146 Mr. A. G, Butler on Lepidoptera 



vague resemblance to some of the species of Jamides {J. jylato, 

 for instance) ; it is not quite so brilliantly coloured, though 

 brighter than any other Catochrysojjs. 



4:'2. Everes dipora. 



Lycana dipora, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1865, p. 506. n. 108, pi. xxxi. 

 fig. 8. 



J, Carapbellpore, Ist June; (dwarfed), Kala Pani, 2nd 

 October, 1886. 



A rare species in collections ; yet Major Yerbury says that 

 it is " not uncommon at Campbellpore from July ; common 

 at Thundiani, August and September ; a pair only taken at 

 Murree in August 1885." The two males now sent are both 

 imperfect, and we only have three others in the Museum 

 series. 



43. Azanus zena. 



Lyc(ena zena, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc, 1865, p. 505. n. 107, pi. xxxi. 

 tig. 9. 



^ . Hassan Abdal, 13th November; ^ ? . Campbellpore, 

 17th and 21st November, 1886. 



" Common on babul- bushes at Campbellpore and Hassan 

 Abdal in the cold weather." — J. W. Y. 



44. Azanus uranus. 



Azanus uranus, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1886, p. 366. n. 40, pi. xxxv. 

 tig.l. 



V . Campbellpore, 29th October and 2 1st November, 1885 ; 

 ^. 8th June, 1886 ; Chitta Pahar, Lumbahdoon, 2000 feet, 

 28th November, 1885. 



" Common on babul-bushes near Campbellpore in No- 

 vember 1885."— J. W. Y. 



It appears from Major Yerbury's notes that this is the A. 

 id)aJdus of De Nic^ville ; it is, however, perfectly distinct 

 from the true A. uhaldus. It is true that both A. uranus and 

 A. uhaldus agree in the uniform lilac colouring of the upper 

 surface in the males ; but the pattern of the under surface 

 and the colouring of the female on both surfaces in A. uhaldus 

 much more nearly agree with A. zena ; indeed, though the 

 males oi A. zena and A. uhaldus are as unlike and as easy to 

 separate as any two species of Lyccena^ the females may 

 readily be confounded. The female oi A. uranus is either pale 

 copper-brown suffused with lilac, or lilac bordered with copper- 

 brown, on the upper surface ; on the under surface it only 

 differs from the male in having the black spots of the secon- 



