnara guttatus, Elwes, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 1888, p. 445. Hesperia fortunei, Felder, Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, xii. p. 489 (1862) ; Reis. Nov. Lep. pi. Ixsii. fig. 11 (1866). " Alia supra : fuscis ; cnrpore et basi alarum fusco-viridibus ; anticis media guttis duabus hyalinis et fascia apicali guttis hyalinis sex composita ; posticis medio guttis hyalinis quatuor in seriem dispositis ; — subtus iisdem ufc supra. "Expans. alar, antic, unc. Ig." {Bremer 6f Orey, I. c.) Fortunei, Felder. — " Alis supra brunneis, basin versus olivascenti pilosis, ciliis albidis, anticarum punctis duobus cellularibus maculisqne sex pone ea, in fasciam ordinatis ; postioarum fasciola disci maculari perobliqua, subhyalina, his subtus dilute ochraceis, fasciola paginre superioris, sed argentea c? ." {Felder, 7. c) Common all over Japan and Corea ; it can be easily distinguished from P. pellucida by its longer, narrower wings, and by the spots of the hind wing, which are almost in a straight line, while in P. pellacida the arrangement is alternate. Elwes (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 445) records it from Kashmir {=mangala, Moore), Mandi, and Sikkim. All the Indian specimens that I have seen agree with those from Japan and China. Staudinger (Rom. sur Lep. vi.) says that the species occurs in Amurland. Parnara colaca. (Plate XLII. fig. 5, d .) Parnara colaca, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1877, p. 594, pi. Iviii. fig. 7; Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 446, fig. 1 ; Wood-Mason & de Niceville, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. Iv. p. 383 (1886). " Male and female. Dark olive-brown : cilia cinereous : fore wing with a recurved discal series of 610 HESPEEIID.E. seven small yellow spots, the second from the hind margin being the largest ; a small spot also at end of the cell. Underside brown, apex and hind wing speckled with olive-green scales ; a median disoal series of small spots on hind wing. " Near to H. cinnara. " Expanse, (S 1^^, 2 Ifo i"*'^- " S. Andamans." (Jfoore, I. c.) I have specimens from Chia-ting-fu, Western China, which agree exactly with some of the examples contained in a series in Moller's collection which have been identified as P. colaca by Mr. de Niceville. My Chinese examples all agree in the absence of the discal and inner marginal spots on primaries, and in the presence of the central series of spots on the secondaries. P. colaca as figured by Elwes is very different to the type of the species as figured by Moore. Elwes states that it is found at low elevations in Sikkim, but is not common. Wood-Mason and de Niceville remark: — "Many examples of both sexes in and around Silcuri, Cachar, from 30th of May to loth June, which agree with specimens from the Andamans of this somewhat variable species." Parnara thyone, sp. nov. (Plate XLll. fig. 4, 6 .) Dark brown, with an olivaceons tinge towards base of aU the wings. Primaries with a white spot at outer extremity of cell, three subapical spots forming an oblique series and two central spots ; in some specimens there is an additional minute white dot, sometimes there are two, above the central spots, and in other examples there is an indistinct white spot above the centre of the inner margin. Secondaries without markings. Under surface olivaceous : primaries have the inner marginal and anal areas fuliginous, and the spots of upper surface indistinctly reproduced : secondaries have a curved series of four small pale spots, but the number of these spots is variable, and in some specimens they are entirely absent. The sexes do not differ in colour or marking. Expanse 30-40 miUim. Allied to P. colaca, Moore, and P. beavani, Moore. Occurs at Kiukiang and Ichang, Central China, and at Ta-chien-lu and Moupin, Western China. I was formerly disposed to consider this species identical with Gegenes hainanus, Moore (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1878, p. 703), but on examining the type, which is in the collection of Messrs. Godman and Salvin, I find that the specimen is so worn and faded as to be useless for purposes of comparison ; I could detect no pale spots on upper surface, but there were faint traces of central spots on under surface of primaries. PAENAKA. 611 Parnara pellucida. Pamphila pellucida, MuiTay, Eut. Mo. Mag. xi. p. 172 (1875) ; Pryer, Rliop. Nihon. p. 34, pi. X. fig. 11 (1889). Pamphila pellucida, var. quinquepuncta, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xxvii. p. Ixiv (1883). Thymelicus pellucida, Staudinger, Rom. sur Lep. iii. p. 152, pi. viii. fig. 3 (1887). Hesperia toona, Moore, Pioc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1878, p. 689 ; Wood-Mason & de Nice- ville, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. Iv. p. 383 (1888). " Alis supra brunneis, albo-maculatis : anticis maoulis duabus discocellularibus super alteram exteriorem magnam quadratara, macula subapioali tripartita, alteris duabus inter maculas subapioalem et quadratam, strigaque parva in vena submediana (maculis omnibus jlellucidis). Posticis maculis quatuor pellucidis, fasciam brevem formantibus. " Subtus, alis ochraceo-bruimeis, anticis ad marginem interiorem nigro-fuseis, maoulis ut in pagina superiore. Ciliis albis. " Alar. esp. 1" 9'". " Hah. Japoniam. " Allied to P. guttata, Brem., Grey, but sufficiently distinct. The spots on the hind wing are arranged in a curious alternate manner, the first and third being nearer the hind margin than the second and fourth." [Murrai/, I.e.) " Allied to H. eltola, Hewitson. " Male. Differs in the fore wings being slightly more elongate, the hind wing more convex exteriorly, and the anal angle less lobed ; markings above similar, those on fore wing narrower, the spot between the median branches elongated and extending to their basal angle ; those on the hind wing very small, the outer spot crossed by a vein. Underside brownish ochreous ; base of fore wing slightly dusky ochreous ; markings as above. " Expanse Ifj inch. ''Habitat. N.E.Bengal." (Moore, I.e.) " Female. Rather larger and less richly coloured than the male, with the large discal semitrans- parent lustrous spot in the first median interspace of the fore wing shorter, emarginate, and not extending to the base of the interspace. " One example has only the three posterior of the spots of the underside of the hind wing — and those much reduced in size — instead of five, but four are visible on the upperside." ( Wood- Mason .j-de NieeviUe,!. c.) Var. quinquepuncta, Mabille. " Xous rapportons a cette espece une forme qui, tout d'abord, parait tres ditferente. Elle est plus grande (40 millimetres). Les ailes superieures ont les points un pen plus gros et il y en a un de plus assez souvent dans la ligne oblique, place au- dessous des points apicaux, qui sont tous bien marques ct cgaux. Les ailes inferieures ofErent les quatre points allonges inegaux et inegalement places et un cinquicme prig dn bord anterieur, dont les males semblent depourvus. " Japon, montagnes do I'interieur." (MahiUe. 