256 Colonel C. Swinhoe on the Geographical 
Anomis fulvida, Guenée. 
Its square form of wings and the clear white spots forming 
the orbicular and reniform easily distinguish it. It is well 
figured in Hampson’s § Moths of India,’ vol. ii. p. 409. 
I have it from Assam, Kina Balu, Sarawak, Java, and 
Perak, many examples. I have had the genitalia of examples 
from several localities examined by Mr. Burrows ; he says 
they are all identical. 
Anomis busana, nov. 
&. Fore wing narrower than in fulvida; colour uniform 
bright ferruginous, the orbicular white but very small, the 
reniform obsolescent, represented by a pale, brownish, indis- 
tinct dot, with another below it, but well separated from it; 
the transverse lines darker red and highly sinuous, the sub- 
basal and antemedial lines outwardly oblique from the costa, 
the postmedial line erect but not reaching the costa, the sub- 
marginal line finishing some distance from the hinder angle ; 
a line between the last two from the costa to the median vein ; 
cilia brown, with white tips: hind wing slightly suffused with 
brown, paling towards the abdominal’ margin; cilia white, 
with grey spots. 
Expanse of wings, g,, 175 inch. 
Type, Busan, 8.E. Borneo ; two examples. 
Anomis revocans, Walker. 
A large form, much larger than any of the Indian species. 
Fore wing dark ochreous brown-red as a rule, some specimens 
a little paler: hind wing suffused with black transverse lines 
much as in bdusana; orbicular and reniform small and pale 
black, in one example the reniform is large, deep black, with 
a curled black line connecting it with the black spot above it. 
In size, colour, and in the formation of the genitalia it is 
quite distinct. 
I have it from Victoria, Brisbane, Queensland, and Cape 
York. 
y 
Anomis scitipennis, Walker, Journ. Linn. Soe., Zool. vii. 
p. 76 (1864). 
Cosmophila ochreifusa, Swinhoe, Ann. & Mag, Nat. Hist. (8) xviii. 
p. 408 (1906). 
A very distinct species. 
Walker’s type came from Borneo, mine from Sumatra. I 
