554 SIR GEORGE H. KENRICK ON 



Fore wing pale golden, a very short basal dark line, an oblique 

 antemedian line, a sharply angnlated median line, a regular 

 curved postmedian line (all these are dark fuscous and the last is 

 lost in a fuscous patch which extends from the middle of the hind 

 margin halfway up the hind margin). 



Hind wing pale at base, with the whole of the outer portion 

 dark fuscous, the boundary between these is marked by a very 

 irregular angulated line. Fringes rather paler. 



Exp. 28 mm. 



Arfak Mts., 4000 feet. 



ApHyTOCEROS GROSALis Meyr. 



CURICTA OPPOSITALIS Walk. 



Pyrausta occultilinea Walk. 



Pyrausta alentialis Snell. 



Pyrausta deductalis Walk. 



Pyrausta flammealis, sp. n. (PI. LXVIII. fig. 20.) 



Male with a tuft of hair at base of fore wing below and a strong 

 fold of costa extending to end of cell ; female with a smaller tuft 

 of hair ; both sexes have the base of the antennse surmounted by 

 a tuft of hair, but this is larger in the male. Head, legs, and an- 

 tennse pinkish brown, also palpi; abdomen ochreous above, darker 

 below ; thorax and patagia flame-colovir. 



Fore wing flame-colour, with three transverse fine dark lines : the 

 first ante median and oblique, the second median and angulated in 

 the middle, the thii'd angulated and not reaching below the third 

 nervur-e ; all the margins of the wing are darker. 



Hind wing uniformly straw-colour with fringes slightly darker ; 

 fringes of fore wing dark. In the female the flame-colour is 

 replaced by Indian yellow. 



Exp. 30 mm. 



Arfak Mts., 6000 feet. 



In addition to these species I have figured two varieties of 

 species already described : — 



PI. LXVIII. fig. 21 represents a form of Glyjjhodes pfeifferce, in 

 which the marginal border to both wings is much deeper than any 

 specimen I have received from New Guinea. 



PI. LXVIII. fig. 22 represents a form of Calamachrous alhi- 

 2mnctcdis in which the deep maroon-purple of the wings of this 

 species is replaced by bright chestnut. 



Both of these forms are from the island of Mioswar. 



Although in some cases a good series of the species was obtained, 

 in others only single specimens or two examples were taken, so 

 that the difi'erences in sex could not be ascertained. 



From this circumstance I am inclined to think that many other 



