36 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 



luuules, a black spot on the aual lobe, ringed with white, another in the first interspace, 

 ringed with orange, terminal line brown, with a whitish inner thread. Cilia of both 

 wings grey, tipped with black. Antennae black, ringed with white ; club with a dull 

 red tip, and a white streak at its base on the underside ; head and body blackish above, 

 the hinder segments of the abdomen orange-red, whitish beneath ; frons whitish, eyes 

 ringed with white. 



Female. Upperside, both wings glossy pale hair-brown, becoming darker towards 

 the margins. Forewing unmarked. Hindwing with a large anal white patch divided 

 by the dark veins from the median nervule to the sub-median neiwure, the portion in 

 the second median interspace small, the one in the first median interspace the largest, 

 the one in the sub-median interspace also large ; a prominent anteciliary black line, 

 which becomes lost in the ground colour of the wing after it has passed the anal white 

 patch ; anal lobe black in the middle, outwardly defined by white ; tail twice as long as 

 in the male, white with a narrow black centre. Cilia of hindwing white, very long on 

 the abdominal margin, becoming hair-brown towards the apex of the wing, of the 

 forewing entirely hair-brown. Underside, both wings dull sUvery-grey. Forewing 

 with the costa naiTOwly, the apex somewhat broadly, the outer margin decreasingly 

 cupreous. Hindwing with an outer discal series of black spots outwardly defined with 

 white, the three anterior ones small, round, slightly increasing in size, the one in the 

 sub-median intei-space erescentic, with a minute dot placed against it in the internal 

 interspace, with another dot anterior to it on the abdominal margin, an oval black spot 

 near the margin in the first median interspace, the sub-median interspace near the 

 margin sprinkled with black scales, the anal lobe black, a prominent anteciliary black 

 thread from the anal lobe to the discoidal nervule, also extending along the abdominal 

 margin for a short distance anterior to the anal lobe. The specimen described is in the 

 collection of Major F. B. Longe, R.E., who captured it on the 8th of January, 1887, at 

 Xgokgale near Hsipaw, North Shan States, Upper Burma, (de Niceville.) 



Expanse of wings, $ 1^^, $ 1-j^^ inches. 



Habitat. — Assam, Burma. 



Distribution. — We have received a number of males from the Khasia Hills, from 

 whence the type male, now in the Indian Museum, Calcutta, came ; our description and 

 figures of the male are from a Khasia example ; the female we have not been able to 

 get, we therefore give de Niceville's description and copies of his figures. 



DEUDORIX HYPARGYRIA. 

 Plate 712, figs. 3, (J , 3a, $. 

 Rnpahi hypaniyrid. Elwes, Pr(jc. Zool. Soc. 1892, p. 643, pi. 43, fig. 7, ^ , 



Imago. — ^lale. Upperside. Forewing black, with a fulvous-red streak from the 