1. c.) This species varies considerably in size. I met with it commonly all over Japan, and also at Gensan in the Corea, and in the Kurile Islands. Several 612 HESPEEUD.E. of the specimens from Japan agree well with Mabille's description of var. quinqiieimncta. The only Chinese examples that I have received are fi-om Omei-shan and Ichang ; these are slightly darker than either Japanese or Indian specimens and the spots are somewhat larger. Tooim, Moore, occurs in Sikkim up to 7000 feet from April to November. It is also found in the Khasia Hills and Cachar. I am quite unable to separate Japanese or Chinese pellucida from Sikkim toona, and believe the former to be specifically identical with the latter. Dorries and Graeser met with P. pellucida in various places in Amurland. Distribution. Western and Central China, Japan, Corea, Amurland, and tlie Himalayas. Parnara jansonis. (Plate XLII. fig. 12, cj .) Puinphila jansonis, Butler, Cist. Entom. ii. p. 28i (1878) ; Pryer, Rhop. Nihon. p. 34, pi. X fig. 12 (1889). " tS • Bronzy olive-brown, witL sordiJ white fringes to the wings; primaries with two small spots placed oblicjuely towards the end of the cell ; five dots between the subcostal branches (the first two very small and wide apart) and an oblique series of five discal spots (the upper four in a decreasing scries, pointing towards the apex, the first small and linear, just above the middle of the submedian vein), hyaline white; a slender oblique brand connecting the first and second spots ; secondaries with four small spots, the first and last punctiform, in a zigzag series not far from the ape.x ; body normal, palpi sordid white ; primaries below with the costal third, excepting at apex, densely covered with sordid ochraceous scales ; hyaline spots as above, an additional white spot between the first and second of the oblique discal series ; secoisdaries sordid ochraceous, with a broad greyish-brown pyramidal area on the intern o- median interspace ; a silvery-white spot in the cell, and four towards apex, the second of which is reniform ; body below sordid greyish. " Expanse of wings 1 inch 8 lines.'" {Butla; /. c.) This species is very closely allied to P. pellucida, but it diff'ers on tlie upper surface in having only two longitudinal spots on the secondaries ; it has a conspicuous white spot towards base of secondaries on under surface, as in Parnara sinensis, and all the spots on the uuder surface of tliese wings are white and not subhyaline as in P. pellucida. Apjiears to be an exceedingly rare insect. The type was taken " on the Kosliiukaido in Shimodzuke." The only other specimens that, I have any knowledge of are two in the late Henry Fryer's collection from Ikao, Central Japan, and one male taken by myself at Gensan, Corea, in June. PARNAEA. 613 Parnara eltola. Hesperia eltola, Hewitson, Exot. Butt. iv. {Hesperia) pi. iv. fig. 40 (1869). Parnara eltola, Wood-Mason & de Niceville, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. 188G, p. 384, pi. xviii. figs. 6, 6 a, (J . " Ujiperside dark brown. Anterior wing with eight transparent white spots, and a spot of yellow near the inner margin : the three largest spots across the middle, two outside of these, and three near the apex. Posterior wings with three transparent spots. " Underside as above, except that it is rufous-brown. " Expanse 1^ inch. Hub. Darjeeling." {Hewitson, 1. e.) Chinese specimens are larger and darker, as a rule, than those from Sikkim. Occurs in Western China at Moupin, Wa-shan, Chia-ting-fu, Omei-shan, Wa-ssu-kow, in June and July, up to an elevation of about 5000 feet. Elwes (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1888, p. 449) says : — " Common about gardens at 5000 feet in Sikkim, and also in the low valleys, and up to 7000 feet during the whole season." Wood-Mason and de Niceville record it from Cachar. Parnara austeni. (Plate XLII. fig. 7, c? .) Baoris austeni, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1883, p. 533. " Male and female. Upperside dark brown. Male : fore wing with two small semihyaline white spots at end of the cell, two before the apes, and three obliquely on the disc, the two upper of which are small. Female with markings the same, but slightly larger; also with a small yellow spot above the hind margin ; cilia cinereous white. Underside as above : both sexes having also a slight yellowish patch above the hind margin. "Expanse, d Ig, $ If inch. " This species is allied to H. cahira, from the Andamans, and to //. moolata, from Tenasscrim." {Moore, I. c.) Not uncommon in Western China at Omei-shan, Moupin, Chia-kou-ho, Chia-ting-fu, and Kwei-chow in July. I also took it at Foochau in April. This species exhibits considerable variation in the number of spots on primaries. Typical examples have two discoidal spots and a central series of five or sometimes six spots. In some examples from Omei-shan and Foochau the upper discoidal spot is absent, as also is the third spot from costa ; these specimens are also paler in ground-colour than typical examples and are more suffused with yellowish. Similar variation is noticed in Moller's Sikkim series. In two female specimens from Omei-shan there is an indistinct whitish spot in the centre of under surface of secondaries, and in 4 m 614 HESPEEIID.E. another example of the same sex there is a pale spot towards costa on under surface of these wings. Elwes, in his Catalogue of the Lepidoptera of Sikkim *, seems inclined to suppose that P. cahira, Moore, and P. moolata, Moore, may prove to be specifically identical with P. austeni. There are specimens in the National Collection from Rangoon, Burmah, and Upper Tenasserim, and Elwes gives Cachar and the- Khasias as localities. Pariiara nascens, sp. uov. (Plate XLII. fig. 8, s .) Male. Fiiliginous brown. Primaries have nine small subh5'aline spots placed as follows : — one in discoidal cell, three towards apex, and five below these forming an inwardly oblique series, the third quadrate, and the fourth and fifth linear, indicating a sexual mark. Secondaries have four minute subhyaline central spots, but the second and fourth are often absent. Under surface dark greyish brown, the costal half of primaries and the whole of secondaries thickly powdered with oohreous scales ; subhyaline spots as above, except that the last two of oblique series on primaries are absent. Fi'inale. Similar to the male, but the subhyaline spots on all the wings are larger, the fifth of oblique series on primaries is round, and the fourth very minute or entirely absent. Expanse, c? 4i-4G millim., $ 46-47 milHm. Occurs