560 Dr. H. Eltringham on the 
examples taken in woodlands and those from more open 
country, the latter being smaller and having a broader 
white band. 
For the sake of completeness I should mention here a 
form provisionally named wurungensis by Strand (Mitt. 
Zool. Berl. V, p. 287 (1911)), and placed by Aurivillius as 
a form of nysiades (Macrolep., p. 201 (1913)). Strand men- 
tions (/. ¢.) two examples resembling Neave’s conspicua, one 
of which is distinguished from typical conspicua in having 
well-defined white dots in cell on upperside. The remainder 
of the description is quite useless as a means of identification, 
and the author states that should it prove to be a definite 
form he proposes the name wrungensis. In my opinion this 
kind of half-description and provisional nomenclature — 
should not be valid as founding a name of any kind. If 
the example in question has distinct white dots in cell it 
certainly cannot be a form of conspicua. I place it here 
merely because it suggests, though only vaguely, something 
allied to agatha. 
15. Nepris gorpani. Pl. XXI, fig. 3; Pl. XXIV, fig. 14. 
Neave, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., p. 33, pl. 2, f. 1 (and 
text fig.) (1910); Auriv., in Seitz, Macrolep., p. 200, 
pl. 48d (agatha ab.) (1913); (%) Holl., (as agatha) Ent. 
News, pl. 9, f. 2 (1892). 
CutsHt I. (L. Banguelo). Karanca (Kambove). 
Boussa (Kassai R.). ARuwimi1. Nyassa. VICTORIA 
FAL.Ls. 
A detailed description would follow so closely that of agatha that 
it would seem of more use to state as fully as possible the directions 
in which it differs from that species. I have before me a series of 
thirty-six examples. In general appearance the ground-colour is 
browner than agatha. The f.-w. discal band is very complete and 
shows no blackening at the nervules. In practically every case the 
white spot in area 4 is longer than that in area 5, whereas in agatha 
4 is generally shorter than 5. In jordani the white in 6 is so markedly 
shorter than that in 5 that the whole band has a narrowed appearance 
towards the costa, an effect much less apparent in agatha. The 
distal margin of the discal band from nervule 4 to the costa presents 
on the whole a straight or even concave line, whereas in agatha such 
margin is convex. In h.-w. the white of the discal band projects 
outwardly between the nervules, especially in 4 and 5, and the ends 
of such projections are well rounded. In agatha the ends of the 
