113 Mr. L. B. Prout on new 
Hind wing with termen somewhat waved, not quite regu- 
larly rounded, being slightly straighter between SC? and R?; 
dull purple, with the dark markings feeble, formed about as 
in subrepleta, Walk. 
Underside with the ground-colour slightly paler, the 
markings consequently rather more distinct ; veins somewhat 
dusted with yellow; fore wing with subbasal yellow streak 
better developed ; hind wing with a rather broad, rapidly 
tapering yellow patch at base of costa, a small yellow spot at 
origin of R14, and a sinuous. row of small interneural sub- 
marginal yellow spots between R’ and fold, the second, third, 
and fifth placed nearer to the termen than the first and 
fourth. 
Andaman Islands ( Watkins). 
7. Agathia curvifiniens, sp. n. 
(Pl. VIL. tig. 23.) 
Distinguished from cartssima, Butl., by having the proximal 
edge of the marginal band of the fore wing strongly sinuous, 
instead of nearly straight, a strong outward curve being 
formed between the radials (deepest between R? and R?) and 
a slighter one between M? and SM’, the intervening part 
appreciably curved inward ; the subapical green patch is 
formed, as in many carissima, of a large central and small 
anterior and posterior elements, very finely separated by red- 
brown dusting on SC® and R?; the small submarginal green 
spot between M? and M? is almost or altogether obsolete. 
Hind wing with a very minute red-brown cell-dot. 
Ningpo, type g and paratype 9. Also from Gensan 
(Corea) and Kiushiu, in coll. Brit. Mus. 
In carissima the median band of the fore wing is usually 
more oblique than in the new species, but varies somewhat. 
8. Anisozyga charma, sp. n. 
(Pl. Wi. hie. /9)) 
6 .—25 mm. 
Face and palpus green above, white beneath. Vertex 
broadly white ; occiput green. Thorax above green, with a 
large white metathoracic spot, beneath white ; pencil beneath 
base of fore wing white, rather short. Fore leg brown, 
ringed with white. Hind leg mostly white; tibia without 
hair-pencil or process. Abdomen largely white, the first 
tergite broadly green, the succeeding ones narrowly and more 
faintly, each with a white spot at posterior end. 