in ^A'estern China, at Chia-kou-ho and Omei-shan, in June and July. Parnara bromus, sp. nov. (Plate XLII. fig. 10, d .) Fuliginous brown. Primaries have ten subhyaline spots placed as follows : — two colon-like in the discoidal cell ; three subapical, and below these an inwardly oblique series of five, of which the third is the largest and triangulate and the fourth is punctiform. Secondaries immaculate. Fringes pale grey-brown. Under surface paler than above ; spots on primaries as above, but the fourth and fifth of oblique series are yellow ; secondaries have a white dot in first median interspace. Expanse, cJ 44 millim., $ 48 millim. Occurs in Western China, but appears to be scarce. I have three specimens, one example of each sex from Chia-kou-ho, and a female from Oraei-shan ; all were taken in July. Closely aUied to P. austeni from China, but is distinguished by having five spots in the oblique series on the upper surface of primaries and a white dot on under sm-face of secondaries ; it is also not so dark in ground-colour, and is clothed with yellowish hairs. * Trans. Ent. Soc. Load. 1S8S, p. 448. PAllXAEA. 615 Parnara cserulescens. (Plate XLII. fig. 9, d .) Pamphila carulescens, Mabille, Ann. Ent. Soc. Fr. 1876, p. Iv. " ilagna, tota nigro-fusca (fcmina) ; alis anticis ad basim subolivaceis, eum 7 puiictis fcnestrato- albis ; quorum parvum unum in cellula extrema ad costam, tria approximata ante apicem, tria alia obliqua in disco ; sex ilia angulatam lineam efFormant. Alis postieis immaculutis, fimbria pallidc cinerea in mare, nigro-cinerea in femina. Alis anticis subtus concoloribus sed rufescentibus, et in fcmina intcnsius ; postieis rufo-fuscis, sinuatis, margine anali fiisco, cum serie discali sex puuctorum in mare pallida, in femina nitide coerideorum, puncto secundo extra sericm procedenti ad marginem externum." (Mahille, I. c.) The discoidal spot of primaries varies in size and is sometimes entirely absent. A fairly common species in June and July, up to 6000 feet, at Wa-ssu-kow, Chia-kou-ho, Ta-chien-lu, Moupin, Wa-shan, and Pu-tsu-fong. The type was taken by I'Abbe David. Parnara sarala. (Plate XXXYIII. fig. 11, d .) Parnara sarala, de Nicevillc, Bomb. Nat. Hist. Journ. iv. p. 173, pi. B. fig. G, ? (1889). " Female. Uppersidc, both wings dark bronzy fuscous. Pore wing with a large- medially constricted spot at the end of the cell ; an elongated spot at the base of the second media n interspace ; a much larger one towards the base of the first median interspace, its outer end concave, its inner end convex, anteriorly and posteriorly touching the second and first median nervules ; a comma-shaped spot in the submedian interspace, touching the middle of the submediiin nervure — all these spots semi transparent lustrous white ; cilia fuscous. Hind wing with a large oval pale yellow patch on the middle of the disc : and a small patch on the abdominal margin near the base of the wing ; cilia rich chrome-yellow at the anal angle, gradually shading off into fuscous anteriorly. Underside, both wings distinctly glossed with rich purple. Fore wing with the three discal spots as above, the one in the submedian interspace on the uppersidc developed into a large outwardly diffused white patch, occupying the middle of the inner margin ; a large chrome-yellow quadrate patch above the spot in the cell extending from the subcostal nervure to the costa. Hind wing with the oval pale yellow discal patch of the upperside developed into a broad anteriorly-increasing discal chrome-yellow band, extending from the abdominal margin to the costa, but with a break between the submedian and internal nervures. Palpi, thorax, and abdomen above and below clothed with bronzy-green iridescent hairs: antennae with shaft black, club broken off. " Expanse 2 2-0 inches. Khasi Hills." (de NicevUh; I. c.) I received two male specimens from Western China, one was captured at Moupin and the other at Omei-shan — both in July. These Chinese male examples differ from the Indian female specimen as figured by de Niceville in the following characters : — the spots on primaries are smaller, and the fascia on upper surface of the secondaries is whiter, narrower, and more widely interrupted. 4m 2 616 HESPERIID-E. Mr. de Niceville (/. c.) says: — "The Eev. Walter A. Hamilton, who obtained the two specimens above described, possesses the wings only of a third specimen, placed between talc, of what appears to be the mal« of this species captui'ed in the same locality. In the fore wing there are two small well-separated spots in the cell instead of one large one, the two spots below are smaller, the spot on the submedian interspace entirely wanting ; otherwise as in the female. This specimen does not apparently possess any secondary sexual characters. " 1 do not know any near ally to P. sarala. The shape of the wings agrees w'ith that of the species of the genus Parnara, the probable male having the fore wing less broad, the apex more acute, and the outer margin more straight and inwardly oblique than in the female." These differences in shape are not apparent in my male specimen compared with de Niceville's figure of the female. The species is here retained in Parnara, as it has been placed therein by de Niceville, but a new genus will probably have to be created for it. Genus BAORIS. Baoris, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 165 (1881). '•Fore wing triangular, apex acute; exterior margin ver}- oblique; hind wing broad, very convex anteriorlj-, the male possessing a more or less prominent tuft of long hair covering a patch of raised scales at end of the cell. Body robust, thorax very broad ; club of anteuniu somewhat lengthened. " Type, B. {Hesperia) oceia, Hewitson." (Moore, I. c.) Baoris oceia. (Plate XLll. fig. 6, j .) Hesperia oceia, Hewitson, Desc. Hesp. p. 31 (1868). Baoris oceia, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. p. 165 (1881). ■' Alls fuscis : anticis maculis vitreis : posticis plaga ovali media rugoso-squamosa, setis longis nigris decumbentibus obtecta. '■ Upperside dark rufous-brown. Anterior wing with seven transparent spots : two, very small, within the cell, three between the nervures below these, and two before the apes. Posterior wing with a large tuft of black hair below the costal margin. '■ Expanse \^ inch. Philippines."' {Ueivitson, 1. c.) I have received this species from Omei-shan, Western China, and fiom Kiukiang, Central China. I took specimens myself at Foochau and Ningpo in AprU. All these agree fairly well with Sikkim examples in my collection. BAOEIS.— AEROMACHUS. 