BY L. B. PROUT. 179 



inward curve between the radials more noticeable ; subterminal 

 feebly defined by weak, slightly macular shades; terminal 

 dots strong, black, interneural, feebly connected by slight 

 grey shading; fringe with minute dots at vein-ends. Hind 

 wing with termen not noticeably bent ; cell-dot rather large ; 

 antemedian line wanting ; median line incurved proximally 

 to it, angled outward on SC, M, and SM^ ; rest ati on fore 

 wing, postmedian rather farther from termen, subterminal 

 shades and fringe-dots slightly stronger. 



Underside rather paler, the fore wing with a little suffusion 

 proximally, the^ basal part of the costa rather strongly 

 infuscated ; markings of upperside mostly indicated, but only 

 the cell-dots, terminal dots and on the fore wing the post- 

 median line well-developed. 



Mt. Murud, 6000-6500 feet, October, type cf , November, 

 paratype cT, 9 > allotype 9 • 



34. Sterrha actio sari a Walk. 



Acidalia actiosaria Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxii, p. 750, 1861, Ceylon. 

 ? Nemoria ? damnata Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxii, p. 756, 1861, 

 Sarawak. 



Acidalia indotaria Walk., List Lep. Ins., xxiii, p. 763, 1861, Sarawak. 



Mt. Murud, 6000-6500 feet, November— 5 9 ; Mt. Pol, 

 4500-5200 feet— 39 , 2 cT ; Mt. Penrissen, 2000-4400 feet— 

 2^^, 1?- . 



A very widely distributed Indo-Malayan species, or possibly 

 assemblage of close allies which have not yet been satisfactorily 

 worked out. In any case Swinhoe (Cat. Lep. Het. Oxf. 

 Mus., ii, p. 362), is in error in referring damnata and indotaria 

 (which seem to be synonymous) to Craspedia (S copula). I 

 suspect squamipunctata Warr. (1900), is an ab. of actisosaria. 



SUBFAM. LaRENTIINAE. 



35. AcoLUTHA picTARiA Moore. 



Emmelesia pictaria Moore, Lep. Coll. Atk., p. 267, 1888, Darjeeling. 



Mt. Murud, 6000-6500 feet, November— 1 q*. 



The Malayan form may prove racially different. A small 

 form from Hainan has already been named imbecilla Warr., 

 1905, the New Guniea race canicosta Warr., 1906. 



