496 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. VIII. 
ground-colour is invariably some shade of yellow. The dry-season 
form of H. phryne is the H. cassida of Fabricius, and is also the 
HT. pallida of Swinhoe. 
HT, lichenosa is a very well-marked local race from the Andamans. 
AI, nama, with its dry-season form, H. amba, Wallace, occurs fairly 
commonly throughout North-Hastern India and Burma, and also in 
the Andamans, the race occurring there having been named 
AM, andamana by Swinhoe, but the only difference between specimens of 
HH, nama and H. andamana, Swinhoe, is the locality-label on the pin. 
H, nama. is replaced in the Nilgiris by a good local race, H. remba, 
Moore, the dry-season form of which is probably the “ species” 
recently described by Col. Swinhoe as H. liguida. Seasonal forms of 
Huphina from my collection are figured on Plate I, figures 1 to 12 
and Plate II, figures 6 and 7. Figures 1 and 2 on Plate I are 
from a pair of the extreme rainy-season form of H. dapha taken 
in coité at Thayetmyo, Lower Burma, in August ; figures 3 and 4 are 
from a pair of an intermediate seasonal form of H. dapha taken in 
coitt at Pokoko, Upper Burma, in October ; figures 5 and 6 are from 
a pair of the extreme dry-season form of H. dapha taken in coité 
at Toungoo, Lower Burma, in January. Similarly figures 7 to 12, 
represent males and females of the extreme rainy-season form, an inter- 
mediate form, and the extreme dry-season form of A. phryne ; figures 
@ and 8 from a pair taken 2m codéd at Berhampore, Ganjam, in July ; 
figures 9 and 10 from a male taken at Madras on the 2nd April and a 
female taken at Madras on the 31st March ; and figures 11 and 12 
from a pair taken zn coztd at Berhampore, Ganjam, in February. 
Figures 6 and 7 on Plate II show the underside of males of the rainy- 
season and dry-season form respectively of A. nama, the former from 
a specimen taken in the North Chin Hills, Upper Burma, in the ond 
of April, and the latter from a specimen taken in the Yaw District, 
Upper Burma, in December. 
Other named forms of the genus, which are either not represented in 
the national collection or are doubtfully identified, are A. amasene, 
Cramer ; H. evagete, Cramer ; H. zeuxtppe, Cramer; H. hira, Moore ; 
H. coronis, Cramer ; and H. copia, Wallace. Mr. de Nicéville informs 
me that H. amasene was described from China, and that he fails to 
recognise it as Indian ; that A. evagete represents a male of the richly- 
