194 
FASCICULI MALATENSES 
The colour of the abdomen is of a very dull dark-brown rather than 
black. The wings appear of a much richer colour when the insect is flying 
than after death. 
This species belongs to a group of closely allied species or perhaps 
geographical races, which range from the Khasia Hills (where E. brunnea^ a 
fairly distinct form, much larger than the typical E. ochracea occurs)^ through 
Burmah and the Peninsula into the Archipelago, where again the forms are 
mostly large, e,g.^ E. lara from Sumatra, etc. 
[^Camp Jor (Grubauer) with variations in size : Kelantan (Waterstradt).’] 
5. Euphaea mason i, Selys 
Pseudophaea masoni, Kirby, Cat, Odonata,^. no (1891). 
4^. Mabek, Jalor. July, 1901. 
‘ Black, except for the transparent patches on the wings.’ 
These specimens agree closely with the types from Tenasserim, but the 
costal spaces are not black, only the sub-costal spaces are so coloured. Occurs 
also in Tonquin. 
6. Euphaea aspasia, Selys 
Camp Jor, 2,000 m. (r ft.) (Grubauer). 
[‘ Identical with specimens received from Mr. G. Schreider from Dalak, 
mountains of Rajah, High Sumatra.’] 
7 . Euphaea impar, Selys 
Recorded by myself (P.Z,S. 1902 (i), p. 87) from the Kelantan River. 
Not represented in this collection. 
8. Dysphaea limbata, Selys 
Dysphaea limbata, Kirby ^ Cat. Odonata, p. 110(1891); Kruger, Stett. Ent. Zeit., 
1898, p. 78 ; Laidlaw, P.Z.S. 1902 (i), p. 88. 
$. Mabek, Jalor. July, 1901. 
‘ On river ; colour velvety black, with a shade of purple on the wings.’ 
^ . Camp Jor (Grubauer) : Kelantan (Waterstradt).’] 
I believe that no specimen has previously been captured so far to the 
north as that taken in Jalor. The genus is confined to the Peninsula and to 
the Islands of Java, Sumatra, and Borneo. 
