NYMPH ALID^. SATYRIN^E. ORINOMA. 173 



This species has as yet only been found in Tenasserim, where two females were taken by 

 Captain C. T. Bingham in the Upper Thouugyeen forests in March and April. It is allied to 

 JV. moorei, Butler. 



The figure is taken from a female specimen in the collection of Major Marshall from 

 Upper Tenasserim, and shows the upper and undersides. 



167. Neope moorei, Butler. 



^.W(7(jm, Butler, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., third series, vol. xix, p. i66, n. 3, pi. iv, fig. 7 (1867), 

 male; idem, id., Cat. Lep. B.M., Satyridte, p. 113, n. 4 (1868); N. goschkevitschii, Menctrie's, var. a, Kirby, 

 Syn. Cat. D.L , p. 42, n. 3 ('1871). 



Habitat : East Indies. 



Expanse: 3-12 inches. 



Description": "Male. Upperside yellow-olivaceous, the nervures ochreous. Fornving 

 with seven elongate oval ochreous spots, the first and second interrupted with a swarthy 

 fasciole, the tliird, fifth and si.xth including large blackish-swarthy spots, and the seventh a 

 small spot. Hindwing with seven submarginal ochreous spots, the first and the seventh 

 minute, from the seventh to the second increasing in length, all including swarthy spots ; a 

 marginal line and the margin itself greyish-swarthy beyond the middle. Body ochreous. 

 Underside pale ochiaceous ; the cell of the forewing and the basal area of the hindwing 

 irregularly variegated with lines and streaks ; a very irregular continuous median band, two 

 marginal lines and the margin itself swarthy. Foreimng with the apex fuscescent ; four submar- 

 ginal spots, the first ocellate, black, banded with yellow and pupilled with white, the second 

 ochraceous, the third and fourth black. Hindwing with seven black ocelli, white pupilled, 

 banded with yellow and again with swarthy, the seventh geminate, the third and fourth small. 

 Body pale ochreous." {^Butler, l. c. in Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist.) 



" This is evidently a local representative oi N. goschkevitschii.'" {Butler, \. c. in Cat. 

 SatyridcB. ) 



We have not seen a specimen of N'. moorei. The " East Indies" is a wide term, and it is 

 possible that so far as this species is concerned it may not include India at all. 



Genus 13.-0I11H0MA, Doubleday. (Plate XIII.) 

 Orlnoma, Doubleday, in Gen. D.L., p. 368 (1851) ; id., Butler, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., third series, 

 vol. xix, p. 50, pi. ii, figs. 4, 4a ("1867), structure. 



" Body moderately robust, clothed, especially at the sides of the thorax, in front and 

 behind, with fine hairs ; wings with longitudinal interrupted pale bars between the nervules, 

 and not ocellated. Head hairy, especially in front, where the hairs form a small tuft. Eyes large, 

 hairy. Antenna: about two-fifths of the length of the forewing, very slender, curved down- 

 wards at the tip, and terminated by a long, gradually formed, but very slender club, the articu- 

 lations scarcely distinct, finely carinated beneath on the inside. Palpi compressed, large, 

 porrected obliquely, reaching nearly to the level of the top of the eyes, and extending forwards 

 nearly to the length of the head, very hairy in front ; terminal joint minute, slender. Thorax 

 oval ; tippets clothed with fulvous hairs ; meta-thorax clothed with longer grey hairs. Abdomen 

 elongated, slender. Forewing elongate, subovate ; costal margin arched ; apical angle 

 rounded ; outer margin entire, about three-fifths of the length of the costal margin, very 

 slightly emarginate in the middle ; anal angle rounded ; inner margin straight in both sexes, of 

 the same length as the outer margin. Costal nerviire swollen at the base, united to the costa a 

 little beyond the middle of its length ; subcostal nervure with its first and second branches free, 

 arising before the extremity of the cell ; the third at nearly half-way between the cell and the 

 apex ; the fourth half-way between the third and the apex, uniting with the costa before reaching 

 the apex, as does also the terminal part of the subcostal nervure, the upper discoidal nervule 

 being extended to the extremity of the rounded apex. Upper disco-cellular very short, oblique, 

 arising a little before the middle of the length of the wing ; middle disco-cellular scarcely longer 

 than the upper, nearly transverse ; lower disco-cellular much elongated and curved, the extre- 

 mity directed outwards, and united with the third branch of the median nervure at about the 

 same distance from its origin as exists between the origin of its first and second branches, thus 



