1892.] THE NAGA. AND KAREN HILLS AND PERAK. 659 



COLADENIA INDRANI. 



Plesioneura indrani, Moore, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 789. 

 Some specimens from Bernardmyo have the ground-colour 

 brighter yellow than those from Sikkim and Tenasserim. 



CoLADENIA DAN. 



Pap. dan, Fabr. Mant. Ins. ii. p. 88. 



Hesperia fateh, KoU. Hiigel's Kaschm. p. 454, t. xviii. 5, G. 



I am unable to define two forms of this insect, though there 

 appear to be two races — one small and dark, which occurs in Perak, 

 Burmah, and the Karen Hills ; the other, from the North-west 

 Himalayas and Sikkim, is larger and brighter. Intermediate forms, 

 however, are common in Sikkim ; and the Javan variety has the band 

 of spots much more golden, and seems more distinct than either of 

 the others. 



Tapena agni. 



Plesioneura agni, de Nicev. J. A. S. B. 1883, pt. ii. p. 87, t. x. 



4 $. _ 



A specimen from the Naga Hills is darker than the type, as are 

 others from the Karen Hills. 



Tapena thwaitesi. 



Tapena thwaitesi, Moore, Lep. Ceyl. i. p. 181, t, ^1 . 2, 2 a. 

 Two males from Bernardmyo and one from Perak. 



Tapena laxmi. 



Plesioneura laxmi, de Nicev. J. A. S. B. 1888, p. 290, t. xiii. 



5 9. 



A single male of this species was sent from Perak and was described 

 by de Niceville as the type of this sex, his original specimen being 

 a female and not, as described, a male. 



Cel^norrhinus pulomaya. 



Plesioneura pulomayn, Moore, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 787. 



Celcenorrhinus pulomaya, de Nicev, Jouvn. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc. 

 iv. p. 180 (1889). 



? 0. pyrrha, de Nicev. 1, c. p. 181, t. B, 11 $ . 



What I take to be a var. of this species was taken in the Naga 

 Hills by Doherty at 6000-7000 feet. It has the two spots nearest 

 the hind margin of the fore wing larger and paler in colour, the outer 

 one being whitish as in C. maculosa, Feld. The markings of the 

 underside are also clearer and paler than in P. pulomaya, but one 

 specimen of the latter from the Naga Hills is like the Sikkim form. 

 I remain in doubt as to whether this is only a variety of P. pulomaya, 

 or whether it is G. pyrrha, of which de Niceville figures only the 

 female, and this is more like what I call C. sumitra. 



