29 
1891.] W. Doherty — A List cf the Butterflies of Engano. 
Herr Kheil describes a Oyaniris from Nias, puspinus, dubiously dis- 
tinct from G. puspa. Zizera kar sandra certainly occurs in Engano, but I 
do not seem to have taken it. Herr Klieil gives it in his Nias list under 
the name of Flebeius lysimon. 
40. Pithecops hylax, Fab. Scarce. 
Subfamily Gerydinm.* 
41. Paeagebydus unicolob, Felder, (horsfieldii, Moore). The 
identity of horsfieldii and unicolor seems generally accepted by the 
German naturalists, and Mr. de Niceville, who has examined Felder’s 
types (three females) of unicolor at Vienna, has come to the same con- 
clusion. 
Paragerydus certainly does differ considerably in aspect from 
Allotinus. I think it may be kept distinct from it for the present, on 
account of the approximate second and third subcostal branches in the 
forewing of the male. 
Family Pieeid®. 
42. Teeias haeina, Horsf. Only one taken. Herr Kheil does not 
record it from Nias. 
43. Teeias hecabe, Linn. 
44. Teeias saei, Horsf. Taken only on the hills. 
45. Appias hippo, Cramer. Only females taken. It may be the 
Javanese Appias lyncida, and not hippo. 
46. Huphina etiiel, n. sp. Male, above white, all the veins, 
including the internal and medians, black, and bordered with diffused 
black scales, the cell and the upper median vein heavily bordered with 
black, the costa tinged with lemon. Outer border rather widely and 
equally black, a dark, diffused outer-discal band parallel with the margin 
as far as the internal vein, cutting off seven submarginal spots, all white 
except the first, which is bright yellow, slender, the last large and out- 
* In the 1889 volume of this Journal, by an unfortunate blunder I described the 
fore tarsi of the Gerydince as like the middle and hind ones, in spite of my numerous 
drawings showing the contrary. I also gave Herr Kheil’s Allotinus aphocha as 
equivalent to horsfieldii. A. aphocha may be distinot, though badly described, and 
figured only on the underside, where it is identical with horsfieldii. I now doubt 
if my proposed genus Malais is distinct from Logania, though a Bornean form 
r sembling L. sriwa does have the tibia) short and thick. 
