( 4.53 ) 



*}fricrnr/Iossn. fiirifiirmii var. Iirminenlnsalia id., /..-. (coll. Staudinger) ; Bartel, in Rlihl, r.'jv.sssc/im. 



ii. p. 2.38'(UI0O). 

 Ilemaris saihinxnevar. hmnneulnisalh, Staudinger & Rebel, Cnt.Lep. ed. iii. p. l(J.O. sub n. 774 (1901). 



i ? . Border of Ibrewiiig not ilent-at.e. 



b.' 11. r(((lii(ns f. rarliitns. 



*.S«/n radknis Walker, I.e. (Shanghai). 



ilacroiilnxsa riuliiitis, Boisduval. Hper. Gni. Lip. lift. i. p. .'ST.S. n. Go (187,")) : Fixs., in Rnm.. yiem. 



Lip. iii. p. 32.3 n. 102 (18K7) (Corea, vii.); Stand., in Rom., Mfm. Up. vi. p. 242. n. 2.33 



(1892) (Amurland). 

 Hemaris rndiruis, Butler, Trans. Znnl. Soc. Lnnil. ix. p. 520. n. 14 (1877) ; id., Illiislr. Ti/p. Sjimm. 



Lap. Hel. B. M. ii. p. 3. t. 21. f. 2 (1878) ; Leech, Ti: Enl. Snr. Luml. p. 121. n. io7 (1889) 



(Kiuldang). 



(? ? . Border of forewine; more or less heavily deutate. Intergradations between 

 the two forms not rare. 



IJab. Both forms in ( 'hina, Amurland, and Japan ; f. radians apparently more 

 common in Japan than on the continent. 



In the Tring Musenni : — 



f. manrlarina, 4 c?c?, 4 ? ? from : Oiwake ; Nagasaki, v. (Leech) ; Loo Choo 

 (Pryer) ; Amur. 



f. radians, So SS, 10 ?? from: Nagasaki, v. (Leech) ; Yokohama, vii.; 

 Makoyama, viii. ; Amnr ; Geusan, Corca, vii. (Leech). 



381. Haemorrhagia fuciformis, 



S/iln'ii.r fi(rifiirmis Linni', Syst. Nat. ed. x. p. 4'.i3. n. 28 (17.'i8). 



(? ? . The hroad-hordered species, feeding on Galium and Lonicera, is 

 nndonljtedly the insect which Linn<? described as fuciforwis. The figures quoted 

 by him represent the broad-bordered Sjjhinx ; the reference to Bradley, Works of 

 Nature, is very significant, as Linn6 quotes only Bradley's fig. b, and not fig. c, 

 which latter is the narrow-bordered species. 



Individually, seasonally, and geographically variable. Spines at tip of fore- 

 tibia rather more prominent than in the other species. A scaled line in cell, and 

 a heavy bar on cross-veins of forewing. Antenna see PI. LX. f. 11. 18. 19. 



$. Tenth tergite (PI. XLIII. f. 21) scarcely more than twice as long as 

 proximally broad, the two halves sejjarated only at the extreme end ; sternite 

 (PL XL! II. f. 22) about one-third shorter than the tergite, slightly asymmetrical, 

 rounded at end. (^laspors (PI. LI. f. 10) : left one spatulate, harpe rejiro- 

 sented by a basal iucrassation which bears a few short bristles ; right clasper with 

 dorsal margin concave, and ventral margin deejily sinuate just beyond middle, apical 

 lobe s])atnl:it(', harpe represented by a conical j)rocess, which varies individnally and 

 is cldtlied with bristles. Penis-funnel (PI. LI. f. I'.i, 1'-f) rough with setiferous 

 granules, little njore jiroduced ventrally than dorsally ; penis-sheath : apical process 

 flattened, olitnse. 



Larva with pale dorso-lateral line from head to horn ; stigmata bordered with 

 browM-red, a ventro-lateral brown-red line from head to anus, including legs ; horn 

 Blightly but obviously curved, brown-red. — Food-])lants : (inlium ; Lonicera ; 

 Symphoricar/iiis. 



llah. Palaearctic Region, except the far north, from Western Eurojie to Japan 

 and N.W. India. 



Three subspecies ; 



