180 GEOMETRTD !^rOTHS 



36. AcoLUTHA FLAviPicTARiA poiensis subsp. n. 



More deeply coloured than /. flavipictaria Proiit (Nov. 

 Zool., xxix, p. 359, Khasia Hills; also from Ceylon in Coll. 

 Joicey), the dark markinfjs of the median area on both win^js 

 broadened and strengthened. Underside with blurred dusky 

 suffusions in distal area. 



Mt. Poi, 4.500 feet, type and another cf . 4400 feet— 1 d*. 



37. EOTS MTXOREMTA sp. n. 



cf. 9 21-26 mm. 



(rronp of mevwrntn Walk. (List Lep. Ins., xxii. p. 657). 

 partaking: of some characters criven for each of the three species 

 which are differentiated (Nov. Zool., xxix, pp. 347-8). 



Size of memorafa Walk. Structure of amydroscia Front 

 (mimite antenna! ciliation and fnll development of areole). 

 Coloration and markina^s almost exactly as in phaneroscia 

 Pront, fore wincf beneath less snffnsed. Dorsal yellow spots 

 of abdomen not sharply defined, the rosy markings which, in 

 the allies, generally enclose them being less evenly developed, 

 feebly expressed excepting a strong pair of subdorsal spots 

 near the hinder end of ench segment. .\n aberration (2 (f . 

 29^ has the postmedian developed into a blackish blotch at 

 abdominal margin of hind wing. 



Mt. Mnrnd. 6000-6-500 feet. October— 5 cf, 69. 



38. PoisrASTA VERNACULAEiA Guen. 



Pomasia iiernacvJaria Guen., Spec. Gen. L^p., ix, p. 427. 1858. Sarawak. 

 Pnma/ita gelasfis Meyr., Tr. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1897. p. 70, Pulo Laut. 



Mt. Dulit, 3000 feet. January, typical— L cf : Mt. Mnrnd, 

 6500 feet, November — 1 cf , 1 9 . rather bright, the 9 larger; 

 Mt. Mnrnd (?) November — 1 cf , also bright, still larger. 



Apart from the localities cited in the above synonymy, T 

 know this species only from the Malay Peninsula. It may be 

 noted that Meyrick doc. cit.) misidentified conferta Swinh. 

 (1902). as vernacuhria and consefjnently named the wrong 

 species. 



39. CoLLTX EXATVfPLATA Warr. 



Collix examplata Warr., Nov. Zool., xiii. p. 98, 1906, Angabunga 

 River, British New Guinea. 



Mt. Poi, 4850 feet— 19 ; Mt. Penrissen, 4400 feet— 1 9 . 



T cannot at present separate the examples here recorded 

 from Warren's species, which inhabits the Moluccas and New 

 (jrninea, Perhaps the cf will throw further light on it. 



