486 MR. F. MOORE ON DIURNAL LEPIDOPTERA [June 13, 
a submarginal band of white; hind margin pale, bordered with dark 
brown on its inner edge. Posterior wings:bright orange-ochreous, 
crossed before the middle by a cream-coloured band bordered with 
deep brown; basal half to just below the cell violaceous, crossed 
before the middle of the cell by an orange band extending along the 
front margin to the cream-coloured transverse band, and from the 
front margin to the median nervure ; a second orange band beyond 
it, and touching the cream-coloured band, bounded on both sides by 
the cell ; a pale blue band extending from just above the anal angle 
along the outer edge of the central band to the first median nervule, 
where it becomes suffused with dusky, and continues up to the an- 
terior margin; hind margin edged with a lunular brown band enclo- 
sing a narrow, grey, lunular, submarginal band, and margined within 
by a broad blue-grey band, having a narrow, interrupted, irregular 
black line on its inner edge. 
Hab. California. 
Closely allied to Heterochroa bredowii, Hiibner (South America 
and West Indies); but differs from it above in having the lowest 
cream-coloured spots of the fore wing very small, so as to separate 
the band from that of the lower wing. In the hind wing it has a 
simple orange lunule at the anal angle, instead of a double one. 
On the underside orange takes the place of rich reddish brown, 
blue of grey ; the orange subapical blotch only extends along the 
outer margin to the middle of the wing, and does not terminate below 
in two lunules. The basal upper half of the hind wing is crossed 
by an additional short orange band; the wings are much more rounded 
than those of H. bredowii, and are not produced at the end of the 
second median nervule. 
6. List or DiurNAL LEPIDOPTERA COLLECTED BY Capt. A. M.. 
Lane 1n THE N.W. Himatayas. By Frepertc Moore. 
(Plates XXX., XXXI.) 
The following list comprises an enumeration of the Rhopalocerous 
Lepidoptera recently collected by..Capt. Lang, together with his 
notes as to the particular locality, &c., of the several species. 
PAPILIONIDA. 
1. Papriiio pissimiLis, Linn. 
The only place in which I have seen this species is Subbathoo, 
altitude 4000 feet, in June, frequenting a grassy undulating down, 
flying rapidly in long circuits, pitching occasionally on grassy knolls, 
and generally returning by the same route to the same spot after a 
flight. 
2. PariLio GOvINDRA, Moore. 
Papilio agestor, Kollar in Hiigel’s Kaschmir, pl. 3. f. 1, 2 (nec 
Gray). 
