SATYRIN2E. 
285 
tlie spots on the hindwing being replaced by perfect ocelli, each of which have a 
black centre, a white pupil, and a broad ochreous outer ring; and the submarginal 
lunular line and marginal bordering line is ochreous. Body pale-brown above, white 
beneath; legs pale ochreous-white beneath; palpi clothed with brown hairs, side 
streak white; collar white; antennm reddish-ochreous, annulated with white, with 
blackish subterminal band, 
Exj>anse, S 2 to 2§, ? 2f inches. 
Habitat. —Sikkim ; Bhotan. 
Distribution. —According to Mr. H. J. Elwes (Tr. Ent. Soc. 1888, 318), u It is 
extremely rare in Sikkim, where Mr. Otto Moller procured a single female in June. 
In Bhotan, however, it is commoner, as Mr. Knyvefct’s collectors procured several 
males in June on the hills, two or three marches north of Buxa. 5 ' 
Of our illustrations of this species on Plate No. 89, figs. 1, la, represent the 
male, and figs. 2, 2a, the female, the latter taken from the specimen captured 
by Mr. Moller, and now in the collection of Mr. J. Id. Leech. 
Indo-Malayan and Chinese allied species of Sinchula. — S. Dataensis (Debis 
Dataensis, Semper, Eeise Archipel. Philip. Lep. p. 57, pi. xi. fig. 4, J, 1886). 
Habitat , Luzon, Philippines.—S. Moupinensu (Debis Moupinensis Poujade, Bulk 
Soc. Ent. France, 1884, p. cxl.). Habitat , E. Tibet.— S. Violaceopicta (Debis viola- 
ceopicta, Poujade, id. 1884, p. clviii.)* Habitat , E. Tibet.— 8. Titania (Debis titania, 
Leech, Entomologist, 1891, p. 67). Habitat , W. China.— S. Galisto (Debis Calisto, 
Leech, Entomologist, 1891, p. 23). Habitat , W. China. 
Genus KERRATA. 
Wings short, broad. Fore-wing triangular ; costa almost straight, apex obtuse, 
exterior margin almost erect, even, posterior angle rounded, posterior margin 
straight; cell broad, extending more than half the length ; second subcostal emitted 
immediately before end of the cell; discocellulars excurved, waved, radials from 
near upper end. Male, on upperside of the forewing with an inwardly oblique trans¬ 
verse discal dentiform glandular patch, disposed from the base of upper median to 
the submedian, above which it is interrupted, the patch exclusively clothed with very 
peculiar shaped jet-black scales, which are entirely different in shape from any pre¬ 
sent in this group of Satyrids, these black scales being moderately short, with the 
base attenuating to a point, a broad expanding tip having a lateral excurved point 
on each side, and in some of them also a central point. Hindiving with the ex¬ 
terior margin slightly scalloped and obtusely angular at end of the middle median; 
cell extending to more than half the length; middle median emitted before the end. 
