NOTES ON INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 769 



(113) Tagiades deaibata, Dist. Swinhoe calls this ^;fe>7a, Hew., and 

 FrahstoiieT pteria dealbata : the type of ^;fe?'m came from the Phillippines. 



(114) Tagiades pralaya, M. Fruhstorfer treats this as a race of tricho- 

 neura, Fd. 



(115) Satarupa. Swinhoe places all, except ^ojjaZft, M., and the sambara 

 group in Daimio. 



(116) Satarupa (Daimio) milliana. Swinhoe describes this as a new species 

 from the Shan States and Pegu : it is apparently very closely allied to 

 bhagava, M., there are numerous spots and the two spots on the costa of 

 the hindwing and the four lower spots on the forewing are very 

 prominent. 



(117) Satarupa sambara, Wl. Swinhoe places (io^e?•<^/^\ Wat., as a synonym. 

 He states that affinis, Druce=mr cognata, Dist., does not occur in India and 

 names the Indian form hinnana. 



(118) Sarangesa dasahara. M. Swinhoe describes as a new species 

 davidsoni from Mahableshwar and Kanara : smaller than dasahara, paler, 

 cilia white not dark, hyaline spots on both sides more prominent. 



(119) Sarangesa albicilia, iVI. Swinhoe describes as a new species Tiamf- 

 soni from the Nilgiris, closely allied to albicilia, but differing somewhat 

 above. 



(120) Carcharodus. Swinhoe gives alcece, Esp., from Ohitral : sioinhoei, 

 Wat., from Baluchistan, Ohitral and the N. W. Himalayas ; dravira, M., 

 from Baluchistan, Afghanistan and the N. W. Himalayas. 



(121) Hesperia. In this genus Swinhoe only places casTimirensis, M. 

 In Spialia, Nov., he puts galba, Fab., zebra. But., geron, Wat., and sao, Berg., 

 the latter is what I have recorded as orbifer. Hub. In Pyrgus he places 

 poggei, 'Led.=standinge7-i, Freyer, recording it from Baluchistan and Ohitral, 

 poggei does not, I think, occur in Ohitral and the specimens I recorded 

 from there as standingeri turned out to be Carcharodus altheoe, Hub. 



(122) Sancus pulligo, iVlab. The type came from the Malay Peninsula 

 and the Indian race should be called subfasciatus, M. 



(123) Astictopterus henrici, Holland. The typical Chinese form is darker 

 than the Indian race, which should be called kada, Swin. 



(124) Suastus gremius, Fab. Swinhoe treats subgrisea, M., as a separate 

 species from Ceylon, where it flies with gremius. 



(125) Taractrocera archias, Fd. The type came from Aboina ; Swinhoe 

 describes the Indian form as a new species under the name quinta. 



(126) Taractrocera ziclea, Plotz, The type came from the Phillippines 

 and Fruhstorfer has named the Indian race samadha. 



(127) Ampittia maro, Fab. Swinhoe gives this under the older name 

 diosGoroides, Fab. 



(128) Aeromachus. In this genus Swinhoe places stigmata, M., and du- 

 bius, El. and Ed.; discreta, Plotz., he regards as a synonym of stigmata. 

 In Machacus, Nov., jhora, DeN., kali, DeN., and indistincta, M.; obsoleta, M., 

 he puts as a synonym of indistincta. 



(129) Pedestes sala, Hew. Swinhoe put sala as a synonym of Suastus 

 aditus, M., and calls this insect submaculata, Stdg., placing maculicornis and 



fuscicornis. El. and Ed., as synonyms of it. See my note on this species in 

 my "List". 



(130) Zographetus ogygia, Hew. Swinhoe considers flavipennis, DeN., to 

 be a separate species as there is a prominent spot at the end of the cell. 



(131) Scobura phiditia, Hew. This apparently does not occur in India. 



(132) Erionota thrax acroleuca, W. M. and DeN. Swinhoe gives acroleuca 

 as a distinct species from Sikkim, Assam, South India, the Andamans and 

 Nicobars. 



(133) Erionota batara, Kl. Swinhoe gives this as attina, M. 



