190 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 



Habitat : Ceylon [Moore) ; Cachar ( Wood-Mason and de Niceville) ; 

 Sikkim (de Niceville) ; Sikkim, Andamans, Burma (E lives) ; Nilgiri 

 Hills, 2,000 — 4,000 feet, rare (Hampson) ; Bhutan, Assam, Orissa. 



(5) Notocrypta Asmara, Butler. 



Tlesioneura asmara, Butler, Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond., Zoology, second series, vol. i, 

 p. 556, n. 3 (1877) ; id., Distant," Rhop. Malay., p. 400, n. 2, pi. xxxv, fig. 28 (188) ; 

 Hesperia asmara, Horsfield and^Moore, M.S., Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C, vol. i, p. 253, 

 n. 576 (1857). 



Habitat : Moulmein, Malacca, Java (Butler) ; Malacca (Distant); 

 Java (Horsfield and Moore). 



Note— As figured by Mr. Distant, this species has a large quadrate 

 spot at the end of the cell of the forewing, a loug narrow one below at 

 the base of the second median interspace, and a third large quadrate 

 spot below the last near the middle of the second median inter- 

 space ; three subapical conjoined dots. A good description of this 

 species is much wanted. 



(6) Notocripta ruficornis, Mabille. 



Tlesioneura rvficornis, Mabille, Ann. Soc Ent. Belg.,^vol. xxi, p 32, n. 93 (1878). 



Habitat: Java (Mabille). 



(7). Notocrypta insulata, Butler. 



Tlesioneura insulata, Butler, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fifth series, vol. x, p. 154, 

 n. 31 (1882) ; idem, id., op. cit., vol. xi, p. 424, n. 88 (1883). 



Habitat : New Britain, Aru (Butler). 



(8) Notocrypta proserpina, Butler. 



Tlesioneura proserpina, Butler, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fifth series, vol. xi, 

 p. 424, n. 89 (1883). 



Habitat: Aru (Butler). 



(9) Notocrypta albifascia,' Moore. 



Tlesioneura albifascia, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. 843, pi. liii, fig. 3, 

 male. 



Habitat : Hatsiega, Burma, ? Sumatra (Moore) ; Moulmein. 

 (10) Notocrypta monteithi, Wood-Mason and de Niceville. 



Plesioneura monteithi, Wood-Mason and de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lv, pt. 2, 

 p. 391, n. 245, pi. xviii, figs. 3, 3a, female (18S6). 



Habitat : Cachar (Wood-Mason and de Niceville). 

 Note — This species is very near to the preceding, but has the 

 white discalband of the forewing typically quite twice as broad, and 



