Species of Indo- Malayan Heterocera. 91 



Hab. Samba Island, south of Flores Island in the Timor 

 Sea [Doherty). 



1 have tour males and one female of this very distinct 

 form. 



Family Hypenidas. 



Genus GlOBOSUSA, nov. 



<$ . Antennae unipectiuated, palpi long and somewhat up- 

 turned, the first two joints thickened and with stiff paired 

 bristles, the last joint very slender, with bristles before its 

 end ; top of head with short thick hairs which protrude some- 

 what in front; all the legs naked, with very long spurs; 

 both wings rounded in a circular form: fore wing broad, 

 costa and hinder margin straight, cell broad, discocellulars 

 nearly straight; vein 2 from a little beyond the middle of the 

 cell, 3 from about halfway from it and the cell-end, 4 and 

 5 from the end ; 6, 7, 8, and 9 deeply curved, 6 from upper 

 end, 7, 8, and 9 stalked : hind wing with vein 2 from the 

 middle of the cell, 3 and 4 on a short stalk, 5 from the cell- 

 end, 6 and 7 from the upper end, 8 free, recurved, touches 7 

 near its base. 



Type, G. curiosa, mini. 



A very curious-looking moth. 



Globosusa ciiriosa } nov. 



d . Antennae grey, palpi blackish brown, legs yellow striped 

 with black on the upperside ; head, thorax, and fore wing 

 saffron-yellow : fore wing with faint indications of subbasal, 

 antemedial, and postmedial grey lines ; a blackish postmedial 

 patch on the costa and black dots on the outer margin : hind 

 wing yellowish white, indications of a recurved medial grey 

 line, its lower part with black spots on veins 3 and 2 and two 

 near the abdominal margin ; indications of a postmedial 

 outwardly curved grey line and black lunular spots on the 

 outer margin. Underside uniform yellowish white; fore 

 wing with a linear black spot in the cell, a smaller one at the 

 end, small postmedial and subapical brownish marks ; hind 

 wing with a small lunular discoidal black spot. 



Expanse of wings, $ , 1 inch. 



Hab. Saugir Island, south of the Philippines (Doher/y). 



