BY J. C. MOULTON. 
219 
144. Kallima inachus Boisd. buxtoni Moore. 09 
Borneo ; India, China, Malay Peninsula, Greater 
Sunda Isles. 
145. Amnosia decora Doubld. & Hew. baluana Fruhst. 70 
Borneo; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Nias, Java. 
146. Stibochiona schcenbergi Honr. 71 
N. Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu) and Sarawak (Mt. Matang). 
147. Cyrestis cocles Fab. sericeus Buth 72 
Borneo ; India, Assam, Tenasserim, Hainan. 
148. C. niyea Zink.-Somm. nivalis Feld. 73 
Borneo, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Burma; Philip¬ 
pines, Java to Sumbawa. 
149. C. MiENALis Erichs, seminigra Gr.-Sm. 
Borneo; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Nias, Philippines. 
150. C. thereS iE de Nicev. 74 
Borneo, Sumatra. 
151. Chersonesia risa Doubld. cyanee de Nic6v. 75 
North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu), Sumatra; Himalayas, 
Tonkin, Annam. 
152. C. exoellens Mart. 75 
North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu). 
153. C. rahria Moore. 
Borneo, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Nias, Java; 
Celebes. 
154. C. intermedia Mart. 75 
Neomalaya (Borneo, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra). 
69 Fruhstorfer treats this as a subspecies of the Burmese form limborgi, 
i.e. specifically distinct from the more northern inachus. They appear to 
be obviously geographical races of one species. 
70 The form described as petronia Fruhst. from “the low plains of 
Northern Borneo ” does not appear to differ from several examples before 
me from Kinabalu and Sarawak. The white-banded female from Banjer- 
masin, known as martini Honr., is surely only an aberration. 
71 Fruhstorfer mentions three minute white dots below the costal spot 
on the under side of fore wing in the male; these are absent in the only 
Sarawak male in the Sarawak Museum. 
72 A very distinct form, perhaps worthy of specific distinction. 
73 C' nivea borneensis Fruhst. is founded on a small point in the colouring 
of the anal region of the hind wing. A series from Sarawak and Kinabalu 
before me shows that this is variable and that some specimens cannot be separ¬ 
ated from C. nivea nivalis, under which name I re-unite the Bornean form. 
74 Shelford records both G. theresce and C. neela from Borneo, suggesting, 
however, that they may be synonymous, which Fruhstorfer now corroborates, 
noting that G. theresce has priority by six months. 
75 Not recorded by Shelford. 
