N YMPH ALI D^ . -NYMPH ALIN.E . 



EUTHALIA AND TANAECIA. I. 



EUTHALIA, Hiibn. 

 I.— EUTHALIA WHITEHEAD!. i . Figs. 1, 2. ? . Fig. 3. 



Enthalia Whitchcadi, Henley Grose Smith, " Anuals and Magazine of 

 Natural History," ser. 6, vol. 3, p, 313 (April, 1889). 



Exp. i 3^; 9 3| inches. 



Male. " Upperside. Anterior wings dark bro\\n, the costal margin, apex, 

 and a rather broad onter marginal space tinged with olivaceoiis-green, slightly 

 iridescent, especially towards the outer angle ; three dark brown bars across the 

 cell, a small oblong white spot between the basal and middle bar on the sub- 

 costal nervure, a narrow, oblong, slightly curved, greyish-white spot immediately 

 beyond the third bar, a fourth bar on the discocellular nervule, and a fifth 

 beyond, the space between the fourth and fifth slightly iridescent olive-green ; 

 two rows of three white spots each bej'ond, converging above the upper median 

 nervule ; near the costal margin, between the rows, is one white spot ; in the 

 disk, on each side of the lowest median nervule, is a curved, rather narrow, 

 indistinct, whitish-brown marking. 



" Posterior wings : basal three-fourths dark brown, outer fourth iridescent 

 dark olivaceous-green, in the middle of which is a row of seven black conical 

 spots, the anal spot double, the three upper spots edged externally with three 

 carmine spots ; three larger carmine spots towards the middle, the uppermost 

 below the costal nervure, the other two below the first and second subcostal 

 nervules ; an indistinct small red spot near the anal angle. 



" Underside. Both wings paler and greener than above. Anterior wings 

 with the bars across and beyond the cell as above, the space between the second 

 and third and fourth and fifth bars carmine, the white spots as above ; two 

 gi'ejdsh-white patches, edged internally with brownish-black, on each side of the 

 lowest median nervule ; a rather broad whitish-green space on the outer margin, 

 lightest towards the outer angle, becoming obsolete towards the apex, and 

 edged internally with brownish-black. 



VOL. I., OCTOBER, 1889. ' A A 



