290 L Olli s B. Pr Oll t : H. Sauter's Formosa Geoinetridae. Supplement 



Chosokci, 1914. Ne^v for Formosa. I think Wileman has mixed 

 it with his iainana (The Ent. L, p. ö(5). 



42. Anisodes (Pisoracaj insitiva Prout (Xov. Zool. XXVII, 

 p. 275, 1920). The worn specinien mentioned in Ent. Mitt. III, 

 p. 244 evidently agrees with the S. Indian species which I have 

 recently described under the above name. 



Subfam. Geometrinae. 



85. Nothomiza costalis flavicosta Prout. — The dark $ aber- 

 ration from AHkang was collected in October 1909 (not 1910 as 

 misprintcd in Ent. Mitt. III, p. 249). It is not quite so extreme 

 as the Khasi form inten sa Warr., but the almost uniform violet- 

 grey suffusions (especially on the forewing) give it a characteristic 

 appearance and it may bc called ab. intensa ab. nov. 



99. Zanclopera calidata Warr. — 1 ^, Maruyama, June 1914. 

 Shghtly paler and more strongly marked than Warren 's Originals 

 from Hainan. 



99 bis. Macaria proximaria Leech. — 1 $, Chosokei, 1914. 

 Xcw for Formosa. 



108. Hyposidra talaca ^^'alk. — 1 $, Paroe, X. Paiwan dist., 

 August 19T2. 



111. Zethenia contiguaria Leech. — 1 $, Chosokei, 1914. 



117. Garaeus apicata violaria subsp. nov. — This form has 

 already been partly described (Ent. Mitt. III, p. 268), but not 

 named. Rather shorter and broader \\inged than a. apicata Moore 

 from India. Underside also more mixed with violaceous, the 

 ferruginous distal shades of the hindwing less e> t?nded. Shisha, 

 May — June 1912, type and others in coli. Deutsc ... Ent. Mus. 



129. Ectropis bhurmitra Walk. — 1 $, Kankau (Koshun), 

 September 1912. 



129 bis. Ectropis arizonensis Wileman. — 1 $, Chosokei, 1914. 

 ^'ery large, with the dark spot at R^ just outside the postmecüan 

 very strong. Recalls the Palaearctic excellens Butl., but has a 

 very long extruded ovipositor, the median and postmedian lines 

 cf the forewing posteriorly very oblique in ward and approximatcd. 

 The l^t subcostal rf the fore\ving arises from the cell, thcugh close 

 to the 3"'. I think it must be referred to the species described by 

 Wileman in 1915 (The Entom. XLVHI, p. 282) as arizancnsis 

 and correctly differentiated by him from the Indian dentilincata 

 Moore by the longer ciliation of the male antenna; but it is much 

 larger than the male — the only sex hitherto known — and ha> 

 the ptjstmedian spot more strongly developed. Probably Bastei - 

 berger 's dentilincata, which I earlier (Ent. Mitt. III, p. 26(5) 

 suggested was a misidentified bhurmitra, was really this species. 



V'io. Cleora acaciaria Bdv. — 1 ^, Maruyama, June 1914. 

 Of the same form ( ? species) as the Alikang and Kosempo exampl('> 

 (Ent. Mitt. III, p. 209), a rather heavily dusted specimen, th. 

 hindwing with the area between median and postmedian lines 



