2'2C) Mr. C. T. Regan on the 



Hamatopola kindostani, ? , sp. n. 



Type (female) and two otlier females from Bababuddin 

 Hills, Mysore, 4700 £t., vi. 1915 (Ramakrishna Coll.). 



A S[)ecies in the same group as H. montamis, sp. n., but 

 rather allied to H. assamensis in the wing having a single 

 band at apex, not reaching the border ; face with a black 

 band ; palpi rather stout and short, pubescence on them and 

 on face rather thick. 



Length 8 mm. 



Face covered with grey tomentum and with some wliite 

 hairs, and a black band on upper part of face. Palpi 

 covered with grey tomentum and with thick black pubes- 

 cence ; some white hairs on the first joint below. Antennce 

 dull reddishj the third joint dusky at apex, the first joint 

 rather stout, shining, with black hairs, the second one very 

 small, same colour, the third a little broader at base, the 

 first joitit longer than the first annulatiou of third joint. 

 Forehead black, covered with brownish tomentum. Frontal 

 callus black, shining, reaching the eyes, with a straight 

 border and a black spot between the antennae. Thorax 

 mummy-brown, with three pale stripes anteriorly, the side 

 ones ending in a pale spot at the suture and there is another 

 pale stripe posteriorly at the sides ; pubescence chiefly 

 consists of pale appressed hairs ; scutellum same as thorax. 

 Abdomen same colour as thorax, with pale yellow segmen- 

 tations and a pale median stripe; pubescence almost nil; 

 underside yellowish. Legs yellowish with darker rings; 

 apices of femora and the tarsi dark. Wings with the usual 

 rosettes, the apical band short, not reaching far beyond the 

 fork of third vein; sometimes a pale spot is visible on 

 border, but never joining the band ; veins and stigma 

 brown. 



XVII. — The Fishes of the Genus Glupea. 

 By C. Tate liEGAN, M.A. 



(Published by peruiissiou of the Trustees of the British 3Iuseum.) 



In a preliminary arrangement of the Ciupeoid fishes in tlie 

 collection of tlie Natural History jMuseiun, I iiad put together 

 examples of Clupea arcuata^ Jenyns, aiid specimens received 

 from New Zealand as Clupea antipodum^ Hector, as be- 

 longing to a genus distinct from Clupea; on going through 



