About Abrota ganga Moore, 1857
This species, commonly called the sergeant-major, has a wingspan ranging from 70 to 90 mm. Males are tawny with dark bands; their upper hindwings have four bands. In the wet-season form of this species, the two central bands are well-separated, while in the dry-season form these two bands are nearly united. Females are dark brown with dusky tawny bands. The upper forewing of females has a streak in the cell, with a spot beyond the streak, and the upper hindwing of females has two tawny bands. This species can be found in Sikkim, Bhutan, Abor Hills, Naga Hills, Burma, Sichuan and Yunnan in western China, Taiwan, Guangdong, and Shanxi. In 1932, William Harry Evans described the species as not rare.