SATYRINZ. fil 
the male, the ocelli somewhat larger and more prominent, the transverse fasciz less 
apparent. 
Expanse, d 1,5,, ? 1,8 inches. 
Dry-Season Broop (Plate 109, fig. 4a, ¢). 
Ypthima Avanta, Moore, Proe. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1874, p.567. Marshall and de Nieéville, Butt. of 
India, ete. i. p. 218, pl. xvii. fig. 66, ¢ (1883). Waterhouse, Aid to Ident. of Ins. pl. 179, 
fig.6, ¢. Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1888, p. 135. 
Imaco.—Male. Upperside uniformly dark-brown. Forewing with an indistinctly 
defined broad dusky discal glandular patch, and a very small indistinct bipupilled 
subapical ocellus. Hindwing with two very small single-pupilled subanal ocelli 
situated between the medians. Underside pale ochreous-grey, very densely covered 
with slender dark-brown strigz, and both wings crossed by a narrow subbasal, a 
medial and a submarginal brown fascia, the subbasal and medial fascia on the 
hindwing being wavy. Forewing with a prominent large bright oval subapical 
ocellus bipupiled with silvery-bluish-white. Hindwing with two small upper oval 
ocelli disposed between the upper subcostal and radial, and four lower linearly- 
disposed similar ocelli, the two lowest being geminated, each with a large oval 
silvery bluish-white pupil. 
Female. Upperside. Forewing with a larger well-formed pale ringed bipupilled 
ocellus. Hindwing with two smaller subanal ocelli. Underside densely covered 
with dark-brown strige, as in the male, the transverse fasciz less defined. Fore- 
wing with large prominent ocellus, as on upperside. Hindwing with two small upper 
and four lower ocelli disposed as in the male. 
Hxpanse, 6 1,4, to 1,6, 2 1,% inch. 
Hasirat.—N. W. Himalayas; Eastern India; Western Burma. 
Distrisotion.—‘‘ In the Western Himalayas, the dry-season form is found from 
April to August, beimg common in Kulu, and extending to Kashmir on the West.” 
(Butt. India, i. 218). Major H. B. Hellard obtained the dry-season form in the 
“Lower Bagh River Valley, Kashmir, at the end of June” (MS. Notes). Major 
J. W. Yerbury (P. Z. 8, 1886, 359) took the wet-season form between Abbottabad and 
Kala Pani im September, at Murree and Tret in October, and the dry-season form at 
Kala Pani in April and May; being common about Kala Pani and on the road 
between Abbottabad and Bugnoter in September.’ In Mr. G. F. Hampson’s collection 
are specimens of the wet-season brood from Col. A. M. Lang, taken in Kumaon at 
Bagheswar, 3800 feet, in September, at Katarwal, 4500 feet in October. Mr. W. 
Doherty (Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, 1886, 120) records it from ‘“ Kumaon—being 
found in river valleys generally from 2500 to 5000 feet elevation.” Mr. Butler 
(P. Z. 8. 1880, 148) gives “ Bengal”’ as the locality of the type specimen of ordinata. 
