678 L. de Niceville— List of the Butterflies of Bali, ^c. [No. 4, 



49. Mvcalesis (Loesa) oroatis, Hewitson. 

 Bali (Doherty). 



50. Lethe (Nemetis) minerva, Fabricius. 

 Bali (Doherty), Lombok (Fruhstorfer). 



51. Lethe (Debis) manthara. Felder. 



Bali (Doherty), Mynheer P. C. T. Snellen in Tijd. Toor Ent., vol. 

 xxxv, p. 4, n. 4 (1892), says that Debis manthara, Felder, is the same as 

 Debis mekara, Moore ; but this is incorrect, they are abundantly distinct 

 in the female sex, on the upperside the grouud-colour of both wings in 

 D. mekara is ferruginous, in D. manthara it is dull ochreous ; D. mekara 

 has the discal macular band of the forewing pure white and highly 

 angled, with a duplicated subapical white spot, while D. manthara h&s the 

 discal band iuconspicuous, curved (instead of angled), and pale ochreous, 

 with no subapical white spot ; while on the hind wing the five sub- 

 marginal black spots are much larger in D. manthara than in D. mekara. 

 The males of the two species are very similar, though D. manthara is 

 much the paler on the upperside of both wings. 



52. Lethe euro pa, Fabricius. 



Bali (Doherty), Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty). 



53. Lethe dyrta, Felder. 



Bali (Doherty), Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa (Doherty). 



54. Tpthima leuce, Doherty. 



Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sambawa, Sumba (Doherty). Mr. Doherty 

 describes the sex-mark of the male of this species as " whitish," but it 

 is in this species, as in all the species of Ypthima in which it is present, 

 more or less black. This is the species from Flores given by Mynheer 

 P. C. T. Snellen in Tijd. voor Ent., vol. xxxiv, p. 236, n. 12, pi. xv, fig. 1, 

 female (1891), as Y. baldus, Fabricius. 



55. Ypthima horsfjeldii, Moore. 



Bali (Doherty). Originally described from Java. 



56. Ypthima Philomela, Johanssen. 



Bali (Doherty and Fruhstorfer), Lombok (Fruhstorfer), Sumba 

 (Pagenstecher as Y. baldus, Fabricius). This in the Y. baldus of Mr. 

 Elwes' monograph of the genus (Trans. Ent, Soc. Lond., 1893, p. 14, n. 

 10, pi. i, figs. 15, 16, clasp and cedeagus of the male). See also the late 



