no JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HIST. SOCIETY, Vol. XXV. 



88. J. atlites, Joh. Fairly common. Chiefly found in gardens. 



89. /. almana, L. Very common. 



90. Symbventhia lucina, Cr. Common in the jungle. I have found no 

 Vanessa in Tharrawaddy, but 7'. cardui, should occur as I have it from the 

 Prome hill in July 1909. 



91. Rhinopalpa polynice hirmana, Fruh. Though I have not actually 

 caught this, I saw it in the Mokka stream in January. 



92. Yomasahinavasuki,Y)o\i.^xt. Common in the jungle. The rains brood 

 is markedly darker than the hot weather brood that it succeeds. The d. 

 s. f. begins to appear in February, and the insects flying at the end of April 

 and beginning of May are very battered and pale. With the first good 

 showers in May the w. s. f. appears. May 19 is a date I have noted 

 for this. The insects are fond of settling on cattle-stamped mud round 

 village wells, inside the wells on the damp bricks, or along roads through 

 the jungle. Kangyi Reserve in May. 



93. H.ypolimnuiibnlina,\i. Very common. I have not caught -ST. misippus 

 L. in Tharrawaddy, but it must occur. 



94. Penthema yoma, Mihi. Two specimens of this from the Myaung 

 stream (Gamon Reserve) and from the Thabyu stream (Thonze Reserve), 

 both in May, 1909 and 1912. It inhabits moist jungle, and seems to be the 

 kind of Penthema peculiar to the Pegu Yoma forests. I have P. lisarda 

 from the Henzada District and P. darlisa from the foot of the Karen Hills 

 in Toungoo District. The type specimen of P. yoma is in the B. M. and 

 was recently described by me in the journal of the B. N. H. S., Vol. XXII, 

 page 585. February 2nd, 1915. 



95. Kallima inachus limboryi, M. Not common, as there is not much of 

 the evergreen jungle it prefers. It is sometimes found in "Indaing" 

 jungle. 



96. Issoria Sinha, KoU. Not very common. Occurs in the jungle. 



97. Atella phalantha, Drury. Very common everywhere. I have not 

 obtained A. alcippe cdcippioides aad find it much rarer and limited to 

 Tenasserim and East Toungoo as far as my experience goes as yet. 



98. Cupha erymanthis lotis, Sulz. Very common everywhere. 



99. Cirroc-hroa mithila, M. Not very common, but I have records of it 

 from the Bawbin Reserve on 13th November 1911 and again in April in the 

 Thonze Reserve. 



100. Eryolis ariadne, Johans. Never very common but to be found in 

 most jungle. 



101. Eryolis merione, Cr. About equally common. 



102. Laiinya horsjieldi ylaucescens, de Nee. I obtained this on the top of 

 the Yoma at 2,600 feet, three on the Kyanktada hill, 16th November 1911, 

 and tw(j on the Kaubalu hill, 20th November 1911 — four males and one 

 female. I have not seen it elsewhere in Tharrawaddy. 



103. Pseudergolis wedah, KoU. Not very common. 



104. Cethosia cyane, Drury. Not common, and seems to inhabit open 

 Savannah jungle by preference, or gardens. Bingham records C. hypsirui, 

 Fd., from the Pegu Yoma. I have not found it. 



105. Lihythea myrrha, QoAiyrt. I have this from Henzada and Toungoo 

 but seem to have failed to take it in Tharrawaddy. 



