414 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL AISTORY SOCIETY, Vol, XIII, 
having the wings broader and rounder, the pectinations of the antennz 
smaller, the forewing with a prominent waved white line from the 
apex to the posterior angle and beyond the postmedial line. The hind- 
wing bears traces of a pale submarginal band nearer the anal angle. 
The type male is in the British Museum and the female in my own 
collection. 
Genus Dasycutra, Steph. 
997. D. complicata, W1k. 
Sikhim, 6,000 to 8,000 feet. This occurs in Darjeeling, but females 
are considerably more scarce than males. I have taken it at light. 
(Common on Tongloo at 10,000 feet in July.—H. J. E.) 
998. D. lineata, W1k. 
Sikhim and Bhutan, 2,500 feet. Common in May, June and July 
at Fagoo, The male differs only in being smaller, and having 
the postmedial, and sometimes the submarginal waved lines more 
distinct, 
999. D. horsfieldi, Saund. 
Sikhim and Bhutan, 1,000 to 7,000 feet. The larva, a bright yellow 
insect with a dorsal black band between the 4th and 5th somites, and 
with five tufts of yellow hair on the 4th to 7th and 11th, somites, is 
often seen on tea bushes, the leaves of which it eats. The moth 
appears in March. (I have a Q from Miller taken in February. 
—H. J. E.) 
1001. D. albescens, Moore. 
Sikhim. I do not recognise this species. (I found it at light at 
Darjeeling in July and August.—H. J. E.) 
1002. D. cinctata, Moore. 
Sikhim. (Also taken at Darjeeling at light, and well distinguished 
from the last by its larger size and black-ringed abdomen.—Z. J. £.) 
1003. D. strigata, Moore. 
Sikhim. (I have only two from Moller’s collection —H. J. E.) 
1004. D. varia, W1k. 
Sikhim, 6,000 feet. The larva feeds on Leucosceptrum canum, and 
is pale green covered with green hairs. I have only once reared a 
female insect from it, which emerged in February. 
1006. D. brunnescens, Moore. 
Sikhim. I do not know this species, 
