214 Colonel C. Swinhoe on 
Linnzeus’s type certainly never came from the East Indies. 
Aurivillius says (int. Tidsk. 1897, p. 163) Cramer’s figure 
is typical ; I examined the type in the Thunberg Museum at 
Upsala; it undoubtedly represents the common New Zealand 
species described as annulatum by Boisduval and doubledayi 
by Walker. 
Deilemera atralba. 
Nycteméra atralba, Hiibner, Verz. Schmett. p. 178 (1818). 
Nyctemera sumatrensis, Heylarts, Compt. Rend. Soc. Ent. Belg. xxix. 
p- xvii (1890) ; Pag. Jahrb. Nass. Ver. Naturk. 1901, p. 139, pl. ii. 
tig. 6. 
Nyctemera tripunctaria, Walker (nec Linn.), ii. p. 897 (1854). 
Hab, Malay Peninsula and Archipelago. 
Deilemera nigrovena. 
Deilemera nigrovena, 2, Swinhoe, Trans. Ent. Soc. 1903, p. 74, pl. iv. 
fig. 2. 
3. Resembles the female, but the longitudinal bands on 
the thorax are broader, and, instead of being yellow with 
black stripes, it is black with thin yellow stripes ; otherwise 
there is no difference. 
ixpanse of wings, ¢, 24/5—-2,) inches. 
Hab. Samanga, South Celebes. 
I have three males from that locality. 
Family Lymantriide. 
Gazalina intermiata. 
Gazalina intermixta, Swinhoe, Aun. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7) vi. p. 806 
(1900). 
@. Wings pure white without any black on the veins: 
fore wing with a well-curved, subbasal, black thin band and 
two transverse, straight, thick black bands, well separated 
from each other, the inner one upright, crossing the cell before 
its middle, with a minute dent inwards below the upper 
margin of the cell, the outer one inwardly oblique from the_ 
costa one-fourth from the apex to the hinder margin, a little 
beyond the middle, with a corresponding minute outward 
dent ; hind wing with an indistinct straight grey middle line 
from the costa one-fourth from the apex to the abdominal 
margin above the anal angle. Abdomen with a very large 
anal tuft of hairs, ochreous grey, with the outer half brown. 
Underside with a blackish transverse band beyond the 
middle across both wings. 
Expanse of wings, 2, 2 inches. 
