22 LEPIDOPTEBA INDICA. 



Iielow and the legs concolorous with the wiugs, abdomen beneath with pale ochreous 

 segmental bands. 



Female similar to the male above and below. 



Expanse of wings, $ % l/v inches. 



Habitat. — Andaman Islands. 



Described and figured from a pair in our collection from Port Blair. 



CEL^NORRHINUS AFFINIS. 



Plate 762, figs. 4, $ , 4a, 9 , 4b, ^ . 



Celsenorrhinus affirtis, Elwes and Edwards, Trans. Zool. Soc. 1897, p. 121, pi. IS, fig. 9, J, pi. 22, 



fig. 4 (genitalia). Adamson, Trans. N. H. S. Northumberland, etc. 1908, p. 138. 

 Celsenorrhinus andamanica, Wood-Mason and de Niceville, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 1886, p. 391. 



Imago. — Male. Upperside dark olive-brown. Forewing with the basal area with 

 some brownish-ochreous scales ; three conjugated, semi-hyaline, small ochreous sub- 

 apical spots from near the costa in an outwardly oblic^ue nearly straight line ; a broad 

 discal, semi-hyaline, ochreous band from the middle of the costa to the sub-median 

 vein near the hinder angle, the band continuous, its outer sides irregular, broadest at 

 the middle where it is somewhat angulated on both sides, the ujiper part squarely 

 darker ochreous, its lower end smaller, also darker ochreous. Hindwing with the basal 

 and abdominal areas with brown hairs, tinted with ochreous, no markings. Cilia of 

 forewing brown, shortly white near the hinder angle, on the hindwing white with small 

 brown patches at the vein ends. Underside like the upperside, some indistinct 

 ochreous discal dots, invisible in some example.?. Antennas black, on the underside the 

 upper half of the club is ochreous, and there is an ochreous streak on the shaft below 

 the club, followed by minute dots ; palpi grey with brown sides ; head, body above 

 and below and the legs concolorous with the wings, foretarsi ochreous, abdomen 

 beneath with whitish segmental bands. 



Female like the male on both sides, but the ochreous costal band of the fore- 

 wing is somewhat broader, and it terminates at its lower end in a large dark ochreous 

 quadrate spot. 



Expanse of wings, ^ $ 1^ inches. 



Habitat. — Assam, Burma. 



Distribution. — The type in collection Elwes came from the Khasia Hills. We 

 have both sexes from the same locality, from which our description and figui'cs are 

 taken, and there is a male example in Colonel Adamson's collection taken by him at 

 Akyab in Burma in April, 1883. The ochreous band in this example ends hindwards 

 more narrowly than is usual in Khasia Hill speaimens, but in every other respect it 

 corresponds with an example in our collection submitted to Elwes and identified by him 



