SATYRINZE. 95 
DALLACHA HYAGRIVA (Plate 115, figs. 1, la, 3 ?). 
Yphthima Hyagriva, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. East India Compy., i. p. 236 (1857). Hewitson, 
Trans. Ent. Soc, Lond. 1885, p. 291, pl. 18, fig. 11. ; 
‘pthima Hyagriva, Butler, Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 152 (1868). Marshall and de Nicéville, Butt. 
of India, ete. i. p. 226, pl. 17, fig 64, 9 (1883). 
Tuaco.—Male. Upperside dark olivescent brown; cilia cinereous-brown with 
a paler inner line ; both wings with a dusky-brown submarginal fascia. Forewing 
with a prominent large broadly-oval or rounded subapical black ocellus, bipupilled 
with bluish-white and ringed with ochreous, sometimes a single white pupil only is 
present, and in some a minute ocellule is also present between the lower median 
veinlets. Hindwing with a large round subanal ocellus with a single pupil and 
ochreous ring. Underside deep olivescent brownish-ochreous ; cilia brownish- 
ochreous with a brown line. JMovrewing with the costal edge and outer border 
slightly flecked with brown strigz ; a distinct broad dusky-brown submarginal fascia 
and a slender black marginal line; ocellus, as in upperside, bipupilled, and below it 
is one, or two, white spots between the medians, the lower one being sometimes a 
fully developed minute ocellus. Hindwing numerously covered with dusky-brown 
waved strigz ; a submarginal dusky-brown fascia; a large geminated pair of apical 
ocelli, each with a bluish-white pupil and both encompassed by an ochreous ring; a 
similar geminated pair of anal ocelli, and between the upper and lower medians two 
intervening white dots are generally present. 
Female. Upper and underside as in the male; sometimes a minute anal ocellus 
being present on upperside of the hindwing. Body beneath, palpi, and legs olives- 
cent brownish-ochreous ; antennz brown above and ochreous beneath in male, 
reddish in the female. 
Expanse, ¢ 1;% to 1,4, 9 1, to 2 inches. 
Hasirat.—Western Himalayas. 
Distrizution.—In the late Mr. W. 8. Atkinson’s collection we verified speci- 
mens labelled “ Tavi Valley, Kashmir,” and “ Chumba,” and in a M8. Note, he says, 
*«T have a specimen from Kumaon, and I took two or three near Thana Mandi just 
before crossing the Ruttan Pir. It seemed common there. I also took a specimen 
on the outer hills of Chumba.” Major H. B. Hellard obtained it at “‘ Masuri at the 
end of September, or beginning of October ” (MS. Notes). In Mr. G. F. Hampson’s 
collection are specimens taken by “Colonel A. M. Lang in Gin Chini, Kumaon, at 
5000 feet in September, and at Naini Tal, 6500 feet, in August.” Mr. W. Doherty 
(J. A. S. Beng. 1886, 119) says, “I found Hyagriva not uncommon at various points 
in Kumaon, from 3000 to 7000 feet elevation, during the rains.” ‘* Mr. A. Graham 
Young took it in the Kulu Valley in August and September” (Butt. Ind. 226), 
We have a specimen from General G. Ramsay’s Nepal collection. 
