BY J. C. MOULTON. 
211 
80. E. esaca Westw. borneensis Wall. 
North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu), Sarawak; Malay 
Peninsula, Sumatra, Philippines. 
81. E. esaoa Westw. tceniola Fruhst. 
South-east Borneo. 
Subfam. 4. Amathusiin#:. 
82. Faunis arcesilaus Fab. borneensis Fruhst. 
Borneo, Natunas; Burma, Malay Peninsula, Suma¬ 
tra, Nias, Java. 
83. F. kirata de Nicev. 
Neomalaya (Borneo, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra). 
84. F. gracilis Butl. 
Neomalaya (Borneo, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra). 
85. F. stomphax Westw. stomphax Westw. 
Borneo (Sarawak and South-east Borneo); 
Palawan. 
86. F. stomphax Westw. barrauti Moulton. 40 
North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu and Limbang). 
87. F. besa Hew. 41 
Borneo. 
88. XANTHOTiENiA busiris Westw. burra Stich. 
Borneo; Tenasserim, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, 
Nias, Mentawei. 
4° << Faunis stomphax barrauti, subsp. n.—Differs from typical stomphax, 
in lacking the white band across the apex of fore wing below. A thin dark 
brown line replaces it in barrauti. 
“Habitat .—North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu, Marapok Mts. and Limbang). 
Further west and south it is replaced by typical stomphax, which Fruhstorfer 
states also occurs in the Kinabalu district. All the individuals collected on 
my recent expedition there are referable to barrauti, as also specimens from 
Northern Sarawak (Marapok Mts. and Limbang); the only typical stomphax 
before me come from Western Sarawak. 
“ Named in honour of the Hon. E. H. Barraut, Resident of the West 
Coast, British North Borneo, to whom I am greatly indebted for much kind 
help in facilitating my expedition to Kinabalu.” (Entomologist, May, 1915, 
p. 99.) 
41 Fruhstorfer treats this species as a form of stomphax. His besa is no 
doubt the same as barrauti described above. Hewitson’s besa is a different 
insect, with more rounded hind wings and differently placed band on hind 
wing below ( vide key to the species at the end of this paper). Hewitson 
gives “Borneo ” only as locality. The single female in the Sarawak Museum 
comes from Limbang. 
Q 
