SATYRIN^. 93 



lOHANA INICA. 



Wet-Season Brood (Plate 114, figs. 2, 2a, ^ ? ). 



Tpthima Ariaspa, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1874, p. 568. Marsliall and de Niceville, Butt, of 



India, etc. i. p. 224 (1883). 

 Tpthima Sara, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1883, p. 145, pi. 24, fig. 1, ? . 

 Yptliima Dadalea, SwinhoSj Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1886, p. 423, (J. 



Imago. — Male and female. Upperside uniformly dark-brown. Forewing with 

 a rounded subapical bipupilled ocellus ; no visible glandular patch, but the lower 

 discal area clothed with short round -tipt or dentate-tipt scales, some longer 

 dentate-tipt scales, and many long filiform dark androconia with tassel-tips. Hind- 

 wing with a small subanal ocellus. 



Underside pale ochreous-cinereous, uniformly covered with numerous narrow 

 brown prominent strigge ; no submarginal shade. Foreiuing with ocellus, as above, 

 prominent, bipupilled, and with pale ochreous outer ring. Hindwing with an apical 

 ocellus (disposed between the lower subcostal and radial) and two small subanal 

 ocelli, the lowest bipupilled. 



Expanse, Ij^ to I^-q inch. 



Det-Season Brood (Plate 114, figs. 2, h, c, d, e, (J ? ). 



Tphthima Inica, Hewitson, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1864, p. 284, pi. 17, fig. 5, ? . 



Ypthima Inica, Butler, Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 151 (1868). Marshall and de Niceville, Butt, of 



India, etc. i. p. 225 (1883). 

 Yptliima Alkihie, Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1886, p. 422. 

 Ypthima complexiva, Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1886, p. 423, pi. 40, fig. 2, ? (variety). 



Male and Female. Upperside as in the wet-season brood. Underside pale 

 ochreous-grey, very numerously covered with brown strigje, more or less uniformly 

 disposed on both wings, and with an indistinctly defined incomplete submarginal 

 sinuous fascia, which is more distinct on parts of the hindwing, or the hindwing is 

 crossed by four more or less defined somewhat clouded brown sinuous fasicse, the 

 intervening strigose spaces being pale ochreous-grey. Forewing with a prominent 

 ocellus, as in wet-season brood, sometimes there is a minute blind ocellule present 

 (as in the variety complexiva) between the lower median veiulets. Hindwing with 

 three minute, more or less perfectly-formed ocelli, or, black dots, sometimes the black 

 dots are obsolescent, as in the typically described Inica. 



Expense, l^, to 1^*0 inch. 



Habitat. — Western and Central India, Upper Bengal. 



DiSTKiBUTiON. — The type specimens of the wet-season hrood (Ariaspa) were 

 obtained by the late General G. Hearsey in the Punjab District, and the late Mr. 



