190 GEOMET-RID MOTHS 



than in mixticoJor ; conooloi'ons with fore wing or slightly 

 paler (with less shadings) ; cell-dot rather less large, postmedian 

 straightish, close beyond it, blacker than on fore wing but 

 obsolete costally, accompanied proximally towards abdominal 

 margin by a narrow shade mixed with ochreoiis, pm-plish and 

 blackish ; a small black siibterminal spot in cellule 3, nearer 

 to postmedian than to termen ; termen and fringe as on fore 

 wing. 



Underside more tinged with ochreous and (especially on fore 

 wing) much more mottled with dull purple ; markings much as 

 above ; fore wing also with a small terminal patch of purple 

 close to tornus, hind wing with a narrow apical one reaching 

 (tapering to) radical fold. 



Mt. Murud, 6OO0--6500 feet, November. 



Nearest to mixticoJor Prout, which shows similar anomalies 

 in venation compai'ed with typical Hypochrosis ; both have also 

 slightly the texture and coloration of Pholaena. Possibly they 

 will require a new genus. 



87. LiJXTARiA AiMASA fulvifascia Warr. 



Luriaria fuhiifuscia Warr., Nov. ZooL, i, p. 440. 1894, Sumatra. 



Pah Trap, November — 1 cf . 



It is not certain whether this race (Sumatra, Perak, Borneo) 

 is definitely diiferentiable from amasa fasriosa Moore (Lep. 

 Coll. Atk., p. 254) from N. India, but as the Malayan specimens 

 seem always warmly coloured and are already provided with 

 a name it is clearly better to conserve it than to make any 

 premature alteration. Name-typical amasa Butl. (Ann. Mag. 

 Nat. Hist. (5), i., p. 405) is from Japan and China. 



88. LUXIARIA SUBRASATA Walk. 



Acidalia suhrasata Walk.. List Lep. Ins., xxiii, p. 773, 1861, Sarawak. 

 Pah Trap, November — 1 cf ; Mt. Murud, November — 49- 

 Name-typical forms occm- in the Malay Peninsula and (or 



almost) in N. India, apparent races in the Moluccas and in 



New Guinea. 



89. IjUXIAria versiformis Prout. 



Luxiaria versiformis Prout, Nov. ZooL, xxxii, (ined.), Malay Peninsula. 



Mt. Murud, 6000-6500 feet, October— 1 cf ; Mt. Penrissen, 

 3500 feet— 1 cT- 



The 9 will probably be difi&cult to distinguish from that of 

 suhrasata and it is possible that some of the 9 referred there 

 (supra) really belong here. 



