292 On new Moths in the Joicey Collection. 
other allies), otherwise quite similar to the g. Its fresher 
condition allows me to add, however, that the ground-colour 
is really white with green irroration and the bands grey- 
green, and that the abdomen has two small brown ee 
spots. ‘The antenna is serrate and the palpus is short, thus 
aberrant for the genus. 
11. Gelasma versicauda, sp. n. 
& .—43-47 mm. . 
Larger than protrusa, Butl. Face deeper black (less 
tinged with red), Palpus with third joint rather shorter, 
though not quite as short as in ¢litwrata, Walk. 
Fore wing darker, bluer green; terminal line and dots 
obsolete ; proximal part of fringe less tinged with reddish— 
dark grey with vaguely darker spots opposite the veins. 
Hind wing with tail longer than in protrusa, directed 
rather markedly outward—i. e., with tle posterior half of the 
distal margin (from tornus to tip of tail) comparatively 
straight ; concolorous with fore wing ; terminal line fine and 
weak or almost obsolete ; fringe nearly as on fore wing, the 
proximal dark part rather narrow, the pale distal (whitish 
ochreous) part ample. 
Koshun, Formosa. Type and another in coll. Joicey; 
also in Coll. Tring Museum from the same locality. 
Subfamily Gzouzrrivz. 
12. Amnemopsyche charmione lufira, subsp. n. 
o ?.—39-41 mm. 
On an average smaller than c¢. charmione, Fab., from 
W. Africa. 
Fore wing with the white markings in general reduced, 
much more shaded with orange, which broadly borders the 
discal band and almost entirely fills the subapical spot; 
discal band continued almost to hind margin, confluent proxi- 
mally with the yellowish hind-marginal streak from base. 
Hind wing with the black border continued narrowly along 
abdominal margin, invaded by asmall orange projection from 
the ground-colour between fold and SM’; orange subterminal 
spot between R* and M* generally small. 
Congo Free State; Lufira River, affluents Kikura and 
Buluo Rivers, near Likasi Copper Mines, 4000 ft., 28th Feb.— 
15th April, 1919; 5 @ g,19 (7. A. Barns). 
