132 MESSES. H. J. ELWES AND JAMES EDWAEDS : 



19 (18). Hind wing above with a subterminal series of suffused spots (on the 



upperside brownish grey in the male and whitish in the female, on 

 the underside white in both sexes), the space between it and the 

 discal band not broken into spots by pale lines corona, Stgr. 



20 (1) . Clothing of lower side of second joint of palpi pure white. 



21 (26). No white spot in cell o£ fore wing. 



22 (25). Abdomen above wholly or in part white. 



23 (24). Abdomen above entirely white. Base of hind wing below bluish white, dohertyi, Watson. 



24 (23). Abdomen above dark at base and apex, white in the middle. Base 



of hind wing below brown sambara, Moore. 



25 (22) . Abdomen above entirely brown aflinis, Druce. 



26 (21). A large white spot reaching quite across cell of fore wing. Abdomen 



dark with narrow pale rings or entirely dark. 



27 (28). White band on hind wing above very distinct sinica, Feld. 



28 (27). White band on hind wing above absent or but faintly indicated . . tethys, Men. 



! Satarupa gopala. 



Voniloba gopala, Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. E.I. C. i. p. 246. 



Satarupa gopala, Moore, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 780, pi. xlii. fig. 1 ; Watson, Hesp. Ind. p. 90 (1891). 



Hab. Sikkim ( M oiler) ; Khasia (Hamilton). 

 ! Satarupa nymphalis. 



Tagiades nymphalis, Speyer, Stett. ent. Zeit. xl. p. 348 (1879) ; Staudinger, Mem. sur Lep. iii. 



p. 153, pi. viii. fig. 4 (1887). 

 Satarupa nymphalis, Leech, Butt. China &c. p. 562 (1894). 



Hab. Amurland (fide Speyer) ; Chefoo, North China (in B. M.) ; Central and Western 

 China (Pratt). 



! Satarupa narada. 



Satarupa narada, Moore, .Tour. As. Soc. Beng. 1884, p. 51 ; Watson, Hesp. Ind. p. 89 (1891). 

 Hab. Sikkim (Moller) ; E. Pegu (Doherty). 



! Satarupa diversa. 



Plerygospidea diversa, Leech, Entomologist, xxiii. p. 46 (1890). 



Daimio narada, var. diversa, Leech, Butt. China &c. p. 566, pi. xxxviii. fig. 14, S (1894). 



This insect is quite as distinct from S. narada, Moore, as are some of the admitted 

 species inter se, and there seems to be no advantage in treating it as a variety of 

 narada. 



Specimens from the Khasia Hills agree with those from Central China. We have 

 not seen it from any intermediate locality. 



