COLIINM. 
27 
7,000 feet.” Col. J, W. Yerbury captured it at Tliundiani in April, September and 
October. 
COLIAS CHITRALENSIS. 
Male. Upperside. Forewing with the pale sulphur-yellow area restricted to less 
than the basal half; discocellular spot less distinct and dull coloured. Hindwing 
basally tinged with pale sulphur-yellow. 
Expanse, 2 to 2|- inches. 
Habitat.— Chitral. 
Distribution. —Specimens taken at Jhela Drosh, Chitral, by Capt. S. ~W. Harris, 
and from the Shishikuh Valley in July and August, at 9,000 to 14,000 feet elevation 
by Capt. G. H. Colomb, are in the British Museum Collection. 
C0LIAS ZANEXOIDES. 
Plate 560, fig. 2, 2a J, 2b, c 5 . 
Goneptcryx Zanelcoides , de Niceville, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 1897, p. 564, pi. 1, fig. 2, $, 7 ? . 
Male. £S Differs from the same sex of Zanelca in having the foreiving markedly 
broader, the costal margin not constricted at half its length, but straight, the apex 
not so produced. Mindwing distinctly broader, almost of the same shade of brimstone 
as the forewing, the outer slightly paler than the basal half of the wing, in Zanelca it 
is pale cream colour of a uniform shade. 
Female. Forewing agrees in shape with the male, consequently differs from the 
same sex of Zanelca in being broader with a straight instead of excavated costa, and 
the apex less produced. The highly dentate limdwing in both sexes will distinguish 
Zanelca and Zanelcoides from AspasiaF 
Expanse, S ¥ 2*1 inches. 
Harttat.— Upper Burma. 
Distribution. — £C Described by Mr. de Niceville from specimens captured by Mr. 
L. A. Thurston, at 7,000 feet elevation in the Southern Chin Hills, during the rains. 
Capt. E. Y. Watson also has a specimen in his Collection. Geographical^, Zaneka 
and Zanelcoides are widely separated, and it is highly improbable that any species 
linking* them together will be found in the mountains which lie between the Western 
o o 
Himalayas and Upper Burma 99 ( l.c . 505). 
Note. —Dr. N. Manders (Tr. Ent. Soc. 1890, p. 534) notices a “ Gonepteryx 
Himalaijensis 99 which he took in the Shan States, in April and September. We do 
not know of any published description of a cc Gun. Himalayensis and, as Zanelcoides 
is the only Burmese species of the genus, it is possibly the one to which he 
refers. 
