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



20. Mycalesis (Calysisme) perseoides, Moore. 

 The commonest Calysisme in the Upper Chindwin, the dry-season 

 form during March and April, and the rainy-season form from April 

 to June. 



21. Mycalesis (Calysisme)' visala, Moore. 

 Two males of the rainy-season form from- the Upper Ghindwin in 

 June. 



22. Mycalesis (Calysisme) intermedia, Moore. 



Two males of the rainy-season form from 3,500 feet in September. 



This and the two preceding species have only recently been discri- 

 minated by Moore in " Lepidoptera Indica." They appear to be 

 quite distinct and are readily separable from the other species of the 

 subgenus. With reference to the other species of the subgenus 

 detailed by Moore, I have not seen C. rama or C nicobarica, but 

 C. mineus, C. suhdita, and C andamana all appear quite distinct from 

 one another and from the four species recorded above, though I must 

 confess I am unable to recognise any difference between C, mineus 

 and C. polydecia^ the descriptions and figures of both of which as given 

 by Moore apply equally well to specimens from Southern India and 

 from Burma, and as the sexual glands in the male do not difi^er either 

 in colour or size, I do not see how the two species can be dis- 

 criminated ; in his descriptions Moore does not compare the two in 

 any way. 



23. Mycalesis (Calysisme) mineus, Linnseus. 



A single male was taken in the Upper Chindwin in February. This 

 subgenus does not appear to extend into the hills above 3,500 feet. 

 24. Mycalesis (Pachama) suaveolens, "Wood-Mason and de Niceville. 



Two males and one female from 3,500 feet in May and June. 

 25. Mycalesis (Samanta) malsara, Moore. 



Ten specimens of the rainy-season form at 3,500 feet from May to 

 September, and numerous ones of the dry-season form from the Upper 

 Chindwin in March, and from 1,500 to 5,500 feet in March to May : 

 also several from Manipur. I record these specimens as S. malsara^ 

 though many of them are quite inseparable from S. lepcha. The dis- 

 tinguishing point between the two races is the greater breadth of the 

 discal band on the underside in S. malsara ; this character is, however 

 of no value in the Chin Hills, as in both seasonal forms some specimens 



