372 MR. A. G. BUTLER ON {June 29, 
and probably represent the 7. esiope of De Nicéville. Major Yerbury 
says of it, “ Terias rotundularis not uncommon at Murree and along 
the hills to Thundiani in September. 7. e@siope apud Swinhoe.” 
I think there must be a slight error in the above note, for 
Col. Swinhoe knows 7. purreea quite well; at the same time he may 
have labelled the insect in haste. TZ. e@siope is not known from 
India. 
65. TERIAS HECABE. 
Papilio hecabe, Linneus, Mus. Lud. Ulr. p. 249 (1764). 
2 , between Abbottabad and Kala Pani, 25th September, 1885. 
With this is a male, taken at Bugnoter on the 20th September, 
and which I think must be a very abnormal specimen of the same 
species. It wants the black border, and therefore, on the upper 
surface, resembles 7. excavata; certainly, with only one example 
before me, I do not feel justified in separating it. 
66. TeRIAS EXCAVATA. 
Terias excavata, Moore, P. Z.S. 1882, p. 252. 
3, Campbellpore, 9th November; 92, Chuttar, 9th October, 
1885. 
This species was mixed up with 7. purreea and T. fimbriata. 
67. TeERIAS VAGANS. 
Terias vagans, Wallace, P. Z.S. 1866, p. 357. n. 10. 
2, Chuttar, 9th October, 1885. 
We previously only possessed males of this species; it has been 
incorrectly named 7’. leta for Major Yerbury; he says that it is 
rare, two specimens having been taken at Chuttar on the Murree 
and Rawal Pindee road. Terias leta is a species in which the 
apical area of the primaries and whole of secondaries on the under 
surface are of a bright rusty-reddish colour ; in the male of 7’. vagens 
they are lemon-yellow, and in the female of a sericeous creamy- 
whitish tiut; in 7. jegeri they are flesh-tinted in both sexes. 
68. TERACOLUS PROTRACTUS. 
Teracolus protractus, Butler, P. Z.S. 1876, p. 137, n. 37. 
6 2, Chittar Pahar, Lumbahdun, 2000 feet; 28th November, 
1885. 
The specimens of this species are not perfectly typical, the 
colouring of the under surface being of a nearly yellow tint instead 
of flesh-pink ; the third black spot of the primaries, in the male 
specimens, is expanded so as to reach the inner margin, as in the form 
from Beloochistan and Kutch ; but the female has three isolated spots 
as in the type form. 
“A single specimen, Campbellpore, 29th June, 1885; found 
commonly in the Chittar Pahar near Lumbahdun, Kala Dilli, &e., at 
the end of November and beginning of December.”—J. W. Y. 
