1883.] MR. F. MOORE ON T.IMNAINA AND EUPLOilNA. 249 



Mangalisa ALBATA. 



Euplcea alhata, Zinken-Sommer, Nova Acta Acad. Curios. 1831, 

 p. 181, pi. 16. f. 16. 

 Hab. Java. 



Sexual mark on submedian and internal veins. 



Caduga, n. g. 



Danais (Chittira, sect. A, part.), Marshall & de Nic^ville, Butt, 

 of India &c. p. 42(1882). 



Fore wing elongated, narrow, more regularly triangular ; first sub- 

 costal branch emitted at one fourth before end of the cell, free ; second 

 branch from end of the cell ; cell long and narrow ; upper disco- 

 cellular bent below lower radial, producing a short spur from the 

 angle within the cell ; lower discocellular slender at its upper end. 

 Hind wing elongated, abdominal margin short, costa straight ; costal 

 vein long, slightly curved and extending along the margin ; cell long 

 and narrow. Male with two spatula-shaped pouch-marks, one, the 

 largest, being on the submedian vein, the other on the internal vein, 

 near the end ; these pouch-marks are formed by a lengthened but 

 slight dilatation or swelling of the veins, the adjacent spatula-shaped 

 surface being composed of very compactly disposed scales of a dif- 

 ferent shape and form, (? between) which project innumerable delicate 

 short white filaments ; a similar patch of scales is also observable on 

 the lower median vein, but it is not accompanied by the swollen vein. 

 Antennae with a regularly formed clavate tip. Apical joint of palpi 

 large, stout, pointed. 



Type C. tytia, Gray. 



1. Caduga tytia. 



Evploea tytia. Gray, Lep. Ins. of Nepal, p. 9, pi. 9. fig. 2 (1833). 



Danais tytia, Doubleday, List. Lep. Brit. Mus. i. p. 50 (1844); 

 Doubleday & Hewitson, Diurn. Lep. pi. 12. fig. 4. 



Banais {Chittira) tytia, Marshall & de Nic^ville, Butt, of India 

 &c. p. 42(1882). 



Danais sita, KoUar, Hiigel's Kaschmir, iv. p. 424, pi. 6 (1844). 



Hab. N.W. and E. Himalayas (Cashmir to Sikkim) ; Khasia hills; 

 Tenasserim. 



2. Caduga niphonica, n. sp. 



Differs from typical C. tytia in its larger size : fore wing very 

 black, with broader subapical streaks; comparatively smaller and 

 more ovate upper discal spots ; the lower discal outer spot also 

 smaller, the latter being more transversely narrow and less quadrate 

 in shape ; the submarginal row of spots are larger, and the marginal 

 row more distinct : hind wing in male with all the veins and tbeir 

 borders blackish, the spatnlar glandular patch and streaks therefrom 

 very black ; no red bifid streak within the cell, which is replaced by 



17* 