617 but there is no teudency to vary iu the direction of the uuicolorous form met Avith in the latter locality, which Moore has named B. nnicolor*, and de Niceville has figured as a female variety of B. oceia f . Elwes (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 18S8, p. 443) states that B. oceia is common in Sikkim, from 4000 to 5000 feet, throughout the greater part of the season, and is very variable in the number of the spots. He considers B. scojniUfera, Moore, to be referable to B. oceia. Distribution. Philippines, Calcutta, Burmah, Sikkim, Pegu, Northern China. Genus AEROMACHUS. Aeromachus, Ae Niceville, Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc. v. p. 214 (1890); Watson, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 1893, p. 80. " Both wings very small. Fore -wing triangular, costa quite straight, apex acute, outer margin gently convex, inner angle rounded, inner margin straight, longer than the outer margin ; costal nervure ending about opposite the apex of the discoidal cell, well separated from the costa, bent upwards to the costa towards its end ; base of second subcostal nervule nearer to base of first than to base of third, fourth subcostal arising very near to the base of the third, reaching the apex of the wing ; terminal portion of subcostal nervure (often called a fifth subcostal nervule) ending on the outer margin considerably btlow the apex of the wing : upper discocellular nervule short, stout, outwardly oblique, straight ; middle discocellular sinuous ; lower discocellular shorter than the middle, straight, on the same straight line with the middle, inwardly oblique ; the median nervules with their bases equidistant, given olf very near to the end of the cell, the third median originating at the poitt where the lower discocellular nervule meets the median nervure ; the median nervure strongly bent upwards from the base of the second median nervule ; submedian nervure straight. " Male (in the type species only) with a broad oblique stripe of modified scales on the upperside. extending from the middle of the submedian nervure to the base of the second median nervule. Hind wing, much rounded throughout ; costa short ; costal nervure almost straight, first subcostal nervule bent upwards at base, thence straight to apex of wing ; subcostal nervure strongly bent downwards between the bases of the subcostal nervules, giving the appearance of a third (or upper) discocellular nervule, the subcostal nervure and its branches together forming a figure of almost the exact shape of a tuning-fork; discocellular nervules outwardly oblique, the upper concave, the lower shorter than the upper ; the discoidal nervule curved, and like the discocellular nervules, very fine but perfectly distinct ; second median nervule given ofi' some little distance before the lower end of the discoidal cell, more than twice as far from the base of the first as it is from the base of the third median ; all three median nervules, however, arising near to the lower end of the cell ; submedian ai\d internal * Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1S83, p. 533. t Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. lii. p. 8-5, pi. x. fig. 11 (1S83). 618 HESPEKIID.E. nervures straight. Antennoc exactly half the length of the costa of the fore wing, with a well-formed club, the tip slightly hooked ; thorax rather sleuder, abdomen very slender. " Female differs from the male iu having the wings broader and more rounded, and lacks in the type species the patch of androconia on the uppersidc of the fore wing. " Type, ' Thanaos ' stu/mata, Moore." {de Niceville, I. c.) Aeromachus piceus, sp. nov. (Plate XLI. fig. 16, d .) Hale. Fuliginous: fringes pale greyish, chequered with darker at ends of the nervules. The male has a narrow oblique patch of black raised scales on primaries. Under surface greyish brown : primaries are sprinkled with ochreous along the costal area, and have central and submarginal series of whitish spots, extending from costa to first median nervule ; secondaries are sprinkled with ochreous, and traversed by two series of whitish spots extending from subcostal to submedian veins. Expanse 28 millim. I have two males wliich were taken at Moupin iu June. Closely allied to A. {T.) stigmata, Moore *, from which it differs in not having a discal series of pale spots on upper surface of primaries and in the macular bauds on under surface of secondaries being differently placed. Aeromachus catocyaneus. Painpl/ila catocijanea, Mabillo, Ann. Soc. Eiit. France, 187G, p. Iv. " Mas alls fuscis, fimbria sordida. Antiois cum striga nigra, brevi, s(iuamis cinereis distincta, a cellula usque ad nei'vum simplicem inferiorem, obUqua. Antioae subtus fuscre, cum liaeola vix conspieua in cellula et duabus lineis punctorum cferuleorum, altera discali, altera margi- nali inferius evanida. Posticfe cum tribus lineis punctorum viridius cseruleorum, una interrupta in basi, secunda discali punctorum majorum, tertia marginali, punctis ejus ad angulum analem majoribus ; lineae discalis puncta ij-a sunt approximata ut dioi possint fascia macularum elongatarum nervis divisarum : pectus et caput pilis olivaceis hirsuta. Pagina superiorum P. nasonem refert, at minor ille noster. "Thibet, Abb. Arm. David. Mus. Nat." (21abille,l.c.) Agrees in general appearance with A. (T) /lali, de Niccville, from Sikkim (Jolirn. Asiat. Soc. Beng. 1885, p. 123, pi. ii. fig. 3, 544. agestor, Gray, Papilio (Cadugoides), 556. aglaia, Linn., Argynnis, 230. aglaope, 3/o;sf'i., = Pieris melete, MM., var., 449.- agna, Moore, Parnara (Ilesperia), 607. agni (Vanessa), Grapta, 264. agnicula, iV/oo>-c, = Grapta c-album, Lin7i., var., 266. agrestis, Oberth., Neope (Satyrus), 53. ajaka, Moore, = Fiens melete, Mhi., var., 454. albescens, Oberth., Timelaea, = Argyimis maculata, var. albescens, Oberth., 246. albescens, Po!//., = Yptbima zodia, Bittl., 91. albicans, Leech, = iieo]>e agrestis, var., 54. albimacula, Leech,= Sephisa princeps, Fi.is.,var., 151. albipuncta, Leech, Callerebia, 102. albistriga, Mab. (Scelothi'ix),=Hesperia zona, Mab., var., 677. albivitta, 06ert/j., = Halpe bivifta, ObeHL, (i2i. albohneata, PouJ., Zophoessa (Debis), 45. albomaculata, Leech, Limenitis, 178, 665, alcinous, Klug, Papilio, 639, 642. aloippus, CVfl»n., = D. chrysippus, var., 5. alcmena, (?;•.- &V., = Erebia sedakovii, var., 98, 99. alebion, Oray, Papilio, 622. alexis, Fabr., Hasora, 638. alexis, Wien. T'e;~., = LycKna icarus, Bolt., 306. alliacmon, de I'Orza, = Papilio bianor, Cram., var., 528. allous, .ffH4«.,=Lyc8ena astrarche, var., 315. almana, Linn., Junonia, 282. alope, Fenton (Lycsena), = Zizera maha, Koll., 325, 326, 327. alsus, Wien. Verz. (Lycana), = Zizera minima, Fuess., 323. altissima, Ehces, Argynnis, 227. alveus, Siibn., Ilesperia (Syrichthus), 579. alvinda, Blanch. (Rhodocera), ? = Gonepteryx aspasia, MSn., var., 442. 4s2 GG4 nlwiua, Brcm., Neptis (Liuienitis), 201 . alysos,i>/ooj-e(riesioneura), = NotoeiTptaffisthamelii, Boisd., 627. amaryllis, Cram., Ccenonympha, 95. Amathusia, Herr.