316 MR. W. WARREN ON LEPIDOPTERA [JuilC 5, 



Remigiu bifasciata, Wlk. Cat. Lep. Het. B. M. xxxiii. p. 1014. 



Remigia gregnlis, Gn. Noct. iii. p. 320. 



Remigia pellita, Gn. Noct. iii. p. 318. 



One female, from Kala Pani, September 1 , 1 886. 



A widely distributed species. The females are more reddish, the 

 males greyer, with the two fasciae more pronounced. The latter 

 very frequently, ^jut not invariably, have a black spot near the inner 

 margin before the first fascia. 



JMr. Moore (Ceylon, iii. 191) erects this species into a genus by 

 itself, under the name Cauninda ; but the characteristics given 

 appear to be merely relative. 



102. Lagoptera elegans. (No. 200.) 



Ophiusa elegans. Van der Hoeven, Lep. Nov. pi. 5. fig. 6 a, b. 

 One female, Dumtauar, September 29, 1886. 



103. Dysgonia latifascia, sp. n. (No. 17.) 



Fore wing olive-brown ; the usual central fascia whitish, with a 

 lilac tinge, wider at each extremity than in the middle ; the olive- 

 brown space beyond it quite as wide as the basal space, narrowly 

 white-bordered throughout from costa to inner margin ; this border 

 is not angulated nor indented, as in other species ; it runs at first 

 obliquely outward from the costa for about one third of the wing, 

 then, without forming an angle, vertically for a short distance, not 

 concave iuwards, and finally obliquely inwards, slightly sinuous, but 

 without any distinct indentation. Apex with a triangular olive- 

 brown spot, faintly white-bordered internally, and a smaller confluent 

 one below it ; hind margin pale lilac-grey, preceded by a dull fuscous 

 shade ; a row of very minute dark submargiual dots. Cilia pale 

 ochreous. Hind wing dull olive-brown, with a rather ill-defined 

 bluish-white central band ; fringes nearly white ; the anal angle 

 narrowly greyish. Head, thorax, and abdomen fuscous-olive. 



Expanse of wings 48 miUim. 



One male from Campbellpore, July 20, 1886. 



This agrees precisely with a very perfect specimen from Solun in 

 the British Museum collection, which had been inadvertently placed 

 among D. arctotcenia. It may be distinguished at once from all allied 

 species by the much greater width of the discal band, which ap- 

 proaches that of D. conjiciens. 



104. DySGONIA OLYMPIA. (No. 17.) 

 Ophiusa olympia, Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 1885, p. 466. 

 One male from Campbellpore, June 3, 1886. 



In this specimen the white band is not only thinner than in the 

 female, but also differs in shape, being much narrower on the inner 

 margin than at the costa, as in B. analis. 



The comparison of a numerous series in the Hocking Collection 

 proves this to be only a variety of D. albivitta. 



