«G6 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. X. 



rather more broadly than in the male are similarly plumbeous-silvery. 

 On the forewing the male has a small discal orange patch which is 

 very diffused in the female. The underside is very similar to that of 

 A. vulcanus to vv^hich the species is certainly allied, though it is, I should 

 say, quite distinct. 



These Myingyan specimens therefore I consider to be typical 

 A. schistacea ; however, at Kalewa in the Upper Chindwin I obtained 

 three males of a species which differed from the specimens above 

 described in being without plumbeous scales on the forewing, the 

 inner margin being shot with blue instead, the orange patch of the 

 forewing being also better defined, and the markings of the underside 

 rather different. I hesitate, however, to describe the species as new. 



No ally of A. vulcanus has previously been recorded from east of 

 Calcutta, as the A. vulcanus var. maximus of Elwes from the Karen 

 Hills belongs to the ictis group of the genus, and is only remotely 

 allied to A. vulcanus, from which it differs in the important character 

 of having the subbasal band on the underside of the hiudwing broken 

 up into well-separated ring-spots instead of being continuous. 

 187. Tajuria illuegis, Hewitson. 



A single female at 3,500 feet in June. 



188. Tajueia jangala, Horsfield. 



Common at the foot of the hills from May to July. 



189. Hypolyc^na erylus, Godart. 

 Common in the Upper Chindwin from March to May. 



190. Chliaeia othona, Hewitson. 



Many males and a single female from the Upper Chindwin and the 

 foot of the hills from April to June. 



191. Chliaeia kina, Hewitson. 



A single male taken in company with Cyaniris on wet sand at the 

 foot of the hills in May, and a single female taken in March on the 

 top of the grassy ridge above Fort White at about 7,000 feet. Both 

 sexes agree exactly with Doherty's detailed description quoted in " The 

 Butterflies of India, &c.," and in neither is tiie discal band on the 

 underside of the forewing continuous, so they cannot be considered to 

 be C cachara. 



192. Zeltus etolus, Fabricius. 

 Common in the Upper Chindwin in May and June. 