-Sc/iaf., 122. amljn, Mnore, Neptis, 199. amljioa, K;-=., = Melitsea aurinia, ^ott., 212. arveusis, Oberth., Epinepbele (Satyrus), 78. asiatica, £/ife.s, =Lyca;na pberetes, Iliibn. , var., 306. asiatica, i(/(^«.,=Papilio macbaon, Linn., var., 516. aspasia, MM., Gonepteryx, 442, aspasia, Leech, Neptis, 193. aspersa, Leech, Celaniorrbinus, 571. assama, Westtp., Clerome, 113. assimilis, IJnn., Hestiua, 143. asterie, Linn., Jnnonia, 280. astbala, Moore, Symbrentbia, 285. Astictopterus, Feld., 629. astrwa, Leech,=Sa,tyTua dryas. Scop., var., 70. INDEX. G65 astrarclie, Bergst., Lycnena, 315. Astycus, Catal. JP/'«re/;.,=Telicota, Moore, 600. asura, Moore, Athyma, 169. aswa, Moore, Melanitis (Cyllo), 108. atalanta, Linn., Pyrameis (Vanessa), 252. ataxii3, Hew., Zephyrus (Dipsos), 374. AteUa, DmM., 207. atlialia, Rott., Melitica, 214. Athj^ma, Westw., 167. atticus, Fabr., Ta-iades (Ilesperia), 573. attilia, Brem., Zeplivnis (Tliorla), 392. augiades, Fdd., Telioota, 600. Augiades, Hiihn., 601. aup-ia.^, Linn., Telieota (Ilesperia), GOO. Aulocera, ButL, 70. auratu3, isec/i, = Chrysoplianus dispar, Hmi:, var., aurelia, Melitaaa, 213. aurini.i, Roft, Melit«a, 212. aurorina, Oberth., = Zephyrus taxila, Brem., var., 370. austeni, Moore, Parnara (Baoris), 613, 614. australis, Boisd., = 'Daxi!us hamata, McLeoy, 4. australis, Graeser, =Argyniiis oscarus, Lversm., var., 222. australis, Xeec/(,=Hest:na japouica, Feld., var., 140. autonoe, Esper, Satyrus, 69. avanta, Moore, Yptliima, 89. avanti, de Nicev., Pamphila, .586. avatara, Moore (Satyrus), = Aulocera padma, Koll., 71 . avidiena, Hew., Amblopala (Amblypodia), 341. badra, Moore, Hasora, 637, 639. balbita, Moore, Melitaea, 218. baldus, Fabr., Ypthima, 90. bambusse, Moore, Telicota (Pamphila), 600. bambusarum, Oberth., Anthocharis, 477, 478. Baoris, Moore, 616. baralacha, J/oore, = Argyiinis pales, Schif., var., 224. barine. Leech, Lycfena, 304. bathycles, Zink., Papilio, 525. battus, JEru4?!.,=Lyca;na orion. Pall., 309. baucis. Leech, Lethe, 22. bavius, Eversm., Lycasna, 310. beautei, Oberth., Ypthima, 85. beavani, Moore, Parnara, 010. bela, Moore, Melanitis, 652. belladonna, Fabr., Delias (Pieris), 418. bellidice, Ochs., = ByTich\o'ii daplidice, var., 459. bellona. Leech, Melitoea, 219. benjamini, Guertn, Rhopalocampta (Ismene, Choas- pes), 641. bernardus, Fahr.,= Charaxes polvxena, Cram., var., 125. beroe, 0-a?n., = Letho europa, 20. beroe, Leech, Neptis, 193. bethesba, Jans., = Terias Ifeta, Boisd., var., 426 betuL-e, Li,m., Zephyrus (Thecla), 383. betuloides, i?!$• il/oorf, = Sephisa, 3Ioore, 1-50. eastetsi, OJ«-tt.,=Argyuiiis uiphe, Linn., var., 244. catena, Leech, Pararge, 64. Catochrysops, Boisd., 335. catocyanea, Mah., Aeroniachus (Pamphila), 618. Catopsilia, Hiibn., 423. caucasica. Stand. ,=lsie\\tx& pboebe, Knoch, var., 214. cauta, ieecA, = Sephisa priucep.*, Fi.rs., 151. celaeno, icecA, =Satyrus autonoe, Esjier, var., 69. Celaenorrhinus, Iliihn., 509. centralis, ey., ' 635. 66( clirysidice, II.-S.,=Piens callklice, Esp..Yar., 460. chrysippus, Linn., Danais, 5. Chrysophanus, Hiibn., 39G. chi-ysus, Oberth. (Apatura), = Dilipa fenestra, Zeec/(, 165. Cigaxitis, Lucas, 658. cilix, Bist., Papilio, 544. ciocolatina, PoiiJ., Limenitis, 186. circe, Leech, Satsuma, 352, 353, 354. ciris, Leech, Ypthima, 85. cisseis, Leech, Pieris, 455. citrinarius, MoUch., Parnassius, 506. clara, Blanch., Argynnis, 227. claripennis, Bull. (Synchloe), = Pieris canijii, var., 455. cleobis, Brem., Lycaena, 309. cleobule, fi'«6;i.,=Gonepteryx rliamiii, Linn., var., 441. cleodoxa, OcAs.,=Argynni3 aclippe, Linn., var., 233. cleopatra,Zj?!?j., =Goiiepteryx rliamni, Lmn, var.,441. cleoplias, Oberth,, Limenitis, 655. Clerome, Weshc, 112. cliiiia, Ofc;-ecA, = Augiades bouddha, Mab., var., 604. constricta, ^//)/(., = Athyma opalina, Koll., \-ai:, 170, 172. contracta, 5«ecA,=Zephyrus betiilse, Linn., var., 384. cratsegi, Linn., Aporia, 471, 473. cratsegioides, Lucas (Leuconea), = Aporia hippia; Brem., 471. cratceis. Leech, Augiades, 603. cressonii, iJeaX;., = Sericinus telamon, var., 486. crishna, Westw., Neorina (Cyllo), 17. crisilda, Hew., Ragadia, 92. crocale. Cram., Catopsilia, 424. crucivora, .Boii(;., = Pieris rapa?, Linn., var., 457. Ctenoptilvun, de Niceville, 574. ctesia, Heic, Camera, 351. Curetis, Hiibn., 348. curius, Fabr., Leptocircus (Erycina), 509. cuTvifascia, Feld., Notocrypta (Plesioneura], 626. cybele. Leech, Lethe, 643. <^r<.-n^-H^, 3/ "7 cydippe, Leech, Neptis, 196. cyllarus, Rott., Lyc»na, 312. CyUo, Boisd., 17. Cyllo, i;o!'srf., = Melanitis, Fubr., 105. cyrene. Leech, Lethe, 37. Cjrrestis, Boisd., 247. dahurica, (?;-a!es(>r, = Chrysophanus dispar. Haw., \ar., 397, 398. Daimio, Murray, 503. Dalchina, Jl/oore, = Papilio, 524. dan, Fabr., Coladenia (Hesperia), 507. Danais, Latr., 4. danava, Moore, Limenitis, 188. daphne, Schiff., Argynnis, 229. daplidice, Xmn., Synch loe (Pieris), 458. 6G8 dara, Koll, Padraona (Ilesperia), 590. daruka, 71/oo)(', = Symbreutliia liippoclus, Cram., yaw, 284. davidi, Oberth., Lethe (Debis), 29. davidi, Oberth., = Thecla teiigstrcemi, Erach., var., 368. davidi, Povj., Everes (Lycneua), 332. davidiauus, PuuJ. (Satyriis),=Letlie lauai-is, Butl., 25. davidii, .l/ffi., Celnenorrliinus (Pterygospidea), 572. Davidina, Oberth., 474. davidina, Oberth., = Aporia davidis, Oberth., var. venata, Leech, 409. davidis, Oberth., Aporia (Pieris), 408. davidis, Oberth., Caliuaga, 118. davidis, OJeriA.,=Parnassiiis nomion, Fisch., var., 498, 500, 501. davidis, Pottj., Araschnia, 274. davu?, i^«Jr., = Coenonymplia typLon, Pott., 96. dea, ZffcA, = Coladenia dan, Fabr., var., 568. Debasa, ^l/oore, = Papilio, 535. Debis, jrestiv., = hethe, 18. deliaani, Feld., =Va^ilio bianor, Cram., var., 528. deidamia, Eversm., Pararge, 05. deiphobe. Leech, Epinepbele, 650. dejanira, Linn., Pararge, 64. delai-lama, Mab., Aeromaehus (Cyclopides), 620. delavayi, Oberth. (Callerebia), = Erebia ruricola. Leech, 100. delavayi, Oberth. (Syricbtlms), = Ilesperia obertLiiri, Leech, 579. delavayi, Oberth., Metaporia (Pieris), 400. Delias, Hilbn., 418. delpbius, Eversm., Parnassius (Doriti.-), 504. demea, Oberth. (Carterocephaliis), = Panipbila gem- matus. Leech, 588. ' demetrius. Cram., Papilio, 646. dentata, J/oore, = Curetia bulis, Doubl., var., 349. Dercas, Poisd., 445. desfontainesii, Eversm.,=M.e&itea. aurinia. Pott., var., 212. desfontainii, 6-Wa>-^,=^Melita?a aurinia. Pott., var., 212. desgodinsi, Oberth., Zepbyrus (Tbecla), 374. Deudorix, 413. dbanada, Moore, Notocrypta (Plesioneura), 629. Diadema, Westw., 140. Diadema, part.,=Iiypolymnas, Hiibn., 128. diagoras, 2Iew. (Diadema), = IIestiiia japonica, i^fW., 146. dialis, Leech, Papilio, 532. diamantiiia, Oberth. (Tbecla), = Zephyriis smaragdina, Prem., 372. diana, Butl., Letbe (Debis), 28. Dichorragia, Butl., 132. dicbroa, Kv/I., Sephisa (Castalia), 151. dictyuna, Espcr, Melitrea, 217. didyma, Esper, Melitaea, 211. dillusa, Xe«7(, = Athyma fortuna. Leech, var., 173. Dilipa, Moore, 165. diluta, Feld. (Lyca2na),=Zizera niaba, Eoll., 327. dilutior, jRr>s., = Argynnis selene, Hiibn., var., 223. dimila, iJ/oure, = Erynnis comma, var., 595. diucles, Moore, Aslictopterus, 631. dipbilus, ii's;)P)-, = Papilio aristolocbia;, Fabr., 554. Dipsas (jiart.), 7['t',s;»'., = Zepbyrus, Balm., 309. disnilis, .l/,)../r, = ('invti,s bulls, i>ottW., var., 349. di>iinirl,',, /.,, /,, AtliviiKi, 175. di.