Hesi^eridie from the Indo-Malayan and African Regions. 3 



Casyapa kallima. pi. I, fig. 1. 



Casyapa kallima, Swinhoe, Ann. Mag. N. H. (7 , xx, p. 

 430, 1907. 



Milne Bay, N. Guinea, types in B. M. Allied to C. 

 callixenus. Hew., from Dorey. 



SATAEUPA, Moore, P. Z. S., 1865, p. 780, type goimla, 

 Moore. 



Satarupa sambara. 



Goniloha sambara, Moore, Cat. Lep. E. I. C, i, p. 246 (1857). 

 Satarupa sambara, Elwes and Edwards, Trans. Zool. Soc, 



xiv (4), p. 134 (1897). 

 Tagiades cosima, Plotz, J. B. Nass. Ver., xxxvii, p. 54 (1884), 



pi. 1584. 



N. India {Plotz) (Weymer 493 in plate). 



Satarupa affinis. 



Satarupa ajffi^iis, Druce, P. Z. S., 1873, p. 360, pi. xxxiii, 



f. 9. 

 Tagiades niphates, Weymer, Stett. ent. Zeit., xlvii, pi. i, 



f. 5 (1886). 

 Tagiades niphates, Weymer, I.e., xlviii, p. 15 (1887). 



TyjJe, Borneo in mus. Godman. Weymer's type came 

 from Padang, Sumatra; I have it also from the same 

 locality. 



Satarupa kirmana. 



Tagiades Icirmana, Plotz, Berl. ent. Zeit., xxix, p. 231 



(1885), pi. 1585. 

 Satarupa a^nis, var. cognata. Distant, Rhop, Mai., p. 385, 



pi. xxiv, f. 17 (1886). 



Malacca {Plotz), type in coll. Erhardt. 



Distant's type came from the Malay Peninsula, and he 

 also records it from Perak and Malacca ; he says, " this 

 may probably prove to be a distinct species," and I believe 

 it is; it is certainly not affinis the type of which came 

 from Borneo. I have it from Sumatra, from which it has 

 also been recorded by de Niceville, and Pelpers records it 

 from Java. 



