A LIST OF THE BUTTERFLIES OF BORNEO, 93 
Sandakan (Pryer). 
Distribution: Malay Peninsula, Nias Island and Sumatra. 
Druce, de Nicéville and Swinhoe regard /ambi as a synonym 
of puspa, but Chapman gives this name subspecific distinction. 
305. Lycaenopsis (Lycaenopsis) limbata placida, de Nicév. 
Cyaniris placida, de Nicév., Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng. Vol. 
IOIULS JPN JO. OSs i, Gh qol Tae. eS (Clusxe)e 
Sarawak: near Batu Lawi, Limbang, Mt. Saribu, Mt. Ma- 
tang, Mt. Penrissen, Mt. Santubong , Mt. Lingga and Kuching 
(Sar. Mus.). First record for Borneo. 
Distribution: Sikkim, Assam, Khasi Hills, 'Tenasserim, 
Penang and Sumatra. 
Two females in the Sarawak Museum are considerably darker 
on the upperside than in the description given by Bingham 
though he admits (/.c.) that he is in ‘lem: as to his female 
specimens. In the ee ak examples the general colour is a 
dull fuscous black, relieved discally in the fore-wing by an 
oblong patch of blueish-white shghtly iridescent ; the hind- 
wing similar, though the patch is much reduced. In the fore- 
wing there is a small black spot at the end of cell. 
306. Lycaenopsis (Lycaenopsis) strophis, H. H. Druce. 
Cyaniris strophis, H. H. Druce, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 
Dees pl NOCNUE. fie, 4. 3 (1895). 
Mt. Kina Balu (Waterstradt) ; Mt. Penrissen (Sar, Mus). 
Druce (/.c.) asks, “Can this be a seasonal form of C. dilec- 
lissima? On the underside they are almost identical, but on 
the upperside the hind-wings are strikingly different.” 
Chapman on the other hand suggests that it may turn out to 
be a form of limbata; while a third suggestion comes from 
Fruhstorfer who places it provisionally as a sub-species of 
singalensis, Felder. 
807. . Lycaenopsis (Lycaenopsis) dilecta, Moore. 
Polyommatus dilectus, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. p. 
IBS) (LUST De 
Sarawak: near Batu Lawi and Mt. Matang 
Mus.). 
This is the first record for Borneo. The males were very 
common along the mountain streams between Madihit and 
Batu Lawi. 
Distribution: Himalayas; Simla to Sikkim; Assam; Upper 
Burma ; Arracau. 
The ‘only difference between the Sarawak examples and 
the described form is that the paleness in the centre of the 
_ lise of the fore-wing and upper discal area of the hind-wing is 
barely perceptible in the Sarawak specimens; though as this 
R. A. Soc., No. 60, I91T. 
3,200 ft. (Sar. 
