214 Wood- Mason & de Nic£ville — On the ffliopalocerous [No. 4, 



seen by ourselves, inserted with an asterisk prefixed to each of the latter to 

 distinguish them from those of which we have received examples. 



LEPIDOPTERA RHOPALOCERA. 



Family NYMPHALID,E. 

 Subfamily Dana.lnje. 



1. Hestia cadelli. 



K. cadelli, Wood-Mason and de NiceVille, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 1880, vol. 

 xlix, pt. ii, p. 225, pi., xiii, fig. 1 $ . 



Since our first paper was published, we have received numerous speci- 

 mens of both sexes of this species from South Andaman from Mr. de 

 Roepstorff. 



? . All the wings broader, with the markings of the same shape, 



situation, size, and shade as in the male, from which, in fact, the female 



differs in the proportions of the organs of flight just in the same manner 



as does H. liadeni $ from H. cadelli $ (vide J. A. S. B., 1880, PI. XIII). 



*2. Hestia AGAMARSCHANA,t Felder. 



Andaman Islands (Felder). 



3. Danais melanoleuca, Moore. 



4. Eupikea core, Cramer. 



We have received no specimens of this common species since 1872, 

 when the native collector Moti Ram forwarded a single example from 

 Port Blair. 



5. EUPL(EA ANDAMANENSIS, Atk. 



Subfamily Satyrltos. 



6. Lethe ettropa, Fabr. 



7. Melanitis leda, Linn. 



8. Melanitis ismene, Cramer. 



9. Melanitis zitenius. 



Pap. zitenius, Herbst, Natur. Syst. Ins. Schmett. viii Theil, p. 5, pi. 182, figs. 1, 2. 

 The single male received from Mr. de Eoepstorff has the round black 

 spot on the yellow-red band of the anterior wings divided longitudinally 

 into two parts by the yellow of the band, and the white pupil obsolete. In 

 other respects, especially in its less falcate anterior wings, it agrees best 

 with specimens in the Museum from Upper Tenasserim. 



10. Mtcalesis (Calysisme) perseus, Fabr. 



11. Mycalesis (Calysisme) drusia, Cramer. 



12. Mycalesis (Virapa) radza, Moore. 



f ? ' agamarsena' from &ya/ji.os, ' unmarried,' and apo-nv-Hptrevos, l male,' in allusion 

 to the fact that the describer was ignorant of the opposite (female) sex. 



