SATYRINJE. 303 



more convex and less sinuous, and there are two prominent ocelli present. In tlie 

 hindwing, the broken subbasal and discal brown portions are somewhat different* 

 the ocelli being also more prominently developed. 



DiSTKiBUTiON. — Two males of this species, from the Khasias, are in our own 

 collection. Mr. H. J. Elwes (P. Z. S. 1891, 265) records under the name of 

 Neope armandii, " two males captured by Mr. "W. Doherty, in the Naga Hills, and one 

 from Bernardmyo, in the Shan States, Burma." The male here referred to from 

 Bernardmyo, which Mr. Elwes has kindly lent us, is identical with the male type of 

 Khasiana. A female, also sent with it, from the Naga Hills, two inches and six-eighths 

 in expanse, has the upperside of the forewing similar to the male, but the hindwing 

 is dark olivescent-brown throughout, with yellow markings only upon the outer 

 .border of the cell, and the submarginal series of ringed and dentate spots, similar to 

 those in B. Pulahoides. The underside is also darker coloured, the markings more 

 compact than in the male. Those on the forewing similar to the male. On the 

 hindwing the basal and lower discal dark portions are also similar but somewhat 

 broader and darker, the intervening subbasal division being narrower, and the entire 

 outer area of the wing is also darker coloured, being of an olivescent-brown tint, not 

 ochreous as in the male ; the ocelli are like those of the male but a little darker. 



The illustration of this species on our Plate 93, fig. 2, represents the male type 

 in our own collection. 



BLANAIDA PTJLAHA (Plate 94, fig. 1,(J). 



Lasiommata {Enope) PulaJia, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. Compy. i. p. 227 (1857). 



EnopePulaha, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1865, p. 499. 



Neope Pulalia, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1865, p. 770. Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 166; Ent. 



Mo. Mag. 1868, p. 195; Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 112(1868). Marshall and de Niceville, 



Butt, of India, i. p. 170, pi. xi. fig. 25, ? (1883). 



Imago. — Male. Upperside dusky olivescent ochreous-brown, darkest externally ; 

 cilia blackish alternated with ochreous-white. Forewing crossed by a dusky blackish 

 indistinctly-defined glandular fascia, clothed with long narrow scales with tridentate 

 or quadridentate tips, and numerously interspersed slender androconia, of similar 

 length, with bulbous base and fine hair-like tasselled tip ; the median vein and its 

 branches at their base, and the submedian to near its end, lined with yellowish- 

 ochreous ; within the cell is a yellowish-ochreous oblique streak at its end, and a 

 much less-defined streak across its middle ; beyond is an irregular transverse discal 

 and a similar submarginal series of yellowish-ochreous spots. Hindiving with two 

 outer curved-rows of yellowish-ochreous spots and an intervening discal series of ill- 

 defined black oval spots. Underside dark brown. Forewing with three zigzag bars 

 across the cell, and two costal streaks beyond ochreous-white; base of median vein 



