16 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XIV. 



thorax of C. bivitta has a green spot on each side, these females 

 cannot in my opinion belong to that species and may require a new 

 name, if, as 1 suppose, they are not the females of C. disjuncta, — 

 H. J, E. ) 



1328«. C. aurantiaca, Hmpsn. 

 Bhutan, 6700 feet. I took one male at Pasheteng in September 

 attracted to light. ( Walker's description of C. bivitta^ I consider 

 applies better to this species than to what Sir G. Hampson has identified 

 with it, and I believe the name aurantiaca should be sunk as a synonym. 

 The types were in Mr. Saunders' collection from " Hindostan." 

 I have it from the Khasias whence many of Walker's types came. — 

 H. J. E.) 



13286. C. alpina, Hmpsn. 

 Yatung, 10000 feet. This may probably occur at similar altitudes in 

 Sikhim proper and Bhutan. The Chumbi Valley, in which Yatung lies, 

 is situated on the Southern watershed of the Himalayas and possesses a 

 similar fauna to that of N . Sikhim. 



Genus Chrysaeglia, Butl. 

 1325. C. inagnijlca, Wlk. 

 Sikhim, 7000 feet. I do not think this is uncommon in Sikhim, but 

 I have only one specimen in my collection withoat date. ( I have two 

 pairs from Holler's collection. The females are much larger than the 

 males. Mr. Knyvett told me he had taken it at Jor-pokri at about 7000 

 feet on the road to Tongloo. — H. J. E.) 



Genus Agylla, Wlk. 

 1312. A. apicaliSf Moore. 

 Sikhim, 5500 feet. I have only procured two examples at Tukvar. 

 I do not tbink it is separable from A. alhijinis, Wlk. The specimen 

 remaining in my collection has the cilia of the hindwing white from the 

 apex to vein 4. (I have one male and three females from Sikhim, of 

 which two females only have some white on the cilia of the hindwing. 

 A pair of A. alhifinn from Sabathu, N.-W. Himalayas, have much 

 more white, but 1 expect Mr. Dudgeon is right about their being 

 varieties of the same species. — H. J. E.) 



1320. A. divisa, Moore. 

 Sikhim. ( A single specimen from MoUer's collection is exactly like 

 those I have from the Khasias, — H. J. E.) 



