96 . LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
Genus CALLEREBIA. 
Callerebia, Butler, Annals Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 217 ; Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 96 (1868); Ent. Mo. 
Mag. 1868, p. 194. Marshall and de Nicéville, Butt. of India, etc. i. p. 243 (1883). 
Ivaco.—Male. Wings short. Forewing broad, subtriangular; costa much 
arched, apex rounded, exterior margin slightly convex, posterior angle rounded ; 
cell broad, extending to more than half the wing; costal vein much swollen at the 
base, median vein slightly swollen; first and second subcostal branches emitted 
before end of the cell, the first at some distance before, and the second close to the 
end; upper discocellular short and inwardly-oblique, angled close to the subcostal, 
lower discocellular long, excurved ; upper radial from angle close to the subcostal, 
lower radial from the middle below the end of upper discocellular ; median branches 
at nearly equal distances apart; submedian slightly recurved from the base. Hind- 
wing very broad, obtusely-conical; anterior margin convex, apex round, exterior 
margin convex, anal angle somewhat produced and slightly lobular, abdominal 
margin recurved and convex towards the base; cell long, broad across the middle ; 
first subcostal branch emitted at some distance before end of the cell; discocellular 
very oblique, slightly concave anteriorly, radial from above the middle; the middle 
median emitted at some distance before end of the cell. Body slender; palpi densely 
hairy to the tip, above, and beneath; antenna with a lengthened slender tip. 
Typz.—C. Scanda. 
Hasrts.—The species of Callerebia “ are autumnal insects of weak flopping 
flight, with an irregular pitching action ; frequenting bare grassy slopes [hybrida], 
or else hedges, copses, and fields near woods [Nirmala and Scanda].” (Col. A. M. 
Lang, MS. Notes). In the Western Himalayas they affect lower elevations than 
the species of Paralasa, and are common in the outer ranges at 6000 feet elevation. 
CALLEREBIA ORIXA (Plate 115, fig. 2, 2a, 3 ?). 
Callerebia Ortxa, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1872, p. 555, g. Marshall and de Nicéville, Butt. 
of India, etc. i. p. 245 (1883). Butler, Annals of Nat. Hist. 1885, p. 301. 
Callerebia ophthalmica, Staudinger, Exot. Schmett. p, 227, pl. 81 (1887). 
Imaco.—Male. Upperside dark olivescent umber-brown, vinescent in some 
lights; exterior borders shghtly paler; both wings traversed by a slender dusky- 
brown submarginal line ; cilia with a cinerescent-white inner line. Forewing with a 
large prominent subapical rounded black ocellus, which is bipupilled with bluish- 
white and has a broad bright reddish-ochreous outer ring. Hindwing with a small 
round subanal ocellus with a single pupil. Underside paler, but of a brighter and 
redder-brown on the hindwing. Forewing with the apical border slightly mottled 
with cinerescent strige ; the ocellus as above, the submarginal dusky fascia joining 
