426 L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin — Butterflies of Sumatra. [No. 3, 
225. *Euthalia parta, Moore. 
ITagen. Originally described from Borneo. Unknown to us. 
226. Euthalia ? zichri, Butler. 
Originally described (but not figured) from Sarawak in Borneo. 
Distant describes and figures it from Malacca, but neither figure or 
description exactly agrees with Butler’s description of the species. 
Nor do our Sumatran specimens agree much better with the type or 
the Malacca example. We have here to do either with one very 
variable species, or several local races. A considerable series from 
various localities is required to settle the point. In Sumatra it is 
exceedingly rare, Dr. Martin has obtained two or three specimens only 
from the mountains. 
227. Euthalia anosia, Moore. 
Hagen. Everywhere rare throughout its considerable range of 
habitat. Dr. Martin possesses a single specimen from Kampong Singha- 
pura, south of Namoe Oekor, captured in April, 1891. Besides this 
specimen Dr. Martin caught another himself at Ayer Panas, 18 miles 
inland from the town of Malacca, and near the spot where Dr. A. R. 
Wallace, F. R. S., captured the type of Prothoe calydonia, Hewitson, 
and a third in April, 1895, at the lower end of the Jibi Kola, near 
Darjiling, in the eastern Himalayas, all these specimens from widely 
separated localities are precisely similar. 
228. Euthalia lubentina, Cramer. 
Hagen as lubentina , Horsfield and Moore [sic]. A rare species in 
Sumatra as elsewhere. Occurs at higher elevations in Sumatra, at 
Soengei Batoe and in the G-ayoe mountains. Dr. Martin obtained one 
pair at Kotta Lembaroe in Deli in 1888. 
229. Euthalia adonia, Cramer. 
Vollenlioven. Hagen as adonia, Horsfield and Moore [sic]. Grose 
Smith as adoma [sic]. Staudinger. Very rare, Dr. Martin has obtained 
a single female. It seems to occur at the same elevations and localities 
as E. garuda , Moore, and the larva probably feeds on the same tree 
(mangoe). The specimen now in Dr. Martin’s collection was caught 
by himself on a small mangoe tree behind the Chinese merchant’s house 
near the Battak restliouse in Bindjei town. He saw a second in 
June, 1894, also on a mangoe tree in the garden of the Loboe Dalam 
hospital, but as he was on duty, he could not secure it. He has never 
seen a male. 
