412 L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin — Butterflies of Sumatra. [No. 3, 
C. hajadeta , tlie male differing from that sex of the former on the 
upperside of the forewing in having a hroad black marginal border 
instead of three waved black lines, and in the hindwing in having the 
inner of the three marginal black lines discontinuous instead of con¬ 
tinuous. The secondary sexual characters of the male consists in some 
specimens (absent in others) of the fifth subcostal and upper discoidal 
nervules of the forewing on the upperside on entering the apical black 
margin being defined on both sides by a narrow line of ochreous. It is 
much rarer than G. hajadeta , and occurs in the same localities, but is not 
found higher than Natnoe Oekor. The female is unknown to us. 
177. ClRRHOCHROA MITHILA, Moore. 
Hagen as aoris. G. aoris, Doubleday and Hewitson, is confined 
to the Eastern Himalayas, Assam, and Upper Burma, Dr. Hagen’s 
identification probably applies to the present species. It is somewhat 
rare, and found in forests at low elevations. The male has no secondary 
sexual characters. 
178. ClRRHOCHROA ( Paduca) fasciata, Felder. 
Wallace. Stau dinger. Kirby. Semper. I have fully described 
the male secondary sexual characters of this species in Butt, of India, 
vol. ii, p. 109. It is the smallest and weakest-flying species in the 
genus, inhabits forest, and is always somewhat rare. It is found from 
near the sea to the mountains as high as Bekantschan. In 1890 
Dr. Martin found it unusually plentiful at the Saentis Estate near 
the sea, where a flowering tree was daily covered, so long as the 
flowers lasted, with this species, and on two occasions he captured 
more than forty quite fresh specimens. 
179. Stibochiona kannegietert, Fruhstorfer. 
S. tcannegieteri , Fruhstorfer, Ent. Nach., vol. xx, p. 305 (1894). 
Snellen as coresia. Grose Smith as coresia. Hagen as coresia. Stau- 
dinger as coresia. Kirby as coresia. Originally described from Sumatra 
and Borneo. Very near to S. coresia, Hiibner, from Java, (from whence 
also Herr H. Fruhstorfer has described S. rothschildi) , that species in the 
male on the upperside of the hindwing having a series of submarginal 
white spots which are absent in the Sumatran species, and in the 
female having a broad white marginal band which in the Sumatran 
species is replaced by a series of white spots similar to the male of 
S. coresia. Occurs in our area from the lower hills to the Central 
Plateau, is not common, and is seldom procured in perfect condition. 
The lowest localities where Dr. Martin has caught it are Namoe Oekor 
