1896.] MR. H. H. DRUCE ON BORNEAN LYCENIDS. 665 
somewhat different, and A. acestes is much more spotted in appear- 
ance beneath than A. bella. I have a fine pair of this species before 
me, both taken on Kina Balu, from Dr. Staudinger’s collection. 
ARHOPALA HAVILANDI, sp. n., Bethune-Baker. (Plate XXX. 
figs. 8 5,9 9.) 
Kina Balu. 
Expanse, ¢ 2, 47-48 millim. 
¢. Upperside: both wings brilliant deep purplish blue, in some 
lights looking dull purplish, whilst with a side ight there is quite 
a brownish lustre over the one side; costa and outer margin of 
primaries very finely black; secondaries with costa broadly and 
narrowly black ; tail fine, black tipped with white ; abdominal fold 
greyish. Underside: both wings cinnamon-brown, with a pinkish- 
violet tinge, with darker brown spots very palely wargined. Pri- 
maries with three good-sized increasing cell-spots—a very small spot 
being over the second and third close to the costa, and another be- 
tween and almost touching them (i. e. the cell-spots), this spot varies 
much in size; below the third is a good-sized spot occupying the lower 
median angle; subdiscoidal cell dark, submedian area paler: the 
transverse band is composed of seven spots, the upper four being 
outwardly oblique, the second being shifted well beyond the small 
first one, the third very slightly inwards, the fourth right outwards, 
the fifth and sixth almost confluent, shifted well inwards but out- 
wardly inclined, and below this is a smaller eighth spot, which is 
sometimes indistinct; submarginal row indistinct, sublunular. 
Secondaries with a small spot at the extreme basal angle of the 
costa, four basal spots below each other, the second and fourth 
shifted inwards, followed by three larger ones below each other ; 
cell closed by a large spot laterally edged ; transverse band begin- 
ning below the upper discoidal nervule and composed of six spots— 
the second shifted outwards, third inwards, fourth outwards, fifth 
angular spot quite detached and shifted far inwards and confluent 
with the long bottle-necked sixth spot ; touching the outer margin of 
the spot closing the cell and the inner margin of the first spot of 
the transverse band are two spots confluent over each other, the 
upper one reaching the costa and the lower one as described but 
with its inner margin shifted right inwards, and being therefore 
the larger of the two; the submarginal row is sublaunular and 
indistinct ; anal area black, with bright bluish superimposed metallic 
scales ; lobe-spot small, black ; lobe scarcely developed at all. 
Q. Upperside: both wings briiliant, lustrous azure-blue, dull 
violet in some lights and with the peculiar brown lustre in others. 
Primaries with somewhat narrow costa, broad outer margin, and 
very broad dark brown apical area ; at the margin of the blue patch 
beyond the upper apex of the cell are three or four deep black spots 
in the interspaces of the nervules. Secondaries with all the 
margins broadly dark brown; the outer margin being less broad 
Proc. Zoot. Soc.—1896, No. XLITI. 43 
