G48 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol X, 



45. Ypthima huebnerii, Kirby. 

 The dry-season form was common in the Upper Chindwin in March 

 and April, and the rainy-season form in June. I also obtained a 

 single specimen which appears to belong to the dry-season form of this 

 species at 5j500 feet in February. 



46. Ypthima newaea, Moore. 



Numerous specimens at from 3,500 to 5,500 feet in May and June, 

 and others from Manipur. These specimens differ slightly from 

 typical Y. luwara in being practically without the submarginal fascia 

 on the underside ; also the subapical ocellus on the underside of the 

 hindwing appears even larger than in typical Y. neiuara. The speci- 

 mens do not appear to vary mter se^ except that the two anal ocelli on 

 the underside of the hindwing are either entirely separated or partly 

 geminated, and that the anal ocellus on the upperside of the hindwing 

 is either present or absent. 



47. Ypthima ltcoides, n. sp. 

 Habitat : North Chin Hills, Burma. 

 Expanse: $, 1*5, 9, 1*65 inches. 



Description : Male. Upperside, both icings uniform dark brown 5 

 ^ilia greyish-brown. Foreivlng with a small black bipupilled ocellus 

 with an indistinct pale ochreous outer ring, a broad dark patch of 

 differently-formed scales extending from the inner margin to the middle 

 of the disc, most clearly visible when the insect is held up to the light. 

 Hindwing with a small perfect ocellus in the lower median interspace. 

 Underside, hoth loings greyish-white, finely and densely striated 

 throughout with brown. Forewing, ocellus as on the upperside but more 

 prominent. Hindwing with a fairly large sabapical ocellus, a smaller 

 one in the lower median interspace, and a still smaller bipupilled one 

 at the anal angle ; all the ocelli black with silvery pupil and prominent 

 yellow outer ring, outside of which is a pale brown ring varying in 

 breadth individually. Female. Upperside, forewing differs from the 

 male in the ocellus being larger and better defined, and in being 

 obscurely irrorated with greyish-white towards the margins of hoth 

 wings. 



Falls into the second group of YpUuma as revised by Elwes and 

 Edwards. The relative size of the ocelli on the underside of the 

 hindwing, and the presence of a male-mark on the upperside of the 



