020 MR. A. G. BUTLER ON THE SPHINGID. 
. 
The Japanese representative of H. fuciformis. M. Boisduval having described it as a 
Macroglossa, | unfortunately overlooked his description. 
9. HEMARIS MANDARINA. 
Hemaris mandarina, Butler, P. Z. S. 1875, p. 289, pl. xxxvi. fig. 2. 
Shanghai. Type, coll. F. Moore. 
10. HeEMARIS FUCIFORMIS. 
Sphinx fuciformis, Linnzus, Syst. Nat. i. 2, p. 803. no. 28 (1766). 
Sesia fuciformis, Scheffer, Icon. Ins. p. 21 (1766-79). 
Cephonodes fuciformis, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 131. no. 1404 (1816). 
Macroglossa fuciformis, Children, Abstr. Gen. Lep. Eur. p. 29. no. 1 (1829). 
Sphinx bombyliformis, Esper (nec Ochsenheimer), Eur. Schmett. ii. p. 180, pl. 23 (1777). 
Sesia bombyliformis, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. 1, p. 382. no. 12 (1793). 
Europe (Becker). B.M. 
11. Hemaris AFFInis. 
Sesia affinis, Bremer, Lep. Ost-Sib. p. 85, pl. iii. fig. 13 (1864). 
Amur (Druce). BLM. 
Closely allied to the preceding species, but rather darker. 
12. HEMARIS SAUNDERSII. 
Sesia saundersii, Walker, Lep. Het. vil. p. 83. no. 7 (1856). 
North India (Stevens, Doubleday). Type, B.M. 
This species is a complete link between the H. fuciformis group and H. hylas; the 
latter though different in aspect (owing to the narrow-scaled border of primaries), does 
not, so far as I can see, differ structurally from the other species of Hemaris. 
13. HEMARIS VENATA. 
3, Macroglossa venata, Felder, Sitz. Akad, Wiss. Wien, xliii. p. 29. no 61; Reise der Novara, Lep. 
iv. tab. 75. fig. 6 (Nov. 1874). 
Amboina. 
Allied to H. fuciformis, but one third larger, the body longer, different in character. 
14. HeMaris RADIANS. 
Sesia radians, Walker, Lep. Het. viii. p. 84. no. 8 (1856). 
Shanghai (Fortune). ‘Type, B.M. 
Approaching H. thysbe in character. 