-^p.ir, lliiir,,ii/i, C'lirysopbauus (Polvommatus), 397. dissimilis, Papilio, 556. distorta, de Nicec, Zinaspa (Pvapala), 340. diversa, Leech (Pterygospidea), = Daiiiiio uarada, Moore, 566. divina, Fixs., Lycsena, 314. Dodona, Jlew., 290. dolope, Feld. (Adolias), = Stibocbiona uicea. Gray, 133. doris, Leech, Araschuia, 272. dromon, Oberth., Ypthima, 85. dromonides, 04crcliry>:.ps cnejus, Fabr., 337. eltola, IIcm:. ]'ain;aa (Ilesperia), 613. elwesi, i>'u//., = Colias hyale, Linn., var., 432. elweti, Leech,= Atbyma asui'a, Moore, var., 170. CGO elwesi, Leech, Papilio, 5oO. elwesi, XeecA, = Parnassiu3 delphius, Eversm., \ar., 504. elwesi, Leech, Ypthima, 64o. elwesi, ieec/(, = ZephjTU3 betulas, var., 384. elwesi, Oberth., Limenitis, 179. Enispe, Westic, 110. enthea, Jans., Zephjrua (Tbecia), 801. epaminondas, >S'to«(/. (Pai'arge), = L. ? epimeuides, var., 19. epaphus, Oberth., Parnassius, 492, 494, 495, 497, 498. epicles, Godart, Ilerda (Polyommatus, Tbecia), 408. epimenides, Men., Letlie ? (Lasiommata), 19. Epinephele, Hiibn., 77. episcopalis, Oberth., Pararge, 62. epycides, Hew., Papilio, 5.55. erate, iV/«/ra?/, = Colias hyale, Linn., var., 431. erato, Boisd. (Taxila), = Dodjna ouida, Moore, 292. Erebia, Balnian, 97. erebina, 5mSYaMrf., = Sericinus telamon, Don., var., 487. flamen, Leech (Dipsas), = Zepbyrus rapbaelis, Oberth., var., 890. &a,\a., Murray (Hesperia),=Padraona dara, Koll. ,ya.r., 596. flavalba, il/a!ra^.,= Delias sanaca, Moore, 421. flavofaseiata, iffcA, =Letbe davidi, Oberth., var., 30. flavoides, Leech, Taractrocera, 690. flavomaculata (-us), Oberth., Pampbila (Carteroce- pbalus), 687. flegyas. Cram., Zemerns, 290. flesus, Fabr. (Pterygospidea), Tagiades, 573. florinda, Butl. (Pampbila), = Erynnis comma, Linn.. var., 594. fortima, Jayis., Argynnis aglaia, Linn., var., 230, 231. fortuna, Leech, Atbyma, 173. fortunei, Feld. (Hesperia),=Parnara guttatu.«, Brent. ^- Grey, 600. fortunei, GV«y,=Sericiniis telamnn, Don., var., 5> 486. trancia;, Gray, Euthalia (Adolias), 138. 4t C70 frater, Oberth. (Eudamus),= Achalarus pvoximus. Leech, 660. frigga, Thunb., Ai'gynnis, 223. fritillum, //«An., = Hesperia alveus, Hiibii., var., C80. fVivaldszkyi, Led., Satsuma (Thecla), 3o2, 353, 354. fuliginosus, Leech, Apostictopterus, 631. fulva, J'u's.,=Thecla prunoides, Stand., var., 363. fulva, Leech, Apatura, 158. fulvescens, Alph., = Pararge dunietonim, Oberth., var. 61. fulvofcnestrata, Fi.rs., Thecla prunoides, Stand., var. 363. fiimida, BntJ. ,= .\rrrynnh daphue, Schi.f, var., 229. fiimosa, Oii'r//(.,= Apiiii;! lii|ipia, var., 472. funebris, Leer/i, ■ilius, fu^ca, Brem., NiphaBda (Thecla, Amblypodia), 340, fusca, Zefc/(, = Neope armandii, Oberth., var., 60. lylla, Doiibl, Abisara (Taxila), 296. gabrielis,if'p('/i, = Zephyru.?{Thecla)michaelis, Oifj-/^., var., 389. ganesoha, iTo//., = {Amathusia) Cyrestis thyodamas, Boisd., 248. ganymedes, Leech (nee Westio.), = Charaxes roth- schildi. Leech, 128. ganymedes, Westw., Charaxes, 128. Gareris, ilfooce, =Mycalesis, 13. gaschlievitschii, FeU., Lasiommata, 62. Gehlota, Do/«');(/, = Cel8eaorrhinus, Jliibii., 6C9. gemina, Leech, l.ethe, 39. gemmata, Bull, Argynnis, 227. gemmata (-us). Leech, Pamphila (Carterocephalus), 688. gener, Oberth. (Eudauuis), = Achalarus .simplex. Leech, 561. generator, Statid., = Ar^jmiis pales, Schif., var., 224. genesa, Moore, Arhopala (Amblypodia), 343. genutia, Boisd., Anthocharis, 478, 479. genutia, Cram., Danais, 6. germanus, Oberth., Achalarus (Eudamus), 661. geticus, i^«7;., = Coeiion3-mpha oedipus, Fahr., 94. giddeneme, OJ^rrt., = Neptis arachne, Leech, 191. gigantea, Leech, Grapta, 263. gigantea. Leech, Leucopha^ia, 484. glacialis, JSM;Z.,=Parnassius citrinarius, Motsch., 500. glauconia, MoiscA.,= Vanessa canace, Zjn«., var., 255, 256. gliciria, 0-am.,=Pieris canidia, Sparrm., 456. glycerion. Gray, Papilio, 520. gola, Moore, Padraona (Pamphila), 598. gomata, Moore, Israene (Chuaspes), C34. Gonepteryx, Leach, 439, ?om, Oberth., Avgyiiuis, 224. gopt, F.hl, .Myr,-d,"sis, 14. giipali, M-.nrr. I'apiUo (Cadugoides), 557. goi!.-il;i, .Mmrn-, Satarupa, 563. goschkevitschii, Men., Nenpe (Lasiommata), 52. gotaiua, Moore, Mycalesis, 14. goto, Mab., Notocrypta (Plesioneura), 028. goutellei, Oberth., Metaporia (Pieris), 405. govindra, Moore, Papilio (Cadugoides), 557. gi-acilis, Oberth., Zophoessa (Pararge), 42. grandis, Feld., Thecla, 360. grandis, Leech, Hidari (Plesioneura), 033. Grapta, Kirby, 262. greyi, i?re);i., = Sei'icinus telamon, Don., var., J, 486. groumi, 06e';-W., = Precis iphita. Cram., 276. intermedia, Zffc/*, = llestina subviridis, Leech, var., 145. ntermedia, Pryer, =Neptis aceris, Lep., var., 203. nterposita, iStaud., = Gia-pt& c-album, Li7m., var,, 265. 0, Linn., Vanessa, 255. ole, Leech, = CEBeis pumilus, FeM., var., 75. on. Leech, Everes (Lycreua), 331. Iphiclides, .ff««Jn.,=Papilio, 510. iphita, Cram., Precis (Junonia), 276. irava, Moore, Hidari, 633. iris. Leech, Ypthima, .'^4. iris, Linn., Apatura. 1(^0. irrubescens, Cjirose Smith, Euthalia, 654. isaeea, ©;•«';/, = Argynnis latonia, Z2n?2., var., 227,228. israene, C™w., = ,Ai.'Ianiti9 leda, Linn., var., 106. Ismene, Sirainson, (j.'!3. Isodema, Feld.. 116. Isoteinon, Feld., 582. ithiela, Butl, Delias (Thyca), 419. jacintha, i»/-«ry,=nypnlymna3 bolina, Linn., 130. jacqiiemonti, Boisd., Parnassius, 495. jacquemonti, Boisd., $,i';M;c«,=Parnasfius epaplius, Oberth., 492. jacquemontii, i?/rtne/i.,=Parnassius epaphus, Oberth.. 492. jsegeri, il/en.,=Terias Iseta, Buisd., 425. jalaurida, de Nicev., Zophoessa, 42. IdXmA&VjButl., =.Cl.araxe9 polyxena, Cram., var., 125. 4t2 672 INDEX, Jamides, Hiibn., 333. janardana, Moore, Mycalesis, 11. jankowskii, Obert/i. , = lsmeue aquilina, 635. jansonis, Btitl., Parnara (Pamphila), 612. japetiis, Cram., Tagiades, 573. japonica. Butl.,=-V?cpi\io bianor, Cram., var., 528. japonica, Fekl., Hestina (E'jripus), 146. japonica, Leech, Luehdorfia, 490. japonica, Mab. (Pamphila) ?, = Padraoiia dara, var., 697. japonica, jl/e'n., = Argynnis laodice, var., 236. japonica, 3f^«.,=Limeniti3 sydj'i, Led., var. ? sibvlla, Linn., var., 181, 186. japonica, Murray, AAopala (Amblypodia), 344. japonica, Murray (Dipsas, Thecla),=Zephynis ta.xila, Brem., var., 370, 377. jiponica, Murray (Lyciena), = Zizera nwlia, KolL, var., 325. japonica, ilfM/vay,=Rliopalocainpta benjamini, var., 641. jasius, Linn., Cliaraxes, 124. jezabel, Oberth., Melitaea, 217. jliora, de Nicer., Aeromachus (Thanaos), 620. jina, Moore, Athyiiia, 172. jonasi, Jans., Zephyrus (Thecla, Dipsas), 385. jugurtha, CraOT.,=Catopsilia crocale. Cram., 424. Junonia, Hiibn., 278. kala, de Niciv., Everes, 332. kali, de Nicev., Aeromachus (Thanaos), 618. kalinda, Moore, Erebia, 99. Kallima, Westw., 121. kalora, Moore (Pieris),=Synchlue callidice, var., 459. kardama, Moore, Euthalia (Adolias), 136. kaschmirensis, iro/;.,= Vanessa iirtics.,=Thecla spini, var., 357. lativitta. Leech, = Aulocem magica, Oberth., var., 73. lativitta, Zeec/j, = Delias patrua. Leech, var., 422. lato, &V.