OF INSULINDE, 21 
Legs short and stout, luteous to brown, with white hairs 
and black spines. Femora brown above, luteous beneath. 
Coxae luteous. Tibiae luteous beneath, densely spotted with 
black above. Tarsi black, the articulations and the base 
of the basal and apical joint red. Claws very strong, red, 
black at the tip. Spurs curved, black at the tip, as long 
as the first four tarsal joints. 
Abdomen long and stout, shorter than the wings. Dorsum 
brown with four luteous markings, viz.: a quadrangular one 
at the frontborder, almost connected with a triangular one 
at the hind border, which occupies more than one half of 
the segment, and two lateral round ones about at the middle. 
In the posterior segments they are connected to a luteous 
cross, but often the abdomen shows no light markings by 
decomposition of the entrails, Venter luteous with a broad 
darker median line. 
Gonopoda very short and inconspicuous, the male with a 
very small triangular genitalvalve and short valvular app. sup. 
. Wings elongate and narrow with acute tips, the posterior 
as long as, but narrower than the anterior ones. Nervature 
not very dense, all veins spotted with white, the longitu- 
dinal veins show this very clear, especially the subcosta and 
radius. Costalveins simple, only some of them before the 
pterostigma are forked. Pterostigma whitish, oval, small, 
with a dark spot at the junction of radius and subcosta, 
which spot is larger in the forewings and much more distinct. 
Apical part with pale oblique lines where the veins are white 
and with broadly brown suffused gradate veins, forming 2, 
3 or more rows in the forewings, in the hindwings they 
are much less distinct and often absent. The posteosta and 
ramus obliquus of the forewings are distinctly united and 
at their junction often a brown spot is to be seen that is 
very large in some individuals. In the hindwings the ramus 
obliquus is very short and the subcosta does not reach it; 
there is no dark spot at this place. A pelotte is not developed. 
The dimensions of the species vary much, also the colours 
of wings and body depending from the state of maturity. 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XX XI. 
