154 NYMPHALID^!. 



ocellus at the tornus only encircled with a very broad ochraceous 

 ring. Hind wing : a slightly cnrved series of five similar ocelli, 

 the posterior two ringed with ochraceous, the anterior three with 

 purplish. Both fore and hind wing with very slender sinuous 

 subterminal and terminal dark lines. Antenna?, head, thorax and 

 abdomen pale brown, whitish beneath; the antennae annulated 

 with white and ochraceous, on the club. 



Exp. S 2 54-60 mm. (2-13-2-38"). 



Hab. Tenasserim ; and Malayan Subregion to Borneo. 



185. Erites angularis, Moore, P. Z. S. 1878, p. 825 s ; M. ty de N: 

 Butt. Ind. i, 1883, p. 236, pi. 16, fig. 50 $ ; Moore, Lep. Ind. 

 ii, 1893-96, p. 115, pi. 121, figs. 2, 2 a, 2 b, tf $ . 



<$ 2 . Resembles E. argentina, but differs as follows : — Fore wiug 

 comparatively longer and narrower, the apex more produced, the 

 termen more oblique. Hind wing : the termen more deeply 

 scalloped, decidedly caudate at apex of vein 4. Upperside : the 

 ocelli on the hind wing better defined. Underside : ground-colour 

 much paler. Fore wing : the dark discal and postdiscal bauds 

 and the series of small anterior ocelli ill-defined, the tornal large 

 ocellus elongate with a large blue centre. Hind wing : the 

 transverse discal bands outwardly angulate in the middle, not 

 straight ; discal and submedian bands more ochraceous, the curved 

 series of ocelli much smaller. 



Exp. 6 2 62-64 mm. (2-44-2-5"). 



Hab. Burma : Tenasserim. 



186. Erites rotundata, de Niceville, J. A. S. B. 1893, pt. 2, p. 4. 

 Erites beelinga, Moore, Lep. Ind. ii, 1893-96, p. 114. 



$ 2 • Differs from E. angularis on the upperside in the tornal 

 ocellus on the fore wing and all the ocelli on the hind wing being 

 clearly defined and encircled with very broad ochraceous rings : 

 there is also a short postdiscal transverse, ochraceous, medially 

 angulated band on the hind wing. Underside much paler, more 

 ochraceous than in E. angularis ; the whole of the wings, not only 

 the basal half as in E. argentina, with short transverse brown 

 striae ; no transverse dark bands on the hind wing ; the ocelli on 

 both fore and hind wing, with the exception of the tornal ocellus 

 on the fore, minute, sometimes reduced to mere specks, or alto- 

 gether obsolete. For the rest, shape of the wings, &c, this form 

 is very close to E. angularis. 



Exp. 6 2 58-62 mm. (2-27-2-43"). 



Hab. Recorded from the hills between Burma and Tenasserim. 



According to Mr. Doherty the genitalia of E. angularis and 

 E. rotundata are structurally different. I have therefore kept the 

 forms separate. In any case, E. angularis, rotundata and the 

 form next described, falcipennis, are very closely allied to each 

 other. 