-G=/-.,=Erynnis comma, var., 595. latonia, (r;-.-tf;-., = Melitaea didyma, £.^p., var., 211. latonia, Linn., Argynnis, 227. latris, Leech, Halpe, 623. laverna. Leech, Apatura, 164. leda, Leech, Melanargia, 60. leda, Linn., Melanitis, 1U6, &52. leechi, de Nicer., Satsuma (Thecla), 657. lehana, Moore,=L,ycasna, pheretes, Hiibn., var., 306. leonina, Butl., Adopjea (Pamphila, Ilesperia, Thy- melicus), 592. leopardina, Lucas (Argynnis), = Timelcea maculata, Brem. ^- Grey, 245. " lepechini, ii-scA., =Limenitis triveua, Moure, var., 187. lepita, Moore, Ijibythea, 288. Leptocircus, Swainson, 507. Lethe, Hiibn., 18. leucodice, Fversm., Pieris, 470. Leucophasia, Steph., 480. kucothoe. Cram, (nee iin?i.), = Xeptis euiynome, Westic, 202. levana, Linn., Aiaschnia (Vanessa), 268. 1 1\ D E X. leYsinn, Pi-i/er (nee 2;i'«H.),= Arasclinia fallax, J(/«.v., 272. levanoidea, Bkmdi. ,= Xraschnia prorsoides, Blanch., var., 273. Ihamo, Obedh., Aporia (Pieris), 608. Ihatso, Oberth., Calinaga, 652. li, Oberth., Chrysophanup, 402. libitina, Z6>cc/*,=Zophoessa dura, Marsh., var., 47. Libythea, Fabr., 286. ligyes, i7i»?c.,= Limemti3 ti-ivena, Muure, var., 187. liliana, Atkinson, Lobocia, 559. liliputana, 5)'OTnorrliinus (Pterygospidea), 509. maculosa, Leech,='Dodona eugenes, Bates, var., 292. maculosa, Leech, Epinephele, 78. maderensis, J<;W.,=Gonepteryx rhamni, Linn., var., 441. nisera, Linn., Amecera, 67. miesa, Moore, Padraona, 595. mjevius, Fabr., Taractrocera (Ilesperia), 589. maga, Leech, Padraona (Pampbila), 699. magica, Oberth., Aidocera (Satyrus), 73. magna. Leech, Mycalesis perdiccas, var., 14. maha, Koll., Zizera (Lyca^na), 325. Mahathala, Moore, 344, 347. mahendra, Moore, Neptis, 201, niahesa, Moore, Atbyma, 168. majuscula, Leech, Amecera, 67. malvse, LAnn., Hesperia, 575. mandaj-ina, de /'0)-2«, = Terias hecabe, Linn., 429. mandarina, ieeeA, = Pieri8 melete, Men., var., 451. Mandarinia, Leech, 9. mandarinus, Oberth., Papilio, 520. mandarinus, i^eW., = Charaxes narcreus. Hew., var. 126. mandscburife, 06tf)'M., = Parnassius nomion, Fisch.. var., 499. maadschuiica, .S/)f7/e;-, = Pieris rap^-e, Linn., \a.r., 457. maudscbui-ica, Staud. , = Lycxna. chinensis, Marrai/. 315. mandschurica, i^a«.,=Melit8ea athalia. Putt., var.. 215. manea, Heio., Rapala (Ueudorix), 414. mangala, Moore (Pamphila), = Paruara guttatu.«, Brem. ^ Grey, 609. manzorum, Pouj. (Satyrus, Pararge), 38. marginalis, Motsch., Letbe (Satyrus), 25. marginata, Poiy. (Lycjena),= Zizera maba,A"o//,, var.. 325, 326. marise, Semper, Papilio, 539. marica, ie 485. montiiim, Oberth., Colias, 436. moolata, Moore, Parnara, 613. moorei. Hew., Ilerda, 407. moorei. Leech, LyciBna, 310. moori, Mab. (Pterygospidea), = Daimio siiiica, Feld., 565. morgiana, Westic, Dilipa (Apatura), ICG. morpheus. Pall., Ileteropterus (Cyclopides), 583. morsei, Fenton (Leptosia), = Leucophasia tiuapis, Linn., var., 483. motschulskiji. Men., Ypthima (Satj-ru.s), 88. motschulskyi, Breyn. Sr Ch'ey, Y'pthima (Satyrus), 88, 646. moupinensis, Poiij. (Debis),=Zophoessadura, J/rt)'s/i., var., 47. muirheadii, Feld., Neope (Lasiommata, Debis), 64. multiformis, Prycr, =Terias hecabe, Linn., 428. multistriata, Butl., Ypthima, 649. murdava, Z'('.!<^, = l'ithauria stramineipennis, 2,631. Mycalesis, Iliibn., 10. myrmidone, Fsjier, Colias, 438. myrrha, Godart, Libythea, 287. naias, Zeec/(, = Lethe satyrina, Butl., 23. nama, Bonbl., Hestina (Diadema), 142. namanganus, h., Coenonympha, 97, 050. Pazala, AfoH)-e, = Papilio, 523. pedius, Leech, Zephyrus, 378. peguanus, Moore, Aphnmus, 411. pelias. Leech, Thanaos (Nisoniades), 581. PeUon, .B:8/%, = Adopsea, Billb., 590. pellucida, Murray, Parnara (Pamphila, Thymelicus), 611. peloria, Heio., Mesapia, 474, 659. penelope, »S'<«!«i., = Argynnis zenobia. Leech, 242. penicillata, Po«/.,= Mycalesis perdiccas, 13. Penthema, Boubl., 116. penthesilea, J''ff6;-., = Cethosia biblis, Dnirij, 120. percomis, Leech, Thecla, 306. perdiccas, Heio., Mycalesis, 13. perfecta, ieecA, = Ypthima ruotschulskyi, Brem. S; Grey, var., 88 ; bon. sp., 647. pero, de Nicev., Celsenorrhinus, 570. perryi, 5!ff/.,= Argynnis selene, Hiibn., var., 222. perseis, Ze(f., = Coenonympha hero, Linn., \ar., 95. persiinilis, IVestw., Hestina, 146. phfedra, iecc/i, = Apatura here, Feld., var., 163. phaedra, Zi««.,= Satyrus dryas, Scop., 69. phalanta, Drunj, Atella (Argynnis), 208. pbanseus, Hew., Casyapa, 572. phania, Oberth., Epinephele, ? Ypthima, 89. Phedra, .Hbcs/"., = Curetis, Hiibn., 348. pheretes, Hiibn., Lycsena, 305. philomela, Johanssen, Ypthima, 90, 91 . philoxenus, Gray, Papilio (Byasa), 537, 539, 542. philyroides, Stand., Neptis, 200, 201. phineus, Cram., 600. phlfeas, Linn., Chrysophanus (Polyommatus), 399. phoebe, Knoch, Melitaea, 214. pliyllis. Leech, Callerebia, 101. phyllodendri, 5Ynu(/. i)/iS'iommata?), 52. pulchra, Leech, I'amphila, 586. pumilus, Feld., (Eneis (Chionobas), 75. punctata, Leech, Athyma, 176. puziloi, Ersch., Luelidorfia, 491. puziloi, Pr^er, = Luehdorfia j aponica, Zcec/j, 400, 401. pylaon, Lycaena, 315. Pyrameis, Hiibn., 249. Pyrgus, ifM6n., = Hesperia, Fabi-., bio. pyrrha, de Nicev., Celfenorrkinus, 572. pyiTha, Leech, Euthalia, 137. querceti, Moore (Ambl^'poJia), = Arhopala rama, Koll., 344. quercivora, Staud., Zephyrus (Thecla), 382. quereus, Linn., Thecla, 870, 371, 382. quiuquepuncta, i/a6.,=Parnara pellucida, var.. Oil. rabdia, 5M<;.,=Argynni3 daphne, Schiff., var., 229. raddei, .SreTO., = Papilio maacki, Men., var., 531. Ragadia, Westw.,'d-2. rama, Koll, Arhopala (Thecla, Amblypodia, Pan- chala), 344. ramosa, Leech, Neope, 52. rap*, Linn., Pieris, 456. Kapala, Moore, 413. raphaelis, Oberth., Zephyrus (Thecla), 389. ravaua, Moore, Papilio, 543. recurva, Leech, Athyma, 176, 656. regalis. Leech, Mandarinia (Mycalesis), 9. regina, Bull. (Thecla), =Zephyrus taxila, Brem., var., repercus.sa, Leech, Rapala, 414. repugnans, /ooc«, =Xeptis eurynome, Westw., var., 202, 203. sangra, Moore, Zizera (Polyommatus, LyejenaV 323. saphir, Blanch., Ilerda (Tliecla), 406. saphii-, Elxoes (nee i)/««oA.), = Ilerda moorei, Hen.. 407. saphirina, Stand., Zepbyrus (Tbecla), 378. sarala, de Kiceo., Parnara, 015. Sarbaria, Moore, = Papi;in, 534. sarpedon, Linn., Papilio, 524. Sataxupa, Moore, 562. satricu-;, DoubL, Rhapbicera (Lasiommata), 55. Satsuma, Murray, 352. satyrina, Butl., Lethe, 23. satyrina, Oberth. (nee Butl.), = Charaxes narca-u? " Heic, 126. SatjmiB, Westw., 68. satyrus, Edw., Grapta (Vanessa), 264. saxatllis, Chr., var. infernalis, Gr.