1895.] L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin— Butterflies of Sumatra. 459 
359. Lampides saturata, Snellen. 
Lycxna saturata, Snellen, Tijd. voor Ent., vol. xxxv, p. 137, n. 3 (1892). 
Originally described from. Java, but not figured. I am not quite 
sure of the identification, it is difficult to identify species of this genus 
without good figures. It is one of the commonest species of Lampides 
in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Java; I possess a very long 
suite of specimens of it from all these places. 
360. Lampides talinga, Kheil. 
Plebeius talinga , Kheil, Rhop. Nias, p. 29, n. 86, pi. v, figs. 32, male ; 33, female 
(1884). * 
Lampides talinga, de Niceville, Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc., vol. x, p. 39, n. 18, 
pi. S, figs. 27, male ; 28, female (1895). 
A very small and quite distinct species. Originally described from 
Nias, and is very common in Sumatra. 
361. Lampides elpis, Godart. 
Snellen. Hagen as elphis [sic], Godardt [sic]. 
362. *Lampides kankena, Felder. 
Snellen. Originally described from Kar Nicobar. I have seen 
the type specimen, a male, at Vienna. In the Indian Museum, Calcutta, 
are a pair of specimens from Nankowri, one of the Nicobar Islands, and 
I possess males from Nias Island and the Philippines. Its occurrence in 
Sumatra is not at all improbable. It is a very distinct species, has the 
striae on the uuderside arranged as in L. elpis , Godart; the male on the 
upperside is of a very pale silvery-blue. 
363. Lampides kondulana, Felder. 
Originally described from Kondul Isle, one of the Nicobars. I 
have seen the type in Vienna. In coloration the male is similar to that 
sex of the three preceding species, but the black border to the wings 
on the upperside is reduced to a marginal thread. On the underside 
the striae are as in the two last-named species. I possess specimens 
from Nacondam Island, the Nicobar Isles, Burma, the Malay Peninsula, 
Sumatra and Java. The “ Gupido ” cserulea , Druce, from Borneo, Proc. 
Zool. Soc. Lond., 1873, p. 349, n. 13, pi. xxxii, fig. 6, male, is almost 
certainly a synonym of this species. 
364. Lampides subdita, Moore. 
First described from Mergui in Lower Burma. Is not uncommon 
in Sumatra at Namoe Oekor and in the Battak mountains. 
J. ii. 58 
