66 Mr. J. H. Leech ooi 



edge suffused ; claviform outlined in black. Secondaries fuscous 

 with an obscure discal dot and central line. Under surface fuscous, 

 the secondaries are rather paler than the primaries and have mark- 

 ings as on the upper surface. 

 Expanse 34 millim. 



One male specimen and two females from Moiipin, 

 taken in June. 

 Habitat. Western China. 



861. Apaonea (?) clava, sp. n. 



Primaries pale purplish-brown, with a short l^lack streak from the 

 base under median nervure ; basal line represented by an elongate 

 black dot on costa ; antemedial line black, sinuous and curved, 

 edged inwardly with pale brown ; postmedial line black edged out- 

 wardly with pale brown, wavy, strongly curved, dentate above inner 

 margin ; submarginal line indistinct except on the costal area where 

 it is white and dentated, it is preceded by some white dots on the 

 costa ; reniform and orbicular outlined in pale brown, a black longi- 

 tudinal bar from the lower portion of the former and there are other 

 black streaks between the nervules on the outer marginal area ; 

 fringes pale greyish-brown marked with darker at ends of the 

 nervules and preceded by a black luni;lated line. Secondaries fuscous- 

 brown with pale grey-brown fringes. Under surface of primaries 

 fuscous-brown on basal three-fourths, outer fourth greyish, there is a 

 dusky spot on middle of the costa and two dusky wavy lines beyond, 

 the outer one edged on costal area by a white dentate line and 

 preceded by two white dots on costa : secondaries ashy-grey 

 powdered with fuscous-brown, ante- and postmedial bands fuscous- 

 brown, postmedial line dark brown, bluntly serrated, sinuoixs. 



Expanse 36 millim. 



One female example taken in June or July at Omei- 

 shan. 

 Habitat. Western China. 



862. Ajyamca (?) variolosa. 



Caradrina variolosa, Motsch., Etudes Entom., vi, p. 33 

 (1857). 



Butler suggests that his A2oamea limbata may possibly 

 be identical with this, but, as he says, the description of 

 Motschulsky's insect is too vague "for satisfactory identifica- 

 tion" {ante, p. 57). 



Hahitat. Japan. 



