248 LEPIBOPTEBA INBICA. 



spots as tliey are ou the upperside, the lowest of the quadrate spots touching the 

 greyish-white hinder marginal space. Hindwing as in the male. 



Expanse of wings, ^ ? 2 to 2:^ inches. 



Larva, feeds upon a leguminous plant bearing the native name of " Tunkul." 

 (Horsfield.) 



Habitat. — Java, Borneo, Sumatra, India, Burma, Ceylon. 



Distribution. — Horsfield and Moore record it from Java. Moore's description in 

 P. Z. S. 1865, is from Bengal examples. We have both sexes from Java, Borneo, the 

 Runjit Valley, Burma, Sikkim and the Khasia Hills ; we cannot distinguish any specific 

 differences between the Java, Bornean and Indian examples. Fergusson records it also 

 from Travancore, Watson from the Chin Hills, Wood-Mason and de Niceville from 

 Cachar, and Davidson, Bell and Aitken from Kanara. Our figures of the larva and pupa 

 are copies of Horsfield and Moore's figures. 



HASORA COULTERI. 



Plate 751, figs. 2, ^ , 2a, ? , 2b, $ . 



Hasora coulteri, Wood-Mason and de Niceville, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 1886, p. 378, pi. 18, figs. 



8, ^ , 8a, 8b, ? . Watson, Hesp. Ind. p. 14 (1891) ; id. Journ. Bo. Nat. Hist. Soc. ix. 1895, p. 437. 



Elwes, Trans. Zool. Soc. 1897, p. 300. 

 Hasora mcetissima coulteri, Friihstorfer, Iris, 1911, p. fi9. 



Imago. — Male. Upperside brown, wdth an ochreous-chocolate tint. Forew'ing with 

 a subapical pale ochreous twin spot, the upper one a mere dot, the lower one near the 

 base of the fifth interspace, the smaller one obliquely inwards in the next upper interspace, 

 both very close together, another small spot or dot immediately below the lower end of the 

 cell ; all these spots are sometimes very faintly indicated and sometimes entirely absent, 

 the base of the wing paler than the rest, being covered with olivaceous-brown setae. 

 Hindiving without markings, the base and abdominal area also with olivaceous-brown 

 setse. Underside paler brown. Forewing glossed with purple at the apex, a broad 

 dark shade through the middle of the wing, from the base to near the outer maro;in, where 

 it extends somewhat upwards, the dots absent. Hindwing crossed by a white baud 

 from the costa to the sub-median nervure, its inner edge even, slightly concave, its 

 outer edge diffuse, its lower end with a short inward curve where it is broken, and is 

 continued by a white spot on the abdominal margin close to the anal angle, the wing 

 suffused with purple beyond the band, the lobe black, a white anteciliary line from the 

 end of the submedian vein to vein 3. Cilia of both wings pale bi'own, with white tips. 

 Antennse black, the club dull dark ochreous beneath ; palpi grey, white at the sides ; 

 body beneath and legs ochreous-grey. 



Female. Upperside darker than the male and with a purplish gloss. Forocing 

 with an ochreous sub-apical small spot, with a small dot a little below', sometimes 



