BUTTERFLIES OF THARUA VVADDY AND PEGU YOMA. 115 



17/). C ro.nii^, Godeat. A fow spocinions from some evergreen jungle on 

 tho MyaiMig stream in .July 15)11 and three from the Mokka stream in 

 Fanuary 1912. 



176. C. (lecidia. Hew. 1 got this at low elevations in Hen?ada so it 

 should occur in Tharrawaddy, but 1 never found it. 



177. Kiphanila crjmbia marcia, Few. This, if it may bo so expressed, is 

 one of tho rarities that turn up fairly often. In all 1 have got six in 

 Thar^a^^addy ; one from evergreen forest at the source of the Mokka stream 

 on 21st January 1912, one from the Takawpi stream on 3rd February J913, 

 and four from the Taungnyo stream in 1909. 



Elsewhere I found it commoner in the Pakokku Chin Hills at about 1,0C0 

 feet, and I have it from Maymyo. 



178. Li/c(enesthes emoluK, God. Fairly common and often found on wet 

 sand by jungle streams. 



179. L. lyccenina, Felder. Not nearly so common as the last. 



180. Nacaduba viola, M. One specimen from the Kyanktada hill, 2,640 

 feet, on 16th November 1911. 



181. N. l-erriana, Dist. Seven specimens from the same hill and on the 

 same date. This species seems to be a Malayan one, and to be somewhat 

 out of place in Tharrawaddy. I have it also from the foot of the Karen 

 Hills in Toungoo. 



182. iV. vincrojMlialma, Felder. Three specimens of this from the 

 same hill on the same date. On page 144 of Vol. Ill of his Butterflies of 

 India, de Niceville mentions aTi aberrational form ot the male, from the 

 Nilgiri Hills. 1 have seen this at the B. M. and I have specimens exactly 

 matching it from Tharrawaddy (one from the Kyini Reserve). The 

 blue colour on the upperside of all these aberrational insects is not the 

 same as in typical macrophihnlma, but is paler and nearer to the colour of 

 iV. pavana, Hors., of which species I should prefer to consider them 

 aberrations. 



I have what I take to be typ'cal macrophthalma from two other localities 

 in Burma. (Maymyo and Pathichaung in tho Toungoo district.) 



183. N. pavann, Hors. I have what I take to be this insect from the 

 Kanbalu hill, 2,600 feet, on 2nd February 1911 and from Myanle on 29th 

 March 1911. 



184. N. dana, de Nee. The male of this is quite common, being usually 

 found on wet sand, but the female 1 have not yet found. 



IHo. N. nora, Felder. Also common, and frequently found in company 

 with dana on wet sand. 



180. N. noreia, Felder. Not very common. 



187. N. calestis, de Nee. 1 have obtained seven, all males on various 

 dates in January, February and September. 



188. N. atrata, Hors. I do not seem to have gob this, but I should have 

 it. 



189. Lampides bochus, Or. Common, usually in streams in the forest. 



190. L.pvm, '^■)-QQ^Y^QQQyj^^celenon\ostvlQrii\in\\y. 



191. X, celem, Cr. ) ' 



192. L. elpis, God. Fairly common, but the rarest of these four 

 Lampides in Tharrawaddy. 



