522 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. VIII. 
specimens of these last two forms in the British Museum, and like the 
female T. dulcis, they consist of slight aberrations picked out of long 
series, JZ’. éaplint, as might be expected, being as near to the 
Southern 7. sanguinalis as to T. dirus. T. albertus of Swinhoe I 
have not seen, but judging from the description it is only a form of 
T. danaé. T. phenius of Butler originally described from Abyssinia 
but since recorded from Karachi has been sunk by Swinhoe as a syno- 
nym of J, dulcis (P. Z. S., 1884). 
Section F.—Upperside white, with an orange apical patch. No 
sexual glands on wings of male. 
This group is represented in the Indian region by two species, 
I. etrida and T. eucharis, the former of which has a well marked local 
race (T’. limbatus), in Ceylon. 
The three forms may be compared as below :— 
A. Upperside, forewing, the fuscous inner border of apical 
orange patch more or less obsolete. 
T, EucHARIS, Fabricius, 
T. PSEUDEVANTHE, Butler. 
T. tirEa, Godart. 
B. Upperside, forewing, the apical orange patch entirely sur- 
rounded with dark brown. 
a. Hindwing with a border of separated spots. 
T. ETRIDA, Boisduval. 
T. FARRINUS, Butler. 
T. peRNoTATUS, Butler. 
T. purus, Butler. 
T. BruBURA, Butler. 
b, Hindwing with a continuous border. 
T. ummBatus, Butler. 
Of the first species, 7. pseudevanthe is the wet-season form, 
T. eucharis the dry-season form, and 7. titea intermediate. ‘This species 
occurs throughout Western and Southern India, and in Ceylon. 
The first four named forms of the second species are practically 
inseparable ; 7. bimbura, which is im the British Museum only from 
North-West India, differs in having a reddish-brown underside, but this 
is a character which is found in specimens from Southern India and is 
merely varietal, probably more or less seasonal. 
T. etrida occurs commonly throughout Southern, Western and North- 
Western India, and is replaced in Ceylon by the local race T. limbatus. 
