1886. ] LEPIDOPTERA FROM WESTERN INDIA. 383 
121. SuRATTHA ALBIPENNISs, sp. ni. 
Allied to S. invectalis of Ceylon, but the primaries of a more 
uniformly pale sandy-brown tint, the belt beyond the middle being 
only flecked with black and white like the interno-basal area, the 
outer border of this belt also less abruptly angulated ; the external 
area grey, irrorated with white and with a marginal series of black- 
tipped fusiform white spots; secondaries white instead of whity 
brown ; abdomen also paler ; under surface paler. Expanse of wings 
22 millim. 
3, Campellpore, 30th July, 1885. 
The genus Surattha was also described by Walker under the 
names Pindicitora and Calarina; the types belong to one species 
only. 
122. Pyrauis ELacHIA? 
Pyralis elachia, Butler, Ul. Typ. Lep. Het. iii. p. 70, pl. lviii. 
fig. 3 (1879). 
Campbellpore, July ; Murree, August 1885. 
Two worn examples belonging apparently to this species; they 
chiefly differ from the type in their slightly darker secondaries. 
123. Pyratis inconerua. (Plate XXXV. fig. 5.) 
Allied to P. glaucinalis and P. yokohame; of the same size as the 
latter, but in pattern much nearer to P. nannodes ; from the latter 
it only differs in its superior size and the almost perfectly straight, 
instead of irregular, whitish stripes across the primaries; from 
P. glaucinalis and P. yokohame it differs in the much greater width 
between these stripes in addition to their greater regularity: the 
colouring in all four species is very similar. Expanse of wings 
27 millim. 
Kala Pani, 24th September, 1885. 
HERCYNID2. 
124. APORODES MELEAGRISALIS. 
Herbula meleagrisalis, Walker, Cat. Lep. Het. xvii. p. 324. n. 11 
(1857). 
Campbellpore, 7th July, 1885. 
ASOPIID&. 
125. SAMEA YERBURII, sp.n. (Plate XXXV. fig. 6.) 
Allied to S. magna of Japan; of the same colours, but with 
whitish-centred discocellular lunules, the whitish patches quite 
differently arranged and not forming bands: primaries with two 
patches—the first small and oblong, in the middle of the cell, the 
second transverse quinquefid, between the end of the cell and the 
dusky discal line, the latter unequally bisinuate, not sharply angulated 
as in S. magna, less defined and with a pale (not whitish) external 
edging ; veins whitish towards the outer margin; fringe with a 
