NOVITATES ZOOLOGICAE XXIII. 1916. 303 



c?. Differs from d. dina above iu having the white portions of the wings 

 strongly suffused with bnff, the brown of the costal and apical third of forewing 

 paler, more liver-brown, and extending farther into cell and on to vein 3, and 

 the discocellulars are brown, not white. The hindwings are entirely bnffish white, 

 with only a border of dark brown, and the dark patch surrounding the ocelli is 

 smaller and darker, and is surrounded, except on the inner side, with a broad 

 golden ring. 



Below it differs in the white area of forewing being less pure and the apical 

 brown area being more extended. On the hindwing it differs in the white being 

 less pure, the apical ocellus larger, and in the space between median vein and 

 abdominal margin above the ocellus being orange buff. 



? . Differs above in the whole hindwing being white, with only a marginal 

 band of sooty brown, and the dark patch surrounding the double ocellus much more 

 sharply defined. Below on hindwing the dark margin is narrower, the area above 

 ocellus and below median vein is buff, not merely tinged with creamy buff, and the 

 yellow band round the double ocellus encircles it much more, while the black outer- 

 most band is much narrower. 



Hab. Salawatti, 1 S, 1 ? (H. Kühn) ; 1 <? (?) (H. Kühn) (labelled erroneously 

 Sorong). 



Taenaris dina sordidior subsp. nov. 



$ . Differs from d. dina above in the dirty buffy white, not pure white, of fore- 

 wing, the dark brown heavily-defined nervures and the brownish suffusion running 

 in from apical and terminal areas. On hindwing the brown-grey outer area is less 

 dense and paler, while the whole wing above median vein is whiter, though all 

 white parts are much suffused with buff. 



Hab. Snow Mountains and Coast of S.W. Dutch New Guinea, 1 ?, near 

 Oetakwa River, 3000 ft., December 1910 (A. S. Meek). 



Taenaris microps Gr. Smith 



Fruhstorfer suggests that this is either an aberration of g. gorgophone or a 

 species having the same relationship to it as dina has to dimona. It is certainly to 

 my mind a good species and not an aberration, but it is much nearer to dimona, 

 than to any of the forms of gorgo. 



Taenaris bioculatus cameronensis subsp. nov. 



(?, Above nearest to b. ckarondos Frühst., but almost entirely suffused on both 

 wings with sooty grey. Below pale areas on both wings duller and more suffused 

 with grey. 



Hab. Mount Cameron, Owen Stanley Range, 1 c?, July — August 1896 

 (Anthony). 



Taenaris catops rosseliana subsp. nov. 



c? ? . Above very similar to c. adriana Frühst, from Fergusson, but differs at 

 first sight by the black on the outer portion of hindwing only extending just 

 beyond vein 4, not to beyond vein 2. Below the much less extent of the black on 

 both wings is at once conspicuous. 



Hab. Rössel Island, Louisiade Islands, i $$, 9 ? ?, January 1898 (A. S. 

 Meek) ; 6 $$, i ? ?, November 1915 (W. F. Eichorn). 



