274 Mr. J. C. Moulton on 
recorded elsewhere. They are divided into seven sub- 
families thus :— 
3s g 3 & 5 2 = 
Total recorded from iy, 
Borneo . 33 | 76) 2 | 15 | 70 | 105 | = 302 
Confined to Borneo. | 18 | 27 | — | — te N\etSaieete sl — LES 
296b. Lycaenopsis (Notarthrinus) boulti, Chpmn. 
Notarthrinus boulti, Chpmn., Ent. Mo. Mag., 
p. 103, pl. vi, figs. 1-5 (1912). 
Described from two males captured on Mt. Kling- 
kang, alt. 2,500 ft., October 1911, and one female 
taken near Limbang, June 1911; both localities 
being in Sarawak, although some 400 miles apart. 
These are the only three examples yet known; the 
types (male and female) are in the British Museum, 
the third specimen (male) is in the Sarawak Museum. 
Dr. Chapman places the species provisionally under 
Notarthrinus, and suggests that when more is known 
of it a new genus will probably be necessary. 
316. Lycaenopsis moultoni, Chpmn. (Plate X, figs. 8 and 9). 
This species, originally described from males 
only, has since been taken im cop. with a species 
described by me later as Lycaenopsis oskewa; this 
last name therefore gives way before that of Dr. 
Chapman, and the following synonymy becomes 
necessary :— 
Lycaenopsis moultoni, Chpmn., Trans. Ent. Soc. 
Lond., p. 184, pl. xxviii, figs. 5, 6, 7 (1911). 
Lycaenopsis (Neopithecops) oskewa, Moulton, 
Journ. Str. Br., Roy. Asiat. Soc., No. 60, p. 90 (1911).* 
* Two females representing seasonal forms (one with large 
iridescent discal patch and the other with this patch reduced) were 
unfortunately described as female and male. 
