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



212. Parnara narooa. 



Hesperia narooa, Moore, Proo. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. 687, pi. xlv, fig. 4. 



Seven males and four females in and around Silcuri, 26tli May to 

 21st June. 



213. Parnara austeni. 



Baoris austeni, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1883, p. 533. 



Eiglit males and two females, Silcuri and around, 1st June to Sth 

 August, one of wHcli has been identified by Mr. Moore. 



214. Parnara ornata, PL XVIII, Figs. 7, 7a, ^, 



Hesperia ornata, Felder, Raise Novara, Lep., vol. iii, p. 515, n. 900, pi. Ixxii, 

 fig. 6 (1867). 



One male, Doarband, 23rd May, appears to agree with Felder's 

 figure and description of this species from Java. 



215. Parnara assamensis. 

 PL XVIII, Figs. 5, 5a, ^ ; PL XVII, Pigs. 7, 7a, ? . 



^ , ^ . Upperside, hoth ivings rich dark vandyke-brown prominently 

 marked with semi-transparent white lustrous spots, with the base of 

 the interno-median and the basal three-fourths of the inner margin of 

 the forewing, and the posterior or inner half of the hindwing from the 

 base nearly to the outer margin along the veins, clothed with olive- 

 brown setae. Forewing with ten spots in the male and eleven in the 

 female, viz., — two oblong at the end of the cell, disjunct in the male, 

 but connected at their inner nnd opposite ends in the female, three 

 subapical, and five discal in the male, but six in the female, forming an 

 oblique series extending from the submedian nervure to the hinder dis- 

 coidal nervule in the male, but to the subcostal (or front discoidal) in the 

 female ; of which spots the first is subtriangular, touches the submedian 

 nervure, and is subequal to the fourth ; the second, in the same inter- 

 space with the first, is equal to the first subapical, and lies close to, but 

 does not touch, the first median nervule ; the third, the largest of all, 

 is equal to, or rather larger than, the first and fourth put together, and 

 acute-angled at its outer end ; the fourth is rhomboidal ; the fifth 

 rather larger than the second ; and the sixth, present in the female 

 only, is shaped somewhat like one of the strokes of a section-sign (§). 

 Hindwing with a small oval discal spot sometimes accompanied by a 

 very minute dot in front of the third median nervule. Underside, 

 forewing marked as above, but with tlie hindermost spot touching 

 the submedian nervure outwardly diffused. Hindwing covered with 



