6. Alexis F. (PL VI, fig. 19). 



Fabricius, Sys/. Ent. /. 533, ^^'«- 387 (i 775) Papilio Alexis. 



Butler, Cat. Fabr., pi. 3, //^. i (1878) Hesperia „ 



Moore, Lcp. of Ceylon, p. 161, //. 65, //..?. 2 a, b (1881). Ismene 



Plotz, Stett. E7it. Zcit. 1884, ?. 57, A^o. 21 



De Niceville, Jow-n. As. Soc. of Bengal, 55, 2,/. 378, 



pi. 18, //<-. 8 6, fig. ?, a, b Q (1886) Hasora Coulteri. 



W. J. Depok (95); Tjampea (160); mount Salak (780). 



C. J.? 



E. J. province of Pasourouan (+ 500) (Fruhst.). 



The food of the larva is not known to me. It is light-green and would 

 much resemble the preceding species, but the head will perhaps be orange 

 coloured overgrown with short, white hairs and showing 4 small black spots; 

 the abdominal spots being round. Evidently some confusion crept into m>- 

 notes about this larva and the preceding one, so that both descriptions are 

 perhaps not very accurate. 



7. Mvra Hew. (PL VI, fig. 20 a, b, e). 



Hewitson, E.xot. Butt. IV, Ismene, pi. \, fig. 3 (? (1867). . Ismene Myra. 



PlStz, Stett. Ent. Zcit. 1884, s. 59, No. 29 



Elwes and Edwards, Trans. Zool. Soc. of London 4, 4/, />. 296, 



303 (1897) 



The figure given by Hewitson is anything but accurate. 



W. J. Batavia (3 — 14); Buitenzorg (265); Sindanglaya (1074); Patjet (i 1 14) ; 

 Megamendoung (1450); province of Prajangan (1200— 1500); mount Karang 

 in the province of Bantam. 



C. J.? 



E. J. province of Pasourouan (+ 500) (Fruhst). 



The butterfly flies in the evening on flowers. The larva feeds on the 

 plants, which I was told at Buitenzorg were named kazvoivli (Milletia Sericea 

 W. & A.) and tonba lalar (poxgamia volubilis Z. & M.). It is light 

 green, and reddish with four white dorsal lines, and some white vertical hnes 

 on the sides; a subdorsal row rather large marks round every second ring. 

 The foremost of these patterns are black, the others a deep red; sometimes 

 all the spots are red. The grown up larva also is overgrown with fine silky 

 white hairs. All the marks of the young larva are black; nor is it reddish. 



