160 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XIIT 
much larger, extending slightly into the cell, thereby reducing the 
extent of the translucent markings, and there are traces of a submar- 
ginal series of dots. 
Hitherto there has been only one known species in the genus 
Inntorata of Moore, the Z. menadensis, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soe., 
Lond., 1883, p. 229, from Menado in South Celebes, with the 
description of which JD. kuekenthali did not appear to agree, so I 
sent the drawing here reproduced to Professor Edward B. Poulton, 
F. R. 8., who has compared it with the unique type of L. menadensis 
in the Hope Museum at Oxford, and has very kindly sent me the 
following note regarding it :—“ Upperside, both wings have the pale 
markings far paler in D, kuekenthali than in D. menadensis, in the latter 
they are buff, even deep buff colour, and the pale markings on the 
inner part are much more developed and continuous, they are broken 
up by dark bars along the veins, and the subapical spots of the 
forewing are separated from the rest of the buff colour by a wide 
band of the dark ground-colour ; moreover, the outer row of marginal 
spots on both wings are absent in the former, but are very distinct 
and numerous in the latter. The discoidal cell of the forewing 
in D. menadensis is almost all dark, with only faint linear traces of 
buff; in D. kuekenthali the cell is about equally divided between 
pale yellowish-green and black.” I may note that D. menadensis 
has been described by the Hon. Walter Rothschild in Iris, vol. y, 
p. 480, pl. iv, fig. 8, male (1892), from Southern Celebes, as 
Chlorochropsis doherty. 
Professor J. O. Westwood in Trans. Hnt. Soc. Lond., 1888, p. 471, 
pn. 19, refers to a Danais (Ravadeba) luciptena, Butler, from Talisse and 
Kalelonda, small islands lying off the coast of Northern Celebes, and 
the Hon. Walter Rothschild in Iris, vol, v, p. 431 (1892), refers to 
Ravadebra [sic] luciplena, Butler, from Southern Celebes. Herr 
H. Fruhstorfer in Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., vol. xliv, p. 78 (1899), also 
refers to Parantica cleona luciplena, Butler, from North and South 
Celebes. Iam unable to trace this species (spelt in two ways by the 
authors cited), but as Ravadeba has “Two ‘sexual marks’ or scent- 
producing organs on the hindwing,” while Lintorata has only one 
placed on the submedian nervure, it is unlikely that the species 
described above is the same. The name Juetptena or luciptena may he 
