IWTTEIiFLIES OF TILARRA W'ADDV AMJ PFGU lOMA. 1 17 



shrubs in the plains beside the stream. Later I got some, all battered. 

 Again I saw it, apparently fresh, near Sanbok village on l/jth February 

 191l>. 



I have M. anicna from Henzada. 



I'Ol. Iraota timoleon, Stoll. I have obtained one male from the Kyank- 

 tuda hill, 2, GOO feet, on 16th November 1911, where it was Hying in company 

 with more numerous /. rochava. 1 also got a female which came into the rest 

 house and was there taken on the wing at Nyanle in the Taungnyo Reserve 

 on 30th April mil. 



202. /. rochana, Hors. Four males from the Kyanktada hill as above 

 and two more from the Kaubalu hill, 2.600 feet, on 20th November 1911, 

 1 have a female from the Gokteik viaduct caught in July 1913. 



These captures extend the range of what seemed like a Malayan insect, 

 and Col. Tytler further records it from Manipur. 



203. Amhliipoilia anita, Hew. Rare. I have only got one male from an 

 evergreen stream in the Thonze Reserve, 3rd May 1912. 



204. Surrendra quercetorum, M. Not common. From the Bawbin 

 Reserve, 1st February 1911 and at Prome on the hill in July. 



205. Arhopala ceiitaurus, Fab. Fairly common in the evergreen or 

 *' Indaing " jungle. December 1912. Kadin Bilin, February 1913, Sanbok, 

 loth February 1913. 



206. A. amantes amatnx, de N. Very common in the beds of streams 

 where it often settles on a willosv-like shrub that grows there {Hot/a). 



207. -4. hazalus, Hew. One specimen in the plains in country that is 

 inundated during half the year, Kyankwa, 2oth May 1912. An unexpected 

 locality for an Arhopala. 



208. A. atosia arid, Std. 1 obtained six examples of this in some ever- 

 green jungle on the Thabelu stream, Thonze Reserve, in May. 



209. A. eumolphus farquhan, Dist. A s nj'le specimen from the same 

 stream in May. 



210. A. heu-itsoni, B.B. This is very common in the " Indaing " jungle, 

 settling on the broad leaves of the trees. 



211. A. tounyura, Gr. S. Common in company with the last named in 

 " Indaing " jungle. The female is a much paler blue than the male. In 

 Tharrawaddy I chiefly got the blue female but in Henzada I got mostly the 

 purple male, from similar jungle. There are two distinct kinds of A. 

 UnuKjuva and they probably merit names as they certainly represent con- 

 stant forms, and may be two species. The males from wet jungle are 

 dadcer, both in the blue colour of the upper side and in the ground colour 

 below. The underside is also washed with pink. The females differ below 

 in the same way and on the upperside much more resemble the colour of 

 the male but females can always be distinguished by the extent of the blue 

 colour. This darker form inhabits wet and evergreen jungle, while the 

 other form irhabits dry "Indaing" forest and is paler both above and 

 below with scarcely any pink wash below. 



I have the dark variety from Rangoon and the Lower Thaungyin, the 

 pale variety from Tharrawaddy, Henzada and Toungoo. 



From Rangoon I have one female of the dark kind which possesses a dull 

 green fore wing, the corresponding wing being blue as usual, with just a 

 dusting of green scales in interspace la. 



212. A, abervans, de N. I have this from the Taungnyo Reserve. Also 

 from Henzada. 



