528 MR. F. MOORE ON NEW ASIATIC LEPIDOl'TERA. [NoV. 20, 



three red subanal marginal lunules and a white anal lobe-spot. 

 Underside greyish-white : fore wing with a very indistinct blackish 

 discocellnlar lunule, a submarginal lunular line with the upper end 

 composed of double lunules, and a marginal luuular line : hind wing 

 with a more distinct black disoocellular lunular mark, submarginal 

 and marginal lunular line, the upper end of the submarginal line 

 composed of double lunules ; a black spot ou the costa near the base, 

 and a lobe and subanal black spot, the two latter slightly yellow, sur- 

 mounted with dark yellow. 



Expanse l^inch. 



Hab. Coonoor, Nilgiris {Lindsay'). In coll. F. Moore. 



Vadebra, n. g. 



Intermediate between Nadisepa and Rapala. ' Male with the 

 outline of the wings more of the form of the latter ; the fore wing, 

 however, is more acuminate, the exterior margin more oblique and 

 even ; marginal tuft the same ; hind wing somewhat broader poste- 

 riorly ; glandular depression prominent. Palpi smoother ; antennal 

 club longer and move pointed. 



Type V. petosiris. 



Vadebra petosiris. 



Deudorix petosiris, Hewitson, lUust. D. Lep. p. 22, pi. 9. figs. 30, 

 31 (1863). 



Hab. Darjiling. 



Vadebra pheretima. 



Deudorix plieretima, Hewitson, Illust. D. Lep. p. 21, pi. 9. figs. 27, 

 29 (1863). 



Hab. Burmah (Tounghoo), Singapore ; Sumatra. 



Vadebra suffusa. 



Deudorix suffusa, Moore, P. Z. S. 1878, p. 834, d . 



Hab. Tenasserim, 



Vadebra lankana. 



Deudorix lankana, Moore, P. Z. S. 1879, p. 141, $ ; Lep. ofCey- 

 lon, i. p. 103, pi. 39. fig. 5. 

 Hab. Ceylon. 



Lehera, n. g. 

 Artipe\ Boisd. Lep. Guat. p. 14 (1870). 



Male. Wings large, broad : fore wing triangular ; first subcostal 

 branch emitted at nearly half before end of the cell, second at one 

 fourth, third bifid, emitted from near end of the cell, the fourth at half 

 from below third and terminating at the apex, fifth from end of the 

 cell; discocellnlar slightly recurved, radial from the middle; the middle 

 median branch at one fifth before end of the cell, lower at one third 

 ^ Artipus used by Schonherr for Coleoptera, in 1826. 



