ELYMNIIN 4. 155 
Adamson obtained a female at ‘Tavoy, in August,’ which was kindly lent for 
examination, and is referred to in his ‘ List of Burmese Butterflies, p. 10,’’’ under the 
name of Hlym. Mimus. 
This is nearest allied to the Bornean lym. Dara, Distant (Ann. Nat. Hist. 
1887, p. 50), the female of Dadalion differing, on the upperside, from the same sex 
of Dara, in the white band on the forewing being straighter and broader in its 
oblique-course from the costa to posterior angle ; the band on the hindwing is also 
broader. On the underside, Deedalion has both bands as on upperside, and both are 
entirely free from strige. 
Typo-Manayan allied species of Erymyias.—H. Protogenia (Cramer, Pap. Exot. 
u. pl. 189, figs. F, G, 2 5 id. i. pl. 25, figs. A, B, ¢ (1777). Horsfield, Catal. Lep. 
K. I. C. pl. 3, fig. 24; pl. 8, fig. 8 (1829). Syn. E. Jynx, Hiibn. Zutrage Exot. 
Schmett. figs. 37, 38, d (1818). Both sexes smaller than in the allied Indian species 
(undularis). In the male the curved series of blue spots on forewing above are 
generally smaller and longitudinally narrow, the underside more uniformly covered 
throughout with strigze. Female with much broader dark-brown borders to the 
forewing, the dark marginal band on the hindwing being obsolesvent posteriorly and 
with much smaller white spots. Expanse, ¢ 2,% to 2;%, ? 2,% to 8 inches. This 
is nearer to the Burmese species (tinctoria) than to the Indian (wndularis), both in 
size and in the broader dark-brown borders of the upperside of the female. The Javan 
female has the ochreous colour on both wings more intense and dusky than in either 
tinctoria or undularis, coinciding, in this intensity of colour, with that occurring in the 
Javan Huploeine Salatura intensa, of which the female of E. Protogenia is a mimic. 
Habitat. Java.—H. discrepans, Distant, Rhop. Malayana, p. 60, pl. vi. figs. 2, 38, ¢ ? 
(1882). Habitat. Malay Peninsula; Penang.—H. leucocyma (Godart, Enc. Méth. 
ix. p. 326 (1819). Described by Godart as having “absolutely the appearance and 
shape of ‘undularis,’ the upperside blackish-brown, with a band of pale blue-violet 
spots on the border of forewing, and a row of ashy points on the border of hind- 
wing. Underside deep brown, with a multitude of small greyish waves, more 
powdered on the hindwing than on the forewing.” Habitat. Java.—H. nigrescens. 
Butler, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 520, pl. 42, fig. 1. Distant, Rhop. Malay. p. 61, pl. 6, fic. 
1, %?,pl. 9, fig. 1, ? (1882). Habitat. Malay Peninsula; Billiton; Borneo; 
Formosa.—H. Hecate. Butler, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 520, pl. 42, fig. 2. Habitat. 
Labuan, Borneo.—F. congruens, Semper, Reisen Philippen, Lep. i. p. 61, pl. xi. figs. 
8, 9,10, d2 (1886). Habitat. Mindanao.—f. Hainana, Moore, P. Z. S. 1878 

p- 696. Habitat. Hainan; Formosa.—l. Panthera (Fabricius, Mant. Ins. p. 39 
(1787) ; Butler, Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 38, pl. 2, fig. 7. Syn. M. Dusara, Hors- 
field, Catal. Lep. Mus. H. I. C. pl. 5, fig. 7 (1829). Habitat. Java.—H. lutescens, 
Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 404, pl. 9, fig. 10. Distant, Rhop. Malay. p. 62, 
x 

