SYNONYMY OF SOME SPECIES OF INDIAN PIERINZA. 515 
B, Apex of forewing less acuminate, marginal band of forewing 
extending to outer angle (7. venata). 
a. Marginal band of hindwing narrow. 
T. veNATA, Moore, 
T. namA, Moore. 
T. patiitana, Moore. 
6. Marginal band of hindwing broad. 
T. crngata, Moore. 
T. jegert has the underside more flesh-coloured than T. lata, of 
whichiit is probably the dry-season form. 
T. vagans, which is possibly wrongly identified in the British 
Museum, has no reddish tinge on the underside, and is apparently 
without the salmon-coloured patch on the upperside of the hindwing 
in the male, though the similar patch on the underside of the fore- 
wing is present. 
Of the next four forms the British Museum possesses nine males of 
T. venata, from Bombay, the Punjab, Mhow, and the N.-W. Hima- 
layas ; one male and one female of 7. czngala, both from Ceylon ; two 
males of 7’. rama from the Nilgiris ; and two females of T. pallitana 
from Kutch. As identified in the British Museum, T. pallitana repre- 
sents the ordinary female of 7. rama. T. venata is slightly smaller 
than 7. rama, but does not appear to differ otherwise. 7. cingala 
may represent a distinct species. It is not at all certain that the above 
four forms are correctly identified in the British Museum. 
The 7. libytheu group is represented in the British Museum by four 
named forms, of which three are separable. They may be compared as 
below :— 
A. Marginal band of hindwing evenly broad throughout, 
T. senna, Felder. 
B. Marginal band of hindwing evenly narrow throughout. 
T. prona, Horsfield. 
C. Marginal band of hindwing broad at apex and narrow at 
anal angle. 
T. LipytHEA, Fabricius, 
T. RUBELLA, Wallace. 
T. senna is in the British Museum from the N.-W. Himalayas, 
Mhow, and Camorta, and in my collection from the Nilgiris, Ganjam, 
Madras, Mysore, and Burma. 
