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



1288. C. Candida, Feld. 



Sikhim, Yiitiing, 10,000 feet. Rather scarce, 1 think. I Imvo one 

 specimen from the latter locality. (Knyvett and Mdller both got this 

 at about 7,000 feet, but I do not know the exact locality. — H. J. E.) 

 1290. C. puer, Elwes. 



Sikhim and Bhutan. I have only one female from the latter locality, 

 taken in June. (I took one male of this at Darjeeling at light in 

 July 1886, and have others from the Khasias, Nagas and Mauipur. — 

 H. J. E.) 



1295. C. detritaj Wlk. 



Sikhim and Bhutan, 5,000 — 7,000 feet. Occurs commonly in August 

 at Labah, where many may be taken settled on the wet mossy rocks 

 durino- the day. It is also common in the Kangra Valley, Punjab. 

 (My specimens are marked April and October, but I never took it my- 

 self.—^. J. E.) 



1296. C. belissima, Moore. 



Sikhim, 6,800 feet up. Rare in May and June. I have two females 

 onlv in my collection. (A rare species in Sikhim, whence I have two 

 males only. — H. J. E.) 



1284a. C. dudgeoni, Hmpsn. 



Sikhim, 1,800 feet; Bhutan, 2,500 feet. I have one male and seven 

 females in my collection, taken at light in May, July, August and 

 September. The male has no costal fold or a very minute one. The 

 hindwino'S and lines on the forewings are pale pink. (This seems 

 commoner in the Khasias than in Sikhim. — H. J. E.) 

 1298. C. coccinea, Moore. 



Sikhim, 1,000 — 3,000 feet. The males of this species vary greatly in 

 colour. My darkest specimen is scarlet with a sub-basal orange patch 

 and the three black spots surrounded with orange. My palest male 

 has the sub-basal patch white, a white patch round the black spots, nar- 

 rowino- towards the inner margin, where it becomes yellowish, and a 

 broad white border to the black post-medial line exteriorly. The 

 females have only two black spots, and were formerly thought by me 

 to be that sex of C. bianca, Wlk. I have reared both sexes of this 

 species from the larvjc. The cocoon is formed of the long hairs of the 

 larva, joined together in a regularly constructed net, and the piipa is 

 suspended within it by a few transverse webs. 



