the genus Ypthima. AT 
The following four species present so many points of 
divergence from the preceding groups, and from each 
other, that they might reasonably be taken as the types 
of separate groups of equal value to the others. 
60. Ypthima Watsoni. (PI. fe his. 25). 
Ypthima Watson, Moore, Lep. Ind., ii., p. 89, pl. Cxlil., 
figs. 4, 4a. 
Y. philomela, part, Elwes, P.Z.8., 1891, p. 267. 
gS. Upper side: Fore wing pale greyish brown; the pale irro- 
rate ocellar space limited, except on the costa, by a dark line, 
which scarcely reaches the inner margin; a narrow double mar- 
ginal dark line ; ocellus large, subcircular, bipupilled ; no trace of 
a sex-mark. Hind wing pale greyish brown to just beyond the 
middle, where that colour is limited by a dark line, thence to the 
hind margin dirty whitish, closely irrorated with fuscous; a narrow 
irregular submarginal dark band, and a fine double marginal dark 
line; one well-defined unipupillate ocellus near the anal angle, 
frequently with traces of another very minute one below it. Under 
side: Fore wing sordid yellowish grey ; normal striolation fine, 
sparse, and even ; the ocellar space concolorous with the rest of the 
wing, but limited by a yellow-brown line; hind margin narrowly 
yellow-brown. Hind wing concolorous with the fore wing, but the 
striolation is exceedingly fine and sparse; three narrow irregular 
yellow-brown bands, one before and one just beyond the middle, 
the third submarginal and attenuate at each end; ocelli three, 
indicated by silvery punctiform spots, narrowly margined with 
black; hind margin with a fine double grey line. Expanse, 
42 mm. 
@. Similar, but larger and paler. HExpanse, 47 mm. 
Hab. Karen Hills, 4—5000 ft., March, April (Doherty). 
Resembles Marshalli in the colour and pattern of the 
upper side, but has only three ocelli on the hind wing 
below. 
This ig one of the forms which I had previously been 
unable to define by the external characters, though I 
have now better grounds for doing so. Besides two 
males and a female in my own collection, there is a male 
in the British Museum, taken in the Karen Hills in 
April by Dr. Watson. 
