BY L. B. PROTJT. ~ ifV 



Underside iridescent white ; fore wing with a black cell-spot 

 and slightly shaded costa ; lines almost entirely obsolete. 



Mt. Diilit, 3000 feet. 



At first sight suggests a heavily marked liimenaria, though 

 not even in the same group as regards generic structure. ■ 



4. Derambila saponaria Guen. 



Zandopteryx saponaria Guen., Spec. G^n. Lep., x, p. 16, 1858. Ceylon. 



Lio Matu, December — 1 cf. 



Range. India, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Banka, Philip- 

 pines. 



0. Alex palparia Walk. 



Panazra palparia Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxiii, p. 988, 1861, Hindustan. 

 Alex niasica Swinh., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (8), xix, p. 416, 1917 

 (syn. nov.), Nias. 



Mt. Murud (?)— 19. 



The specimen belongs to the ab. obsoleta Warr., Nov. 

 Zool., i, p. 3Q8 , = niasica Swinli. 



Range. — About as in the preceding species. 



6. OZOLA BASISPARSATA Walk. 



Carima basisparsata Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxvi, p. 631, 1862, Sarawak. 



Lio Matu , December — 1 cf . 



Range. — Malay Peninsula to Queensland and the Louisiades. 



SUBFAM. HeMITHEINAE. 



7. Neobalbis flavibasalis Warr. 



Actenochroma flavibasalis Warr., Nov. Zool., i, p. 381, 1894, Java. 



Bakong — 1 cT. 



This species seems to be localised in the Malay Peninsula, 

 Java. Sumatra, and Borneo and never taken in large numbers. 

 The Mjoberg specimen is a rather grey aberration. 



8. Pingasa chlora crenaria Guen. 



Hypochroma crenaria Guen., Spec. Gen. Ins., ix, p. 278, 1858, Central 

 India. 



Pah Trap, November — 1 (j' . 



Pingasa chlora Cram, is very generally distributed in the 

 Indo-Australian region ; the race crenaria (not very sharply 

 differentiated but generally separable by the less acutely 

 angled antemedian line) in India, the Malay Peninsula and 

 adjacent islands, S. China, and Formosa. 



