Hesperidm from the Indo-Mcdaymi and African Regions. 2S 



Mabille, but Mabille must have been mistaken in his 

 identification of tvlsi ; I have two pairs of that species 

 identified by de Niceville. Plotz's figures do not at all 

 represent them; his male is uncommonly likede Niceville's 

 figure of Zampa zenon, Journ. Bomb, N. H. Soc, ix (4), p. 

 391, pi. Q, f. 58 (1895); but his female (and they are 

 evidently a pair) resembles nothing with which I am 

 acquainted ; without examining the type specimen it is 

 impossible to say to what genus it belongs. 



Caltoris colaca, 

 Hesperia colaca, Moore, P. Z. S., 1877, p. 594, pi. Iviii, 



f. 7. 

 Parnara cingala, Moore, Lep. Ceylon, i, p. 167, pi. Ixx, 



f. 3a, 3& (1881). 

 Hesperia urcjus, Plotz, Berl. ent. Zeit., xxix, p. 226 (1885), 



pi. 1415. 

 Hesperia saruna, Plotz, 1. c, xlvii, p. 90 (1886), pi. 1429. 



Aru, Java, India (Plotz), both types in coll. Erhardt. 



All over India and Ceylon; recorded also from Bali and 

 from Nias. The spots on the fore-wings above and below 

 are smaller than usual, but I have one from Bombay with 

 these spots quite as small. At the end of the cell there 

 are generally two spots, sometimes only one, and some- 

 times both are obsolescent; in the figures in Plate 1415 

 there is only one, in 1429 both are absent; I have Indian 

 examples like both. 



Caltoris bevani. 



Hesperia hevani, Moore, P. Z. S., 1878, p. 688. 



Hesperia vaika, Plotz, Stett. ent, Zeit., xlvii, p. 96 (1886), 



pi 1414,^. 

 Parnara thy one, Leech, Butt. China, &c., p. 610, pi. xlii, 



f. 4, $ (1894). 



India {Plotz). 



Common all over the East ; I have it from many 

 Indian localities from the north to the south, from the 

 Philippines, N. Guinea, and Borneo. 



CHAPRA, Moore, Lep. Ceylon, i, p. 169 (1881), type 

 mathias, Fabr. 



Chapra agna. 

 Hesperia agna, Moore, P. Z. S., 1865, p. 791. 



