256 Wood-Mason & de Niceville — On the BTiopalocerous [No. 4, 



111. ISMENE BADRA. 



Goniloba badra, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. p. 778, $ ? . 

 A single female in very fine condition. 



112. Tagiades alica, Moore. 

 Numerous specimens of both sexes. 



113. Tagiades ravi, Moore. 



114. Tagiades menaka. 



Pterygospidea menaka, Moore, Proc. Zool. Lond. 1865, p. 778, S ? , from 'N. E. 

 Bengal.' 



Male and female. 



115. Tagiades ehagava, var. andamanica, nov. PL IV, Fig. 5, $ . 



Satarupa bhagava, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1865, p. 781, <?, from 'N. E. 

 Bengal.' 



Numerous males and a female from S. Andaman. 



S . With the cream-coloured subbasal band of the posterior wings in 

 one specimen narrower and not continued on to the anterior wings, in an- 

 other as broad as in an Upper Tenasserim example, and continued faintly 

 on to the anterior wings ; with the spot at the end of the cell larger than 

 in the female and not isolated from the fuscous outer margin ; and with 

 the transverse abdominal band concolorous with the subbasal. 



$ . Wings above paler, with the spots of the anterior wings whiter and 

 larger, and the band of the posterior ones pure white, much broader, and 

 extending on to the anterior ones broadly up to the submedian vein and 

 thence narrowly up to the first median veinlet between the two pairs of 

 black spots. 



Posterior wings with a black speck at the end of the cell on a white 

 ground on both sides, and the two anterior of the semicircular series of 

 black spots on the upperside nearly, but on the underside wholly, placed on 

 the white subbasal band. 



A specimen from the Sikkim Hills, 3000 feet, differs in having the 

 band broader both on the- posterior wings and between the two pairs of 

 spots in the anterior ones. 



116. Plesionetjra altsos, Moore. 



Our specimens from S. Andaman, the Sikkim Hills, and the N. E. 

 Frontier districts (Sib^agar, etc.,) all agree with one another in always 

 having three conjugated obliquely placed subapical semitransparent spots 

 and usually three in the reversed oblique series, the innermost of which is 

 separated from the next to it by a greater interval than this is from the 

 outermost, which latter is the absent one in those specimens with only two 

 in the series. 



Males and females. 



