174 GEOMETRID MOTHS 



19. Chloeues dyakakia Walk. 



EucTostis dyakaria Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxii, p. 567, 1861, cf Sarawak. 

 Cosmostola dyakaria Swinh.. Cat. Lep. Het. Oxf. Mus., ii, p. y96, 

 pi. vi, f. 9. 1900, Cf. 



Chloeres dyakaria Prout, Gen. Ins., pp. 129, 240, 1912, cf. 



Mt. Poi, 4350 feet— 19 (neallotype). 



Similar to the cT as described by Walker and figured by 

 Swinhoe ; palpns long and slender, with the terminal joint 

 rather strongly elongate, as in Conwstolopsis, to which genus 

 — in spite of the non- stalking of M^ of the fore wing and very 

 short stalking of the same vein on the hind wing — it ought 

 probably to be transferred. Eeally transitional. Apparently 

 an extremely rare species. 



SUBFAM. StERBHINAE. 



20. Ptochophyle ozophanes Prout. 



Ptochophyle ozophanes Prout, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (9), i, p. 22, 1918, 

 Perak. 



Mt. Dulit, 3000 feet— 1 cf • 



Described from a single male in Coll. Joicey. I have since 

 seen only one other example, from Pahang, in Coll. Fed. 

 Malay States Museum. 



21. Anisodes subrosea Warr. 



Perixera subrosea Warr., Nov. Zool., xiii, p. 91, 1906, British New 

 Guinea. 



Mt. Murud, '? 6500 feet. November — 1 cf . 



Seems indistinguishable from the most black-marked New 

 Guinea examples, though more material might be expected 

 to reveal some racial difference. Hitherto only known from 

 Dutch and British New Guinea. Several of the species in 

 this genus have a remarkably wide distribution. 



22. Antsodes absconditaria Walk. 



Anisodes absconditaria Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxvi, p. 1580, 1862, 

 South Hindustan. 



Mt. Murud, 6000--6500 feet, November— 19 . 

 Distributed in India, Malay Peninsula, Formosa, and the 

 Greater Sunda Islands. 



