447 
1895.] L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin— Butterflies of Sumatra. 
301. Logania marmorata, Moore. 
Originally described from Elpliinstone Island in tlie Mergni 
Archipelago of Lower Burma. 
302. Logania luca, de Niceville. 
L. luca, de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. Ixiii, pt. 2, p. 28, n. 24, pi. ii, fig. 13, 
female (4894). 
Found in Burma (Rangoon, the Daunat Range and Ataran Valley 
in Tenasserim), in the Malay Peninsula (Perak), and in Sumatra. 
This is the species referred to by Doherty under Logania massalia in 
Journ. A. S. B., vol. lx, pt. 2, p. 37, n. 10 (1891), as being undescribed 
from Perak. The general colour of the ground on the underside is 
brownish-ochreous or pale ferruginous. The figure has been badly re¬ 
produced, as it shews the apex of the fore wing far too acute. 
303. Logania massalia, Doherty. 
Described from Margherita in Upper Assam. I possess specimens 
from the Daunat Range in Tenasserim, Burma, from Singapore cap¬ 
tured by Dr. Martin, and from Sumatra and Java. The ground-colour 
of the underside is quite different to that of L. luca , de Niceville, being 
white speckled with blackish and ochreous, instead of pale ferruginous. 
The males of both these species have a small round white spot in the 
middle of the disc of the forewing on the upperside, the hindwing 
throughout concolorous with the forewing, both being dull purplish- 
fuscous. A list of the known species of the genus will be found in 
Journ. A. S. B., vol. Ixiii, pt. 2, p. 29 (1894). The Loganias are true 
inhabitants of large forest, and fly like Gerydus round the buds of low 
bushes, but are decidedly quicker on the wing than they. L. malayica, 
Distant, and L. sriwa , Distant, occur all the year round in the forests 
of the plains, and do not go much higher than Namoe Oekor. Both 
species remind one when flying of a common lycsenid, such as Gyaniris 
or Catochrysops. L. marmorata, Moore, L. luca , de Niceville, and 
L. massalia are found at higher elevations beginning with Namoe Oekor, 
and occur mostly in the first months of the year, January and Febru¬ 
ary. In 1893 and 1894 Dr. Martin caught a pair of L. marmorata 
in coitu in January in the forest south of Namoe Oekor. The white 
patch on the upperside of the forewing not reaching the base of the 
wing will at once separate L. massalia from L. marmorata and L. luca. 
304. Zarona pharygoides, de Niceville. 
Z. pharygoides, de Niceville, Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soo., vol. v, p. 208, pi. E, 
fig. 3, male (1890). 
The type specimen was from Johore in the Malay Peninsula. Dr. 
