103 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 



Euthalia Anosia, Kirby, S5'n. Catal. D. Lep. p. 254 (1871). Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 117, pi. 14, 

 fig. 5, ? (1883). de Niceville, Butt, of India, etc., ii. p. 222 (1886). 



Male. Upperside dark ashy-green, witli the anterior margin of hindwing 

 broadly pale pinkish-brown. Cilia of forewing black, of hindwing white. Fore- 

 wing with a broad transverse discal densely grey irrorated-faacia, its inner edge 

 being angulated, its outer edge sinuous, and both edges lunularly slightly black- 

 speckled ; black-lined markings within and below the cell edged with grey scales, and 

 a few grey irrorations scattered between these markings. Hindwing with a transverse 

 discal black-speckled sinuous fascia, and a subraarginal series of black-speckled 

 lunules, the lower portions of both and intervening discal area being thickly 

 irrorated with grey scales ; black-lined cell marks and a small black spot above and 

 below the cell edged with grey scales ; a prominent small patch of pure white scales 

 extending (in both sexes) from base of precostal to base of subcostal. Underside 

 olivescent-grey, palest on the forewing ; outer borders of both wings, broadly, 

 with numerous rather indistinct blackish short transverse slender strigge ; discal 

 and submarginal black-speckled sinuous markings, as on upperside, ill-defined ; 

 basal black-lined markings very distinct. Body and palpi above dark ashy-green, 

 below and legs greyish-white ; antenna dark brown above, reddish below. 



Female. Upperside paler than in the male, the exterior borders brownish ; 

 irrorated markings the same. Forewing with an inner-discal curved row of 

 prominent white dentate decreasing spots with black edges, extending from middle 

 of the costa to below the middle median veinlet. Hindwing with the discal 

 sinuous black fascia and submarginal lunate spots more defined. Underside paler 

 than in the male; markings similar, the forewing also having the discal spots of the 

 upperside. 



Expanse, S 2^^, ? 3 to 3n) inches. 



Habitat. — Sikkim ; Assam ; Cachar ; Burma; Tenasserim. 



The above description of male and female is taken from N. Indian examples. 



Distribution within Indian Abea. — " Extremely rare in Sikkim. It has been 

 obtained at Singla in April and October. It is generally found in river-beds, where 

 it is fond of resting with outspread wings on the face of large boulders, from which 

 it is then scarcely distinguishable " (de Niceville, Sikkim Gazetteer, 1894, p. 14t). 

 " Dr. L, Martin caught a specimen in April, 1895, at the lower end of the Sibi 

 Kola, near DarjiUng " (J. A. S. Bengal, 1895, 426). " Mr. J. Wood-Mason obtained 

 a female at Irangmara, in Cachar, in July; another seen with outspreading wings 

 resting on the wall of a room in the bungalow at Lalla Mookh, in June, presenting 

 the appearance of a leaf overgrown by a fungus ; one male also taken on Nemotha 

 Peak in September" (J. A. S. Bong. 1887, p. 362). "Mr. J. L. Shirwell took a 

 female in the Jorehat district in June, and Mr. S. E. Peal has sent it from 