- Gr., Melitrea, 21 1 saxicola, Oberth., Erebia, 100. sca^vola, Oberth., = Vn.^\\\o macilentus, 547. Scelothrix, 2ia)n6.,=Hesperia, Fabr., 575. sehakra, KolL, Amecera, 67. schrencki, Men., Apatura (Adolias), 154. schrenckii, Men., Pronopbila ?, 17. scintiUans, Leech, Zephyrus, 376. sciron, ie«'cA,=Papilio gyas, Westw., var., 53(^ seolyraus, Butl., Anthocharis, 479. scoparia, 5Mi/., = Erebi,i sedakovii, Ecersm., var., 9S, 99. scopulifera, Moore, Baoris, 617. seotosia, B«§• de Nicev., Pithaiiria, 631. strephon, Grose Smith, Eulhalia, 653. striata, Hew., Ismene, 636. strigosa, Butl., = Araschnia burejana, Brem., 270, 271. strigosa, Alph. (nee _/?«//.), = .\iaschnia prorsoides, Blanch., var., 273. strophia, Godart (Nyniphalis),=Athyma sulpitia, var., 174. stubbendorfii, Men., Parnassius, 506, 507. stygiana, Bntl., Zephyrus (Thecla), 391. stygianus, iSwi/., = Chrysophanus phlajas, Linn., var., 399, 400. stygne, Fkch., Erebia, 98. styppax, Oberth. (Mycalesisj, = Lethe satyrina, Butl, 23. suaveolens, Wood-Mas. ^- de Nicev., Mycalesis, 15. subalba, Povj., Apatura, 158. subaurata, 2?Hrt., = Colias hyale, Lirm., var., 433. subcserulea, Leech, Apatura, 156. subfervens. /j>(//., = Terias Iteta, Boisd., var., 426. subflava, Leech, llalpe, 025. subhyaliua, Brem, ■^- Grey, Augiades (Ilesperia, Pamphila), 602. submaoula, Leech, Halpe, 622. subnubila, it'ec/i, = Delias sauaca, Moore, var., 421. subpurpurea, ieec^, = Ilapala nissa, KolL, 413. substituta, i?irf/.,= Apatura ilia, Wien. Verz., var., 161. subviridis. Leech, Hestina, 145. suffusa, Leech, = Stichophthalma howqua, Westic, var., 114. suflFusa, Leech, = Zephyrus orientalis, Murray, var., 377. sulphurea, Oie)-//(., = Aporia liippia, var., 472. sulpitia. Cram., Athyma, 174. sumitra, Moore, Celienorrhinus (Gehlota, Plesio- neura), 569, 570. siiperba. Leech, Helcyra, 152. sura, Doubl, Zophoessa, 49. ausruta, Moore, Neptis, 204. suyudana, Moore, = Melauitis aswa, Moore, var., 108. swinhoei, Butl. , = JimoB'm oritliyia, Linn., var., 280. syama, Ilor.'if., Aphn;ous (Ambl}podia, Spindasis), 410. sybillina, Oberth., Aulocera (Satyrus), 73. sydyi. Led., Limenitis, 181. syfanius, Oberth., Papilio, 532. sylvanoides, Leech, Augiades, 604. sylvanus, Esp., Augiades (Ilesperia), 601. sylvatica, Brem., Adopaea (Pamphila), 501, sylvicola, Oberth., Oallerebia, 103, Symbrenthia, Hiibn., 283. Ssmchloe, Hiibn., 458. syrcis, Ileir., Lethe, 37. Syrichtus, i)y/s(/., = Ilesperia, Fabi:, 575. 680 I X D E X. svrichtus, Fabr. (Pyrgus), Ilespeiia, 575. szt5chenvi, Friv., Parnassius, 001. Tachyris, Wall., 474. tages, Linn., Thanaos (Xisoniades), 580, 581, G61. Tagiades, Hiihn., 573. Tajuria. Mooi-e, 412. tiimerlaua, Stand., Polycoena, 294. tanierlanus, OheHh., Papilio, 521. tamu, HeiD. (nee io//.), = Ilerda Tiridipunctata, de M'cev., 405. tamu, KolL, Ilerda, 40(5. tangutica, G/'.-G;'.,= Thecla tengstrcenii, Ersch.. \ar.. tliibetana, OJer/A., = Augiades subhyalina, var., 603. thibetana, Pouj., Euthalia (Adolias), 138. thibetanus, 06crt^., = Chara.xe3 nar^teus, Heic, var., 126. thibetanus, Oberth., Hesperia (Syrichtbus maculatiis, var. thibetanus, Oberth.), 578. thibetanus, Oberth., Pararge (Satyrus), 63. thibetanus, Oberth., = Papilio polytes, Linn., var., 553. thibetensis, PouJ. (Lyefena),=Zizera sangra, Moore. var., 323, 324." thisbe, Min., Neptis, 190, 196, 197. thunbergii, de rO;';«, = Anthocharis seolyiuus, Dull., Tansima, 3/<;o;-p, = Lethe, 23. Taractrocera, Butl, 589. Taraka, Doherty, 207. taxila, Brem., Zephyrus (Thecla), 370. teesta, de Xice'v. (Satadra),=:Arhopala turbata, But/., 345. Teinopalpus, Hope, 509. Teinoprosoptis, J'eW., = Teinopalpus, Hope, 509. telamou, I)un., Sericinus, 484. telemachus, (w-, = Melitfea parthenie, Bork., var., 214. varia, Murray, Halpe (Pamphila), 621. varmona, Moore, Neptis, 203. vasava, Moore, Ctenoptilum (Achlyoiies, Antigoaus), 675. va.=iutana, Moore, Ismene, 637. vau-album, Wien. Verz., Vanessa, 261. venata, Brem. ^- Grey (Hesperia),= Augiad63 sylva- nus, var., 601. venata, Leecli, =A-poTia. davidis, Obcrth., var., 469. veuata. Leech, = Limenitis homeyeri, Timcre, var., 183. verbuellii, Soev., Pereas (Colias), 446. veris, Stand.,= 'P\M\s melete. Men., var., 451. verma, Koll., Lethe (Satyi-us), 23. vesta, Fabr., Pareba (Acrsea), 114, 556. vestigiata, Butl., Salpinx (Euploea), 8. vibilia, /«»«.,= Leucophasia sinapis, Linn., var., 483. violaceopicta, I'ouj., Lethe (Debis), 39. virgata, Leech, Padraona (Pamphila), 598. virgaurese, Zm?j., Chrysophanus (Polyommatus), 398. viridipunctata, de Nicev., Ilerda, 405. viridis, ieecA, = Hestina mena, Moore, var., 143. visala, Moore, Mycalesis, 13. vitatha, Moore, = kx^ynms aglaia, Linn., var. 232. vitrea. Leech, Coladenia, 568. vitrea, Murray (Pamphila), = Isoteinon lamprospilns, Feld., 582. vitta, Butl., Hasora (Hesperia), 638. vorax, .©«*/., = A rgynnis adippe, Xw»., var., 232. vulcaniea, Godart, = Pyrameis iudica, Herbst, var.. w-album, Ktioch, Theela, 358, 359. walkyria, Fixs., ffineis, 77. wallaeei, 2);s<., =Junonia orithyia, Linn., var., 280. ■wallichii, Doubl., Dercas (Gonepteryx), 445. wedah, Koll., Pseudergolis (Ariadne), 275. whitelyi, ^««., = Lethe diana, Butl., -IS. xanthodippe, i^(.rs.,=Argynnis adippe, Linn., var., 234. xanthomelas, Esper, Vanessa, 260. xanthopogon, iToW. (Hesperia), =Rhopaloc:imptii bpu- jamini, Gu4rin, 641. .xuthulus, 5ra».,=Papilio xuthus, Linn., var., 514. xuthus. Leech, Everes, 330. xutlius, Linn., Papilio, 614. yama, Moore, Neop3 (Zophoessa), 48. yankowskyi, 2^ ^Sp^i tq '^m3 ^ w "1 rj5 ^ ^ .^ ^ o < ^ a. pa 2 •< LU BUTTERFLIES FROM CHINA, JAPAN, AND COREA. BY JOHN HENRY LEECH, B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., Etc. Part III. LEMONIID^ AND LYCiENID^. Pages 285—417. LONDON: R. H. PORTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, W. January 1893. BUTTERFLIES FROM CHINA, JAPAN, AND COREA. BY JOHN HENRY LEECH, B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., Etc. Part IV. PAPILIONID^. Pages 4-17-557. LONDON: R. H. PORTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, W. Octoler 1893. BUTTERFLIES FROM CHINA, JAPAN, AND COREA. BY JOHN HENRY LEECH, B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., Etc. Part V. HESPERIID^. Pages 557—642. LONDON: R. H. PORTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, W. December 1893. \ *^l.. BUTTERFLIES FROM CHINA, JAPAI, AND COREA. BY JOHN HENRY LEECH, B.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., Etc. Part VI. APPEJjTDIX, INDEX, TITLE, PREFACE, CONTENTS, SYSTEMATIC LIST, INTRODUCTION, DISTRIBUTION TABLES, &c. Pages 643-681, i-lv. LONDON: il. H. PORTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, W. January 1894. ^