LYCMNOPSIN^. 203 



Loganin distanti, Staudinger, Lep. Palawan, p. 93, pi. 1, fig. 3, 9 (1889). Semper, Reise, Philipp. 



p. 161, pi. 31, figs. 6, 7 and 21 (1889). Logania obscura, Distant and Pryer, Ann. Mag. Nat. 



Hist. 1887, p. 266 (nom. prseoc). Habitat, Philippines, Borneo. 

 Logania luca, de Niceville, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 1895, p. 29, pi. 2, fig. 13, ?. Habitat, Perak, 



Malay Peninsula, Sumatra. 

 Logania staudingeri, H. H. Druce, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1895, p. 565, pi. 31, figs. 13, (J, 14, ?. 



Habitat, Kina Balu. 



Sub-Family LYC^ENOPSIN^. 



Genus LYC^NOPSIS. 



Lycxnopsis, Felder, Reise, Nov. Lep. ii. p. 257. Chapman, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1809, p. 419. 



Cyaniris, Scudder (nee Dalman), ii. p. 918 (1872). Moore, Lep. Ceylon, i. p. 74(1881). Distant, 



Rhop. Malayana, p. 210 (1884). de Niceville, Butt, of India, iii., p. 92 (1890). Bingham, 



Fauna of Brit. India, Butt. ii. p. 315 (1907). 

 Celasirina, Tutt, Entom. xviii. p. 180 (1906). 

 Notarthrinus, Chapman, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1908, p. 677. 



Eyes naked. Antennse less than half the length of forewing, club long and spatu- 

 late ; palpi sub-porrect, second joint pilose beneath, projecting half beyond the head, 

 third joint naked, slender, and about half its length ; body slender ; legs slender ; 

 femora slightly pilose beneath. Fomving broad and short, costa slightly arched, apex 

 rounded, outer margin convex, hinder angle slightly rounded, hinder margin nearly 

 straight ; cell half as long as the wing ; vein 3 from before lower end of cell, 

 4 from the end, 6 from upper end, 6 and 7 closely approximate at base, upper 

 discocellular therefore very short or absent, middle and lower very slender ; vein 

 8 absent, 9 emitted from basal half of 7, 10 and 11 free, 12 bent towards 11, ends on 

 costa a third before the apex. Hindwing with the costa slightly arched, apex and 

 outer margin continuously rounded ; cell half as long as the wing, middle discocellular 

 shorter than the lower ; veins 3 and 4 from lower end of cell. 



Type, haraldus, Fabricius, from Sumatra. 



We are obliged to put Chapman's genus as a synonym, because it is erected on 

 the genitalia only, and for all practical purposes this is useless. The genus Cyaniris 

 seems to have been here misplaced by many authors ; Prout has called attention 

 to the fact that Dalman gave semiargus, Rottenburg, as his type for Cyaniris, and 

 semiargus does not belong to this genus ; we must take Lycsenopsis, Felder, for the 

 genus, his type haraldus being congeneric with the Indian forms. 



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