198 GEOMETRID MOTHS 



SC^, which is connected with a smaller apical one; two 

 indistinct roundish grey-spots beyond the postmedian, in 

 middle and posteriorly (probably inconstant) ; fringe slightly 

 darkened at tip, reddened at the apical spots. Hind wing with 

 termen nearly straight ; less strignlate than fore wing (chiefly 

 at base and apex) ; postmedian line continued as antemedian 

 (from DC^ to hind margin just proximally to middle) ; traces 

 of the outer line of underside, especially at costa. 



Underside bright yellow. Fore wing with posterior margin 

 (except at tornus) white, the rest of the wing with strong, 

 dark purple-grey strigulae ; postmedian line purple-grey, 

 thickening into a brighter spot between jVP and fold. Hind 

 wing with the strigulae sparse, except proximally (especially 

 along costal margin) ; the line from DC^ to hind margin 

 purplish ; a redder postmedian half-line between costa and M*, 

 a little excurved anteriorly, intent behind R^ but becoming 

 weak and interrupted; some coarse, partly confluent rosy 

 irroration terminally, culminating in a dense, uninterrupted 

 terminal line. 



Mt. Penrissen, 4400 feet. 



95. Dalima mjobergi sp. n. 



(j* 64 mm. 



Closely hke a large calamina Butl. (Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 

 (5), vi, p. 121), except in shape of hind wing. Ground-colour 

 rather deeper. 



Fore wing with markings stronger than in calamina; 

 antemedian scarcely angled in cell ; median costal spot vertical, 

 not oblique outward. Hind wing produced to a double tail at 

 SC^— Il\ about 3 mm. long at the former, rudimentary in the 

 latter (about as in the much larger, darker nuhilata Hmpsn.) ; 

 on this tail a large black spot ; terminal line in the cellule on 

 either side of it strongly black ; cell-dot rather large. 



Mt. Murud, 6000-6500 feet, October. 



96. Xandrames latiferaria curvistriga Warr. 



Xandrames latistriga Warr., Nov. Zool., i, p. 431, 1894, Khasia Hills. 



Mt. Poi, 4500 feet— 1 cf • 



It is possible that the Borneo-Sumatra race may prove 

 separable from the Indian. Name-typical latiferaria Walk. 

 (List Lep. Ins., xxi, p. 445) was from "North China" 

 (? Shanghai district). 



