672 L. de Niceville — List of the Butterflies of Bali, 8fc. [No. 4, 



8. Danais (Tirurnala) septentrionis, Butler. 



Lombok (Fruhstorfer) . Fruhstorfer does not record this species 

 from Lombok, though it certainly is found there. Perhaps he has 

 identified it as D. melissa hamata, MacLeay. 



9. *Danais (Nasuma) haruhasa, Doherty. 



Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa (Doherty and Fruhstorfer'). Fruh- 

 storfer says that D. erebus, Rober, from Ceram, Goram and Flores, des- 

 cribed in the same year as D. haruhasa, is the same species. 



10. *Danais (Nasuma) taimanu, Doherty. 

 Sumba (Doherty). 



11. Danais (Limnas) chrysippus, Linnaeus. 



Lombok (Moore), Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty). Mr. Doherty notes 

 that his specimens are somewhat intermediate between typical D. chry- 

 sippus and D. bataviana, Moore. Mr. Elwes says that of five specimens 

 from Sambawa in his collection, four are dark-coloured like those from 

 Bali and Lombok, and one female is paler, so that he considers 

 D. bataviana to be an inconstant variety of D. chrysippus. All the 

 specimens of this species in de Niceville's collection from Lombok are 

 quite constant and are typical D. bataviana. 



12. Danais (Limnas) bataviana, Moore. 



Bali (Doherty), Bali, Lombok (Fruhstorfer). This species can 

 typically be recognised by the dark ferruginous colour of the ground on 

 the upperside of both wings in both sexes. The markings are quite 

 as inconstant as are those in D. chrysippus, Linnaeus. Mr. Moore re- 

 stricts it to Java. 



13. *Danais (Salatura) plexippus, Linnaeus. 



Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty as D. genutia, Cramer). Mr. Doherty 

 says his specimens are intermediate between typical D. genutia, Cramer 

 (plexippus), and D. interna, Moore. We think it highly improbable that 

 typical D. plexippus is found in these islands. 



14. Danais (Salatura) intensa, Moore. 



Lombok (Moore and Fruhstorfer) . We have very numerous speci- 

 mens of this species from Lombok which are quite typical D. intensa. 

 It is, we think, almost certain that the Sambawa and Sumba species 

 (see above) are also D. intensa rather than D. plexippus. Mr. Fruhstorfer 

 describes a D. (Salatura) gemdia partita, from Lombok and Sambawa, 



