16 MR. A. ANDERSON ON THE [Jan. 5, 
lineata, but altogether deeper in colour, and with a slender marginal 
plum-coloured line ; body and legs below chocolate-brown, abdomen 
with a rosy tint. Expanse of wings 2 inches 7 lines. 
Coimbatoor (Walhouse). Type, B.M. 
33. LevcoPpHLEBIA BICOLOR, n. sp. (Plate II. fig. 5.) 
3. Primaries rosy, a broad central longitudinal tapering strami- 
neous streak from base to apex, nearly straight in front, arched 
behind, and having three processes along the median branches ; 
fringe stramineous; secondaries ochreous; costa and abdominal 
margin stramineous, outer margin rosy, fringe stramineous ; thorax 
dull rosy, deeper in front than behind, with a central ochreous spot : 
body whitish ochraceous, rosy at the margins; antenne above 
creamy whitish, below brownish: wings below stramineous; _pri- 
maries with discoidal area ochreous; apical costa abruptly and 
broadly rosy, outer margin with a broad pale rosy border, tapering 
to apex; secondaries with costa and outer margin pale rosy; body 
dull pale ochraceous, with a rosy tint, gradually becoming more 
intense to the head; palpi dull rosy ; legs creamy above, rosy below. 
Expanse of wings 2 inches 2-3 lines. 
Almorah (Boys), N. India. Type, B.M. 
Allied to LZ. emittens, but coloured more like L. lineata. 
EXPLANATION OF PLATES I. & II. 
Puare I. 
Fig. 1. Macroglossa proxima, p. 4. 
obscura, p. 5. 
fervens, p. 4. 
. Cherocampa ignea, p. 10. 
. Calliomma lutescens, p. 5. 
. Macroglossa nox, p. 5. 
Puate IT. 
. Cherocampa elegans, p. 8. 
gracilis, p. 8. 
argentata, p. 8. 
. Leucophlebia rosacea, p. 15. 
bicolor, p. 16. 
Fig. 
SUR go bo 
2. Corrections of and Additions to “ Raptorial Birds of North- 
western India.” By AnpREw ANDERSON, F.Z.S. 
[Received November 30, 1874.] 
(Plate III.) 
Since the publication of my last paper*, my knowledge of this 
subject generally has been greatly advanced, not only by furthur re- 
search, but by the acquisition of European and African specimens of 
some of the species concerning which comparatively little was known 
* P.Z.S8. 1872, p. 619. 
