374 Wood-Mason & de Niceville — On the Bhopalocerous [No. 4, 



174. Papilio (Fanosmiopsis, subg. nov.J ehetenor. 



P. rhetenor, Westwood, Arc. Ent., vol. i, p. 59, pi. xvi, figs. 1, la, male (1842) ; P. 

 icarius, id., Cab. Or. Ent,, p. 5, pi. ii, female (1848). — Wood-Mason, Ann. and Mag. of 

 Nat. Hist., fifth series, vol. ix, pp. 104-5 (1882). 



Two females only, Nemotha, 28tli September, flying in company 

 witli P. dasarada, many specimens of which were taken, bat only two 

 preserved, the rest having been used for dissection and experiment or 

 been in too bad a state to be worth preservation. 



Mr. Wood-Mason notes that they are " scentless." 



175. Papilio (Pangeranopsis, subg. nov.J elephenor. 



P. elephenor, Doubleday, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xvi, p. 305 (1845). 



One male, Dhurmkhal, 5th July, of this rare species, which also 

 occurs at Jorehat, Assam (/. L, Sherwill). 



176. Papilio (Panosmia, subg. nov.J dasarada. 



P. dasarada, Moore, Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C, vol. i, p. 96, 

 n, 195 (1857). — Wood- Mason, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fifth series, vol. ix, 

 p. 105 (1882). 



Two females, on Nemotha, 21st September and 4th October. 



Mr. Wood-Mason notes that they had '' the strong scent of caged 

 porcupines with a touch of musk." 



177. Papilio {Panosmia) nevilli, PL XV, Figs. 2, 2 a, $, 



P. nevilli, Wood-Mason, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fifth, series, vol. ix, p. 105, 

 n. 2 (1882) ; Papilio, n. s. ?, Nevill, List Diurn. Lep. Indian Museum, Calcutta, 

 p. 1, n. 7 (1870). 



" (^ . Posterior wings above with two large pink- white spots, one 

 between the discoidal vein and the second branch of the subcostal, 

 occupying all but the two ends of the space ; the other in the space 

 next in front, smaller and not extending so far towards the base of the 

 space, and with three bright crimson siibmarginal lunules, two subequal 

 in the interspaces between the branches of the median vein, and the 

 third between the third median veinlet and the discoidal vein, equal to, 

 or slightly greater than, the other two taken together ; below with a 

 email pink- white spot between the first branch of the subcostal and the 

 costal veins, forming with the two visible on both sides of the organs 

 a series of three, all equally distant from the outer margin, the sub- 

 marginal lunules larger and subequal and much lighter coloured, and 

 with a fourth rather irregularly-shaped crimson spot, subequal to the 

 lunules and divided into two unequal parts by the first median vein, at 

 the end of the basal half of which it is placed, with the tails well deve- 

 loped, but not constricted at base." 



