SATYRINZE. 81 
(Butt. Ind. 227) from “ Pegu, in May and June, and taken by Captain C. H. E. 
Adamson at Gyne,” in January. Dr. J. Anderson found it “‘ very common in 
the Mergui Archipelago, from December to March.” (J. Linn. Soe. Zool. 1886, 
32.) 
DisrrreutTion OvursipE Inp1an Arva.—Mr. W. L. Distant (Rhop. Malayana, p. 5) 
describes and figures a female of the wet-season form from Malacca, Malay Penin- 
sula. We also possess it from Malacca. Mr. Distant also records it from Sumatra 
and Java, on the authority of Herr Snellen. The latter locality is doubtless an 
error, for this species, as we possess several specimens received from Herr Snellen, 
labelled, ‘ philomela,” of Hubner, and all of them have six ocelli, disposed in three 
pairs, on the underside of the hindwing, and are undoubted philomela of Linnexus, 
which latter species is quite distinct, and belongs to another division of the 
Ypthime group. 
Of the illustrations of Y. Hubneri on our Plate No. 111, jig. 1 represents 
the larva and pupa reared in Calcutta by Mr. L. de Nicéville; jigs. la, b, 
Calcutta males of the wet-season brood, and fig. 1c, a Nilgiri female of the same 
brood ; jigs. 1d, e, represent the male and female of the dry-season brood, these 
being the type specimens of ‘‘ Howra,” fig. f is from one of the dry-season males 
reared by Mr. de Nicéville in Calcutta; jig. g is a male, and fig. h the female 
5 
Mahabeshwar type specimens of jocularia, kindly lent by Colonel Swinhoe, 
YPTHIMA CEYLONICA. 
“Wert-Srason Broop (Plate 112, figs. 2, 2a, ¢ ?). 
Yphthima Ceylonica, Hewitson, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 288, pl. 18, figs. 14, 15, ¢@. 
Ypthima Ceylonica, Butler, Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 152 (1868). Moore, Lep. of Ceylon, i, p. 25, 
pl. 12, figs. 5, 5a, 9 (1880). Marshall and de Nicéville, Butt. of India, i. p, 228 (1883). 
Ivaco.—Male. Upperside brown; cilia of forewing cinerescent-brown, of hind- 
wing white. Forewing with a prominent large apical bipupilled ocellus, and a few 
very slightly-defined submarginal pale cinerescent strigee. Hindwing with the lower 
half pure white, the extreme outer edge-line and a contiguous submarginal sinuous 
line being dark brown ; bordering the latter are two small black median ocelli, and, 
generally, a smaller anal ocellus, each with a slightly-defined minute white pupil, 
ochreous ring, and then a brown ring ; sometimes a small apical black spot is also 
present. Underside cinerescent-white, purest white on the hindwing; sparsely 
covered with delicate transverse brown strigee, which are much less numerous, more 
slender, and more widely separated on the discal area of the hindwing. Forewing 
with the ocellus larger than above, broadly pale ochreous ringed, and outwardly by 
a brown ring, the latter ring broadly extending below the ocellus, and descending 
as a brown streak to the posterior margin ; a slightly-defined discal and submarginal 
vot. 11. November 17th, 1892. M 
