518 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. VIII. 
c'. Underside, hindwing, not irrorated with brown ; 
markings prominent and reddish, 
T. ornreNs, Butler. In the B. M. from Kalka 
(foot of W. Himalaya). 
b. Upperside, forewing, costa strongly suffused with greyish 
from base to apical markings. 
T. soLARis, Butler. In the B. M. from Deesa. 
B. Submarginal fuscous band of forewing coalescing with mar- 
ginal band towards outer angle, thus forming an apical 
patch enclesing spots of the ground-colour. 
a. Apical fuscous patch not reaching outer angle. 
T. Funvius, Wallace. In the B. M. from 
Khandesh. 
T. PALLISERI, Butler. In the B. M. from 
Khandesh. 
b. Apical fuscous patch continued to outer angle, 
a’, With three spots of ground-colour in apical patch. 
T. tripuncratus, Butler. In the B. M. 
from Bombay and the Nilgiris, 
6}. With more than three spots of the ground-colour 
enclosed in apical patch. 
T. sunya, Moore. In the B. M. from Ganjam. 
T faustus, T. faustinus, T. oriens, and T. solaris grade into one 
another, and are probably not separable; 7. rosaceus, Butler, 
which is not represented in the British Museum, is apparently identical 
with 7. oriens. As far as known the females of all the above forms 
are similar to the males, but are of a deeper shade. 
T. pallisert is slightly smaller and more suffused with red beneath 
than 7. fulvius, but is otherwise identical. The distinction between 
T. surya and T. tripunctatus is very slight, and is not true to locality. 
I have specimens of typical 7. tripunctatus from Ganjam, and of 
typical 7, surya from the Nilgiris, T, fulvius, which is in my collec- 
tion from Southern India, is in my opinion the dry-season form of 
TL. tripunctatus, and it is almost certain that 7. fulvius, T. palliserd, 
TL’. tripunctatus, and T. swrya represent a single species. The females 
of these four forms as far as known are white, sometimes slightly 
tinged with salmon-colour towards the margin. 
