332 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XII. 



N. fvaterna, while for N. douUedayi he gives Sikkim, Assam, the 

 Khasia and Naga Hills, and Burma. These localities are strangely 

 mingled, and as far as my experience goes N. douhledaii is confined to 

 Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam and Upper Burma, while N. nonius occurs to 

 the southwards, in Karenni and Upper Tenasserim. The female of 

 N, nonius has yet to be discovered. 



22. EuTHALiA {Zalapia) taooana, Moore. 



One male of this very rare species from the Taungoo Hills, 4,000 feet, 

 taken in May. Colonel C. T. Bingham has given me a single male 

 captured on the ascent from the Tbaungyin Valley to the Taoo 

 Plateau at about 2,000 feet, taken 1st March, 1890. 



23. EuTHALiA (Chucapa) fkanci^, G. R. Gray. 

 Taungoo Hills, 4,000 feet, one male in October. 



24. LiMENiTis (Sumalia) zulema, Doubleday and Hewitson. 

 Taungoo Hills, 4,000 feet, October, one male. 



25. Athyma kanga, Moore. 



As A. rauga, Moore, and A. mahesa, Moore, are seasonal forms of one 

 and the same species, buc as the former name occurs earlier than the 

 latter in the work in which both are described, it must stand for the 

 species. A. ranga is found in the Daunat Range in December, the 

 Thaungyin Valley in May and December, and in the Taungoo Hills, 

 4,000 feet, in November. 



26. Athyma selenophora, KoUar. 



Daunat Range, February. Males only met with. 



27. Calinaga sudassana, Melvill. 



Originally described from Siam. I have specimens from the 

 Kunlon Ferry, Salween River, N. Shan States, taken on 11th March, 

 1895, and Mr. Hauswell obtained three males on the Taungoo Hills, 

 at about 2,000 to 2,500 feet elevation, also in March. 



28. Penthema binghami, Wood-Mason. 



I have a single male taken in the Yunzalin Valley, Middle 

 Tenasserim, in April, Mr. Hauxwell has obtained one male in the 

 Daunat Range, and another in the Thaungyin Valley, both in 

 April. F. lisarda, Doubleday, occurs in the Chin Hills very rarely in 

 February, while P. darlisa, Moore, is fairly common in high forest 

 throughout Burma ; hence all the known species of the genus occur 

 in the province. 



