502 MR. F. MOORE ON DIURNAL LEPIDOPTERA [June 13, 
“The ‘ meadow-brown’ of the meadows of Rogi and Cheeni in 
Kunawur. It is limited in its range, not appearing to the westward, 
nor venturing further north and east into the drier lands affected by 
the other two Satyri (Epinephile davendra and Lasiommata bal- 
diva).” 
94. EpINEPHILE DAVENDRA, n. sp. (Pl. XXX. fig. 7.) 
Male greyish brown ; fore wing with the space within the dis- 
coidal cell to near the apex and then descending to near the posterior 
margin ferruginous, this colour being distinctly defined ; within it is 
a single black apical spot. Underside with the costal and exterior 
margins of fore wing greyish brown, the inner space pale ferruginous, 
the apical ocellus with white pupil and brown-bordered yellow iride, 
which latter, however, does not encircle the spot, being cut off as it 
were posteriorly ; a short streak before the ocellus, and a submarginal 
line, dark brown. Hind wing grey, with delicate minute brown 
striee ; a discal and a submarginal line dark brown, the former irre- 
gularly across the disk from middle of anterior to posterior margin, 
both bordered outwardly with pale white, and having a single ante- 
rior and two posterior black ocelli, each with a yellow brown-bor- 
dered iride, and the anterior with a white pupil. 
Female pale grey ; the ferruginous space in the fore wing ill 
defined; and with a second black spot situated near the posterior 
angle. Underside as in male, but with the lower black spot on 
fore wing as above, the anterior ocellus on the hind wing being mi- 
nute or nearly obsolete. 
Expanse 1? inch. 
Hab. Spiti and Tibet. 
Allied to #. eudora. 
This is a Tibetan and Spiti insect, affecting the dry hot summer 
of the rainless region of the Chinese frontier. On a hot June or 
July day, these sober insects may be seen flitting about the stony 
hill-sides, 9000 to 12,000 feet altitude—hill-sides where the Gra- 
minaceze are scarce and brown, and grey Artemisia and Ephedra 
form the principal vegetation. They do not occur in the moister 
and more wooded regions of the Himalayas ; but first appear on the 
confines of Upper Kunawur, in Spiti, and the Chinese provinces of 
Gughe (? Cughe) and Nari Khorsum (Tibet). 
95. YpHTHIMA SAKRA, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i, 
p- 236. 
Hab. Simla Hills and Lower Kunawur. 
96. YPHTHIMA, sp.? 
The species of Yphthima are all Himalayan insects of very feeble 
flight, frequenting banks, hedges, and grassy land. 
97. LisyTHEA MYRRHA, Godt, (Gray’s Lep. Ins. Nepal, pl. 12. 
f. 4). 
Not wncommon in Himalayan woods. 
