284 Mr. A. G. Butler on a Collection of 



broad central belt bounded by darker lines, the inner line 

 arched and sinuous on each wing, the outer line irregularly 

 zigzag ; a submarginal blackish line : primaries with whity- 

 brown internal area ; a very minute black ocellus with white 

 pupil and ochreous iris near the apex, and an ocellus similarly 

 coloured, but of about six times the size, on the first median 

 interspace : secondaries with a white-pupilled black ocellus on 

 the first median interspace, followed on the second interspace 

 by a much smaller (almost punctiforra) ocellus, and on the 

 subcostal interspaces by three white dots. Expanse of wings 

 1 inch 10 lines. 



($ . Caught in the forest, Fianarantsoa. 



This species seems to be allied to " Erebia " passandava 

 of Ward ; but in tlie colouring of the upper surface and position 

 of the ocelli it differs from that butterfly. 



Ypthima, Westwood. 



3. Ypthima Batesii. 



Ypthima Batesii, Felder, Reise der Nov. Lep. iii. tab. C8. figs. 10, 11 

 (18G7). 



(^ . Found only in the forest, Fianarantsoa. 



Ntmpsazinje, Bates. 

 Heteropsis, Westwood. 



4. Heteropsis drepana. 



c? . Heteropsis drepana, Doubleday and Ilewitson, Gen. Diurn. Lepid. 

 pi. 03. fig. 5 (1850) ; $ , Ilewitson, Ent. Mo. Mag. xi. p. 227 (1875). 



One female. Ankafana, Betsileo. 



This singular species, with its acuminate primaries and 

 rounded secondaries, I have hitherto only known from the 

 figure of the male. To my mind it has been wrongly located 

 in the Satyrin^e ; it seems to find a natural position near 

 Coenophlehia and Siderone^ notwithstanding its more slender 

 antennae and the general coloration of the male. The colouring 

 of the female is quite as near to that of Tenaris as to that of 

 any Satyrid, and the leaf-like under surface agrees with that 

 of the group to which I propose to transfer it. 



CORYPH^OLA, n. gen. 



Allied to Paphia^ Kallima^ and Doleschallia ; the form of 

 the wings in the male like Kallima, that of the female more 

 like Doleschallia owing to the apex being obliquely truncate ; 

 the secondaries of both sexes terminating in a long tail con- 

 tinuous with the abdominal margin j antennge more abruptly 



