4 L. de Niceville — On Erites, an oriental [No. 1, 



{Moore) ; Perak (Distant) ; Mepl ay Valley, January ; Thoungyeen forests, 

 March ; near Moulmein, October (Marshall and de Niceville) ; Yoonzaleen 

 Valley, November; Mjitta, January, both in Burma; Rawan, Selangor, 

 Malay Peninsula, December (collection de Niceville). 



In this species there are four small equal-sized ocelli and one large 

 ocellus to the fore wing, the ocelli of the hindwing prominent; the inner 

 band of the hindwing strongly outwardly angled in the middle ; the outer 

 band is twice outwardly angied, once in the middle, and once where 

 it is crossed by the second subcostal nervule, this feature being only 

 found in the otherwise quite distinct species, E. elegans. 



6. Erites eotundata, n. sp. 



E angularis, Watson (nee Moore), Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc, vol. iii, p. 19, 

 11. 3S(1SSS). 



Habitat : Burma. 



Expanse : <?, 2-0 to 21 ; 2 , 2-2 to 2-4 inches. 



Description : Male. Upperside, both wings semi-transparent, 

 brownish-ochreous. Foreiving with the two discal bands of the underside 

 showing through by transparency ; a large, almost round (slightly oval) 

 black ocellus in the first median interspace and extending slightly into 

 the two interspaces beyond, obscurely pupilled with plumbeous, and sur- 

 rounded with an ochreous ring. Hindwing with a prominent discal 

 ocbreous band, outwardly angled in the middle ; four large round blind 

 black ocelli, surrounded each by a very wide ochreous ring, the rings 

 touching, thus forming a continuous band, one ocellus in each interspace 

 from the first median to the second subcostal nervule ; two fine ochreous 

 and two fine fuscous marginal lines. Underside, both wings finely striated 

 with purplish-fuscous ; the four apical ocelli present in the forewing of 

 E. angularis, Moore and the five of the hindwing reduced to minute 

 black dots in this species. Forewing with the fifth large ocellus much 

 as above, but the black portion is smaller, the ochreous ring wider, and 

 the pupil prominent and silvery ; two prominent discal deep ochreous 

 bands outwardly sharply defined by a black thread commencing close 

 to the submedian nervure, the inner band straight, crossing the dis- 

 coidal cell obliquely aboxit its middle, and becoming lost before reach- 

 ing the subcostal nervure ; the outer band curved and bounding the 

 wide ochreous outer ring of the large ocellus in the first median 

 interspace, the band ending on the third median nervule. Hindwing 

 with faint traces of two discal bands, the inner one straight, the outer 

 one angled outwardly once only, as in all the species of the genus 

 except E. angularis ; the marginal lines as on the upperside. Female 

 hardly differs from the male, except that the wings are broader, 



