768 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HIST. SOCIETY, Vol. XXII. 



(99) Capila zennara, Wl. Swinhoe places this in Pisola. 



(100) Celaenorrhinus clitus, Leech. The Chinese form has dark antennas, 

 while the Indian form has them white in front and should be known as 

 aspersa, DeN. 



(101) Celaenorrhinus pyrrha, DeN. Swinhoe keeps patula and plagifeva, 

 DeN., separate, and as far as I can judge from DeNiceville's types 

 quite rightly. The antennse are white in front in the male of sumitra, 

 M., and in both sexes of patula ; they are dark in front in pyrrha 

 and plagifera, the latter being a larger insect with larger spots on the 

 hindwing. 



(102) Celaenorrhinus munda, M. Swinhoe gives this as a synonym of 

 leucocera, KolL, but I think it is quite distinct. He kee-ps j^utr a, M., from 

 N. E. India and Burma separate from leucocera: with all the spots much 

 reduced. I have failed to recognize two forms from this part of India, 

 but specimens from Southern India certainly have the markings reduced ; 

 the type oi putra came from Bengal and perhaps this name might be 

 applied to the race from districts South of the Himalayas. 



(103) Celaenorrhinus fusca, Hamp. Swinhoe says that the correct name 

 for this is area, Plotz. 



(104) Celaenorrhinus asmara, But. The type came from Malacca : accord- 

 ing to Fruhstorfer the Assam race should be called consertus, DeN., and the 

 Burmese race cacus, DeN. 



(105) Coiadenia indrani, Wl. The race tissa, M., with the cilia on the 

 hindwing unchequered, is confined to Ceylon. Specimens from the 

 Himalayas are always paler than Central and South Indian ones, but 

 perhaps there is no need to differentiate between them. Specimens from 

 Burma, however, are golden yellow on the hindwing above and have been 

 called ujjosathra, Fruh. Swinhoe states that this name is only applicable to 

 the dry season form of indrani. 



(106) Coiadenia dan, Fab. The type is from South India and Swinhoe 

 records it from Burma as well. Fruhstorfer calls the Burmese race dan 

 dhyana. From the Himalayas Swinhoe gives fatih, KolL, as a separate 

 species ; Fruhstorfer calls this dan fatih. Fatih is said to differ from dan 

 in being bigger and brighter, with much larger hyaline spots ; the spot in 

 1 on the fore wing is hyaline, while the spot in the cell is large and single 

 not small and double. 



(107) Coiadenia hamiltonii, DeN. Swinhoe places this in the genus 

 Gerosis, Mabille . 



(108) Tapena thwaitesi, Wl. Swinhoe places minuscula and hampsoni, El. 

 and Ed., as synonyms, as the only difference is in the genitalia. 



(109) Caprona. Swinhoe calls this Abaratha: he puts saraya, Doh., as 

 a separate species from Kumaon, South India and the Punjab. 



(110) Tagiades helferi ravi, Wl. Swinhoe keeps AeZ/ej^', Fd., as a separate 

 species. The correct name for the continental form is atticus, Fab., khasi- 

 ana, M., and hhasiana ravina, Fruh. Helferi is certainly conspecific and 

 should be called atticus helferi. 



(111) Tagiades alica, Wl., etc. Swinhoe restricts alica to the Andamans, 

 the Burmese form he calls meetana, M., the Ceylon form distans, M, and 

 the South Indian form obscurus, Mab. 



(112) Tagiades atticus, Fab. Aurivillius has discovered that this name 

 should be applied to the butterfly hitherto known as ravi, M.; litigiosa, 

 Moschler, is the oldest name for what has been known as atticus. Swinhoe 

 keeps separate menaka, M.^t^wZ^wwa, Plotz, from Kashmir to Upper Burma ; 

 it has 8, not 10, spots on the forewing and a prominent black spot on the 

 white area of the hindwing. Fruhstorfer calls the South Indian and 

 Ceylon race menaka vujuna. 



