NOVITATEa ZOOLOGICAE XXII. 1915. 115 



64. Terias tilaha tilaha Horsf. 



Teiias tilaha Horsfield, Cat. Lepid. Mus. E.I.C. p. 136. No. 62 (1829) (Java). 



a cJc?, 1 ?, Danau Bratan, Bali, January 1911; 1 ?,Gunnng Bratan, Bali, 

 4000-650U ft., January— February 1911. 



65. Terias norbana depicta Fruhst. 



Terias norhana depicta Fruhstorfer, Seitz Gvonsschm. Erde, vol. ix. p. 172 (1910) (Amboiaa). 

 1 cJ, 2 ? ?, Mannsela, Central Ceram, 650 metres, 1912. 



66. Terias Candida Candida (Cram.). 



PapiUo Candida Cramer, Pap. Exot. vol. iv. pt. xxviii. p. 8.3. pi. 331 (1780) (Amboiaa). 



15 cJcJ, 13 ? ?, Manusela, Central (Jeram, 650 ft., 1912; 1 <S, Sukaradja, 

 N.W. Ceram ; 1 ?, Kanike, North Ceram, 600 metres, 1912 ; 4 cJc?, 7 ? ?, Wahai, 

 Nortb Ceram. Abundant in open places!! — E. S. [Hagen says always only in 

 forest lands.] 



67. Terias Candida papuana Butl. 



Terias paptiatia Butler, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hixt. ser. vii. vol. i. p. 60. No. 9 (1898) (Misol). 



I (?, 9 ¥ ?, Misol. 



68. Gandaca harina aiguina Fruhst. 



Gandaca harina aiguina Fruhstorfer, Seits Grossschm. Erde, vol. ix. p. 173 (1910) (Obi, Moluccas, 

 to New Guinea ! !). 



The bulk of the New Guinea specimens have a much wider black apex to 

 the forewing in the males, but I have specimens even more exaggerated from 

 India, the Malay Islands, and the Philippines, so that before I venture to describe 

 the Papuan race I require a better series from the Moluccas, for the eleven specimens 

 enumerated below are all I have from there. 



II (?c?, Manusela, Central Ceram, 650 metres, 1912; 1 S, Misol. 



69. Hebomoia glaucippe javanensis (Wall.). 



Iphias glaucippe loc. var. {3) javanensis Wallace, Journ. Entom. ii. p. 3 (1863). 

 1 (?, 1 ?, Bnleleng, North Bali, January — April 1911. 



70. Hebomoia leucippe leucippe (Cram.). 



PapiUo leucippe Cramer, Pap. Exot. vol. i. pt. iii. p. 57. t. 36. ff. A. B. C. (1775) (Amboina). 



Fruhstorfer has separated the Ceram leucippe as a distinct subspecies under 

 the name of leucippe daemonis. He gives as the differences the great reduction 

 of orange above in the forewing and the whitish not yellowish underside of hind- 

 wing. This does not hold good : out of my seven Amboina females five have more 

 black and less orange than Frnhstorfer's figure of his daemonis female, while six 

 of them have the hindwing below white. Of my two Ceram females one has 

 more orange in forewing than the figure shows. 



1 t?, Ceram ; 1 c?, Manusela, Central Ceram, 650 metres, 1912. 



Rather rare in river valleys in open country. — E. S. 



