216 
THE BUTTERFLIES OF BORNEO. 
122. C. SATELLITA Butl. 58 
North Borneo and Sarawak, Malay Peninsula, 
Sumatra, Palawan. 
128. C. orissa Feld, orissides Fruhst. 
North Borneo and Sarawak; Malay Peninsula, 
Sumatra. 
124. Terinos terpander Hew. terpander Hew. 69 
Borneo ; Malay Peninsula, Natunas, Sumatra, Nias, 
Banka, Java. 
125. T. clarissa Boisd. nympha Wall. 60 
Borneo ; Siam, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, 
Palawan, Philippines. 
126. T. atlita Fab. albonotata Moulton. 61 
Sarawak ; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra. 
127. T. fulminans Butl. 62 
Borneo. 
88 Fruhstorfer separates the Bornean form as illergata on a difference 
in the orange band of fore wing which, he states (and figures), does not 
broaden towards the anal angle. Some Kuching specimens agree with this, 
but others, including one from Kinabalu (whence Fruhstorfer describes the 
form), have the band broaden in goutanally as in examples from the Malay 
Peninsula and Sumatra. 
69 Recorded as T. fulminans Butl. by Shelford, who wrote, “ Terinos 
terpander Hew. (syn. T. nymplia Wall.) seem to have been wrongly 
recorded from Borneo, the species is confined to Sumatra.” This is quite 
at variance with Fruhstorfer’s arrangement, which seems more reasonable. 
60 Shelford gives this as clarissa. 
61 “ Terinos atlita albonotata, subsp. nov.—Recorded by Shelford as 
teuthras Hew., from which it differs, on comparison with Distant’s figure 
of the upper side, in the absence of fuscous scales at the base of the inner 
margin in fore wing and in cell of hind wing, in the fuscous scales of the 
inner margin in hind wing extending to the first median nervule, and in the 
much reduced white distal edging to the two large violet-white subanal spots 
on the hind wing. 
“ Type and only known specimen (a male) from Simanggang, Sarawak, 
August, 1900. 
“ The colouring above is very different to that of fulminans , with which 
it agrees, however, on the under side and square caudate hind wing.” 
(Entomologist , May, 1915, pp. 99, 100.) 
62 Fruhstorfer places T . fulminans as a subspecies of atlites, but in view 
of the occurrence of another subspecies (just described above) in Sarawak, 
it would appear preferable to give it specific distinction. The under sides 
of fulminans and albonotata are exactly similar, but the upper sides are 
entirely different. Fruhstorfer notes that fulminans occurs in both North 
and South-east Borneo; it is in the Sarawak Museum from Kinabalu, but not 
from Sarawak. It is, of course, possible that albonotata takes its place 
there, but the upper side is sufficiently different to render this unlikely to 
my mind. 
