474 L. de Niceville & Dr. L. Martin — Butterflies of Sumatra. [No. 3, 
446. Tajuria burbona, Hewitson. 
Myrina burbona, Hewitson, Ill. Diurn. Lep., Lycsenidse, p. Supplement 24, 
n. 66, pi. Supplement iiia, fig. 95, female (1878). 
Charana datoe, Martin. 
Hewitson. Hagen as jalindra. Standinger as jalindra. Groso 
Smith. Originally described from Sumatra. It is a local race of 
T. jalindra , Horsfield, from Java, T. indra, Moore, from India, and 
T. tarpina , Hewitson, from the South Andaman Isles. The male of the 
Sumatran race has the black border to the fore wing on tlie upperside 
narrower than in the allied species. Dr. Martin described the male, 
Hewitson the female. Only a few males obtained in forest near 
Selesseh in April, May and June ; no female. 
447. *Tajuria longinus, Fabricius. 
Staudinger. Found on both sides of Sumatra—in Java and in 
the Malay Peninsula—so it is almost certain to occur in Sumatra 
also. 
448. Tajuria mantra, Felder. 
From Namoe Oekor to Bekantschan; is rarer than the species 
which next follows. 
449. Tajuria trayana, Hewitson. 
Grose Smith. Distant. Staudinger. Kirby. Butler. Originally 
described from Sumatra and Borneo. Common at low elevations in 
Sumatra. 
450. Tajuria tura, de Niceville. 
T. tura, de Niceville, Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc., vol. ix, p. 301, n. 27, pi. P, 
fig. 39, male (1895). 
Found very rarely in August in the Battak Mountains of Sumatra, 
and in Western Java. 
451. Tajuria tyro, de Niceville. 
T. tyro, de Niceville, Journ. Bomb. Nat. Hist. Soc., vol. ix, p. 302, n. 28, pi. P, 
fig. 40, female (1895). 
Occurs rarely in Burma and Sumatra. 
452. ^Tajuria is^ius, Hewitson. 
Grose Smith. Kirby. Originally described from Sumatra and 
Sarawak in Borneo. We have seen no specimen of it from Sumatra. 
See remarks below, No. 458. 
