188 Mr. L. B. Prout on 
to add that the antenna is bipectinate to apex, the branches 
rather long, shortening suddenly at apical end, and that 
vein C of the hind wing does not anastomose with cell in 
the middle, but is connected with a bar as in the Aganaide, 
-with which the genus seems to show some affinity. 
Subfamily razz. 
35. Hyblea joiceyt, sp. n. 
3 .— 46 mm. 
Head and palpus purple-fuscous, palpus beneath whitish 
proximally. Thorax chocolate-brown ; beneath paler, 
variegated with whitish and yellowish anteriorly, with 
reddish posteriorly. Abdomen above fleshy greyish; beneath 
mostly red, with a dark central line. Fore leg with gold- 
yellow tuft on coxa, femur white, tibia above brown, tarsus 
blackish ; middle and hind legs predominantly red. 
Fore wing not very broad, costal margin not strongly 
arched (very slightly waved), termen almost straight and 
rather oblique from apex to M1, somewhat excised between 
M! and tornus: chocolate-brown, slightly variegated in the 
shadings, almost throughout with irregularly scattered dots 
and small spots of greenish white; faint indications of an 
elongate dark apical streak. 
Hind wing scarlet-vermilion, unmarked ; abdominal margin 
with tufts of very long yellowish hair; fringe yellowish, 
from apex nearly to R! proximally infuscated. 
Fore wing beneath red-orange, becoming infuscated midway 
between cell and termen, darker at extreme margin; costal 
margin dotted with fuscous ; hind margin pale; arosy patch 
in submedian area ; an elongate dark cell-mark. Hind wing 
beneath orange-red with coarse purple-fuscous speckling, 
which in distal area is condensed into an ill-defined cloud ; 
between fold and abdominal margin clear red, as above. 
Isle of Mioswar, Geelvink Bay, North Dutch New Guinea, 
September 1909 (C. & F. Pratt). 
Near ibidias, Turn. (Proc. Linn. Soc. New South Wales, 
xxvii. 135), but larger, the wings slightly narrower ; 
further distinguished by the pale-spotted fore wing and even 
brighter red, entirely unmarked hind wing. 
36. Hyblea puera vitiensis, subsp. n. 
6,40 mm.; °, 36 mm. 
Abdomen beneath wholly red. 
Fore wing above with strong purple shades (but evidently 
variable, as in the other forms). 
