76 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
recurved. Body slender; head and thorax small, clothed in front with hairs. Hyes 
prominent, naked. Palpi long, slender, obliquely-porrect, compressed, clothed in 
front with long straight divergent bristly hairs; second joint reaching to vertex, 
third joint fully two-thirds the length of second, slender, naked. Antenne very 
slender, ringed with white, terminating in a very slender gradually-formed club. 
Carprprttar.—‘* When full grown is about an inch or a little less in length; 
entirely green; head round; body of nearly equal thickness throughout, slightly 
increasing in size to the fifth segment, thence gradually tapering to the anal segment, 
which is furnished with two very short diverging immovable processes or tails; the 
head and body are thickly shagreened, being covered with very small closely-set 
tubercles emitting fine colourless hairs.” 
Curysatis.—* Either green or brown; head rounded, the edge of the wing- 
cases raised and angled anteriorly, the thorax tuunpes ” (de Nicéville). 
Tyrz.—Y. Hibneri. 
YPTHIMA KASMIRA (Plate 112, fig. 1, la,d 9). 
Ypthima Kasmira, Moore, Journ. Asiatic Soc. Bengal, 1884, p. 17. Waterhouse, Aid Identif. of Ins. 
pl. 179, fig. 5,9. 
Imaco.—Male and female. Upperside dark brown, Forewing with a moderate- 
sized subapical bipupilled ocellus ; lower discal area clothed with short broad dentate- 
tipt scales, some longer scales with dentate tips, and a very few intervening longer 
black androconia with broad bulbous base and hair-like tassel-tip. Hindwing with 
two small subanal ocelli situated between the medians in the male, and a third 
minute anal ocellus in the female. Underside pale purpurescent brownish-cinereous, 
very densely covered with entirely uniformly-disposed broad brown strige. Forewing 
with a prominent subapical bipupilled ocellus. Hindwing with a prominent apical 
ocellus, and three lower linearly-disposed ocelli, the lowest being bipupilled. 
Expanse 3 13, ¢ 1 inch. 
Hasrrat.—Kashmir. 
DisTRIBUTION.—Specimens of both sexes of this species in our own collection 
were taken by Major H. B. Hellard in Kashmir, in September. 
YPTHIMA APICALIS. 
Ypthima apicalis, Moore, Journ. Asiatic Soc. Bengal, 1884, p. 17. Waterhouse, Aid to Identif. of 
Ins. pl. 179, fig. 2. 
Imaco.—Male. Upperside pale brown. Forewing palest obliquely across the 
lower discal area; with a small rounded bipupilled subapical ocellus, above which is 
a distinct whitish apical streak. Hindwing with two small subanal ocelli, the upper 
