1886,] Insects collected in Tavoy and in Siam. 451 



Danais aglea, Moore (nee Cramer), Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. 822. 

 A few males from Tavoy, Ponsekai, and the hills. 



Danais (Eadena) vulgaris, Butler. 



3. Danais (Bahora) ceocea. 



D. crocea, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1866, p. 57, n. 53, pi. iv, fig. 5. 

 Two males from Tavoy. 



*4. Danais (Oaduga) melaneus. 



Papilio melaneus, Cramer, Pap. Ex., vol. i, pi. xxx, fig. D (1775). 

 Three males from Ponsekai. 



Danais (Gaduga) tytia, Gray. 

 *5. Danais (Salatura) genutia. 



Papilio genutia, Cramer, Pap. Ex., vol. iii, pi. ccvi, figs. C, D, male (1779). 

 Danais plexippus, Moore (wee Linngens), Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. 822. 

 Two specimens from Tavoy. 



Danais (Limnas) chrtsippus, Linn^us. 



*6. EuPLCEA (Danisepa) diocletianus. 

 Papilio diocletianus, Fabricius, Ent. Syst., vol. iii, pt. 1, p. 40, n. 118 (1793). 

 Salpinx rhadamanthus, Moore (nee Fabricius), Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, 

 p. 822. 



Two males from Tavoy. 



*7. EuPLCEA {Pademma) erichsonii. 



E. erichsonii, Felder, Eeise Novara, Lep., vol. ii, p. 324, n. 444 (1865). 

 Salpinx crassa, Moore (nee Butler), Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. 822. 



A single male from Tavoy which does not quite agree with Mr. 

 Moore's diagnosis of this species (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1883, p. 307, 

 n. 11), as the third, fourth, and fifth upper submarginal spots on the upper- 

 side of the forewing are quite separate from, instead of being slightly 

 confluent with, their opposite marginal spots. Mr. Moore in the above 

 cited paper gives E. crassa from Siam and Cochin China only ; he gives 

 JS. erichsonii from Moulmein only, E. jpemhertoni from Magaree, Pegu, 

 B. apicalis from British Burma, E. burmeisteri from Upper Tenasserim, 

 and E. masoni from Tenasserim — all these species coming into his genus 

 Pademma. He seems to have lost sight of the specimens he gave in his 

 Upper Tenasserim paper under the name of Salpinx crassa from " Ah- 

 sown ; Moulmein to Meetan ; Hatsiega ; Naththoung to Paboga ; Taoo, 

 3,000 — 5,000 feet," unless he has distributed them amongst the numerous 

 species above-mentioned, all of which are from the region dealt with 

 in this paper. There can be no doubt whatever that a very laro-e 

 proportion of the new species and some of the older ones given by 

 Mr. Moore in his paper on Enploeina will have to disappear ; in the col- 



