638 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. X. 



Sumatra. Moore does not mention its occurrence in either of 

 the above-named islands, though he records an allied species, 

 C. inconspicua, Moore, from Sumatra. The violet-grey apical patch 

 of C. godartii is excessively variable, and in some specimens is barely 

 traceable ; when it is altogether absent, the specimen becomes 

 C. layardii. 



9. EuPLCEA (Penoa) deione, Westwood. 

 Excessively common in the Upper Chindwin in April and May, but 

 not noticed in the hills ; also from Manipur. This species has a sexual 

 patch of modified scales on the upperside of the hindwing in the male 

 precisely similar to, but less developed than, the corresponding patch 

 found in T. linncei ; in P. limborgii, the southern race of F. deione, this 

 patch is more inconspicuous. 



10. EuPLCEA (Trepsichrois) linh^i, Moore. 

 Common in the Upper Chindwin and throughout the hills ; also 

 from Manipur. This appears to be the only Euplcaa that is found 

 above 5,000 feet. 



11. EuPL(EA (Danisepa) diocletianus, Fabricius. 

 A single male from the Upper Chindwin in May. In his 

 " Lepidoptera Indica " Moore has sunk D. diocletianus as a synonym 

 of D. rhadamant/ius, though the former name has priority^ and 

 has given the name D. ramsayi to the race from the Eastern 

 Himalayas ; however, after examining the long series of this subgenus 

 iij he British Museum, I do not think this name should stand even as 

 thj,t of a local race, as though Eastern Himalayan specimens show, as a 

 rule, more white on both wings than those from further south, yet 

 some southern specimens exhibit quite as much white as other northern 

 ones, and a perfectly complete gradation can be traced from one 

 extreme to the other. 



12. EuPLCEA (Paderama) klugii, Moore. 

 Nineteen males and eleven females from the Upper Chindwin in 

 April and May. This species appeared in the utmost profusion at the 

 end of April : the specimens caught include typical Idugiij grantii, 

 dharma, augusta and imperialis, among them being a male of impe- 

 rialis taken in coiiH with a female of hlugii, the latter agreeing 

 exactly with the figure (of female Idugii) in Moore's " Lepidoptera 

 Ii\dica " which, in wauling the marginal spots on the forewing. 



