238 MR. F. MOORE ON LEPIDOPTERA [Feb. 21, 



Ypthima indecora, n. sp. (Plate XII. fig. 7.) 



Nearest to Y. inica, Hewits. Upperside brown : fore wing with 

 a darker subbasal oblique shade ; a prominent, bipupilled, subapical 

 ocellus : hind wing with two smaller subanal ocelli. Underside covered 

 with very slender grey strigae ; two very faint brown fasciae crossing 

 middle of both wings, those on the hind wing waved : hind wing with 

 two subapical and three subanal, extremely minute, and indistinct 

 silver- pupilled ocelli. 



Expanse, J If, ? 1§ inch. 



Hab. Kangra district. In coll. Rev. Hocking & F. Moore. 



Ypthima nareda. 



Satyrus nareda, KoUar, Hiigel's Kaschmir, iv. p. 451 (1844). 

 Ypthima nareda, Hewits. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 285, 

 pi. 17. f. 6 (nee f. 7). 



Nymphalin^. 

 DlLIPA morgiana. 



Apatura morgiana, Westw. Doubleday's Gen. D. Lep. p. 305 

 (1850). 



Dilipa morgiana, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E.I. C. i. p. 201, 

 pi. 6 a. f. 5. 



"August. 6000 feet." 



Limenitis trivena. 



Limenitis trivena, Moore, Ent. Monthly Mag. 1864, p. 133. 



Charaxes fabius. 



Papilio fabius, Fabricius, Spec. Ins. ii. p. 12 (1781), cJ . 

 Papilio solon, Fabr. Ent. Syst. iii. 1, p. 69 (1793), $ . 

 " Dharmsala ; July. Taken at sugar." 



EuLEPIS ATHAMAS. 



Papilio athamas, Drury, 111. Exot. Ins. i. pi. 2. f. 4 (1773). 

 Kangra ; Kulu ; 3000 feet. 



EuLEPIS HAMASTA, n. Sp. 



Smaller than E. athamas. Fore wing differs in the medial band 

 being broader in the male, the subapical spot also broader and more 

 regularly quadrate, its upper angle being nearer the apical spot, of 

 which latter there are two in the female, one above the other : hind 

 wing with a more prominent subniarginal series of white spots, the 

 three lower spots being conspicuously larger and lunular in shape, 

 with contiguous greyish outer lunules. 



Expanse 2g to 2| inches. 



Hab. Dharmsala, G200 feet ; March, June. In coll. British 

 Museum. 



" The wildest butterfly that I know. Takes very long flights at 

 a time and returns to the same point. Very shy." " 



