BY J. C. MOULTON. 
221 
167. N. heliodore Fab. dorelia Butl. 80 
Borneo, Malay Peninsula; Sumatra, Nias, Java, 
Burma, Siam. 
168. N. vikasi Horsf. salpona Fruhst. 81 
North Borneo, Sarawak; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, 
Java, Celebes, Palawan, Philippines, Tonkin, 
India. 
169. N. anjana Moore discerna Fruhst. 82 
Borneo; Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Nias, Java, 
Palawan. 
170. N. miah Moore sarochoa Fruhst. 83 
Sarawak, Malay Peninsula ; China, Sikkim, Assam, 
Sumatra, Java. 
171. N. miah Moore digitia Fruhst. 
North Borneo (Mt. Kinabalu). 
172. N. fuliginosa Moore arnoldi Fruhst. 
Borneo; Tenasserim, Malay Peninsula, Banka, 
Sumatra. 
178. Pantoporia pravara Moore pravcira Moore. 84 
Borneo; Assam, Burma, Tenasserim, Malay Penin¬ 
sula, Sumatra, Java, Palawan. 
80 Shelford records both siaka and heliodore from Borneo ; the former is 
the Sumatran form of heliodore , which occurs typically in Siam. 
81 Kecorded by Shelford as harita (the Indian form), which he suggests 
is only a subspecies of vikasi. He also records the Sumatran form omeroda 
from Borneo as a separate species, remarking on its close resemblance to 
vikasi and harita. As Fruhstorfer places it, it is undoubtedly only the 
Sumatran representative of vikasi , slightly differing from the Bornean form, 
which Fruhstorfer has separated as salpona. 
62 Fruhstorfer recognizes two forms from Borneo: discerna from the 
south-east, distinguished by very narrow grey-brown stripes above, and 
elegantia from Kinabalu, distinguished by the broader, yellower bands above, 
and more intensely violet colouring below. 
The Sarawak series includes sufficient variations to suggest that the 
two forms are hardly separable, and I prefer to unite them under the one 
name discerna. Shelford recorded them as anjana (the Malay Peninsula 
form, which appears to be distinct). 
83 The Sarawak specimens were identified by Shelford as miah batara 
Moore, which, however, refers to the broader banded form from Sumatra. 
They are certainly separable from the Kinabalu form, and if not worthy of 
subspecific distinction themselves, are better placed with the Malay 
Peninsula form, which Fruhstorfer has named miah sarochoa. 
84 In the same group as this species is P. perius Linn., which Fruhstorfer 
records from “the Sunda Islands from Sumatra to Sumbawa, Sumba.” I 
can find no record of it for Borneo. 
