from China, Japan, and Corea. 71 
One male specimen from Chow-pin-sa: May. 
Haid. Western China. 
Allied to E. pulchellata, Steph. 
Eupithecia mandarinaria, sp. n. 
Primaries pale brown, suffused and clouded with darker, 
and traversed by three black lines, each of which originates 
in a black mark on costa, and externally edged with whitish 
throughout its course; the inner is slightly curved, the outer 
is sharply dentate, and the median one is twice angled, the 
upper angle almost touching a dentation of the outer line; 
submarginal line wavy, whitish ; discal spot black, encircled 
with whitish, large and conspicuous. Secondaries whity 
brown, dark brown on outer marginal area; there are two 
dusky transverse lines before the middle and a_blackish- 
edged whitish dentate line beyond the middle, but this latter 
only extends from abdominal margin to third median nervule ; 
submarginal line wavy, whitish. Fringes brown, marked 
with whitish and preceded by a whitish line. Under surface 
whitish, suffused with darker on the outer marginal area; 
primaries have a black discal spot, a black mark on costa 
beyond, and the transverse lines of upper surface are faintly 
indicated ; secondaries have a black discal spot, some dusky 
transverse lines, and a series of blackish marks on the 
nervules, 
Expanse 30-38 millim. 
Fitteen specimens from Ta-chien-lu, Wa-shan, and Pu-tsu- 
fong, June; and one female example trom Kiukiang. 
fab, Central and Western China. 
In the Kiukiang example the transverse lines of primaries 
are very faint, but the black line beyond middle of secondaries 
is Very conspicuous. 
Alhed to #. togata, Hiibn. 
Genus MicroLoBA. 
(Hampson, Fauna Brit. Ind., Moths, iii. p. 405 (1895).) 
Microloba bella. 
Melanippe bella, Butl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) i. p. 448 (1878) ; 
Ill. Typ. Lep. Het. iii. p. 55, pl. liv. fig. 10 (1879); Oberth. Etud. 
d’Entom. vy. p. 53, pl. iv. fig. 11 (1830). 
Tyloptera eburneata, Christ. Bull. Soc. Nat, Mose. lv. (2) p. 116 (1880). 
Microloba bella, Hampson, Fauna Brit. Ind., Moths, iii. p. 405 (1895). 
There were specimens from Yokohama in Pryer’s collec- 
tion. I obtained the species at Gensan in July and at Hako- 
date in August, and my native collector met with it in the 
