620 JOUR^^AL, BOMBAY NATURAL HIST. SOCIETY, Vol. XXVIII. 
mens comes to 31 for the right wings and 28 for the left whilst in both of the fore- 
wings of Stevens’ specimen there are 32. ) There is a basal antenodal of the 2nd 
series in all wings. 
Abdomen black marked w'ith green and yellow as follows : — 1st segment with 
a small, dorsal streak of yellow and the sides broadly apple green ; 2nd segment 
marked as in the male but the sides more broadly and the basal half green turn- 
ing gradually to yellow apically ; segments 3 to 7 have an apical, dorsal, yellow 
triangle formed by the confluence of 2 spots and a transverse, triangular spot 
on the transverse ridge. (This ridge has been named the “jugum”byDr. 
Laidlaw), this spot also formed by the confluence of 2 spots ; segments 8 to 10 
are broadly yellow on the sides. 
Anal appendages very short and filiform, brown. 
Dentigerous plate which has been figured in the preface to the subfamily, 
strongly forked into robust spines, directed downwards. 
Hab. Type from Sikkim, in the Berlm Museum is a female. Laidlaw’s speci- 
men is also a female, from Cherrapunji, Assam, now in the Indian Museum. The 
male, which has not been described before is from Gopaldhara and I am indebted 
to Mr. H. Stevens for it. I hav« seen also a female collected by Mr. Inglis 
above Mangphu, 5,500’. 
The differences between the descriptions of Karsch’s C. sikkima and Laidlaw’s 
Cepkalceschna sp. are not greater than those between individual specimens 
collected by l\Ir. Stevens and Mr. Inglis so that I have no hesitation in treating 
them as one and the same species. 
[I'o he continued.) 
