242 Some apparently new Species and Forms of Noctuidae 



obsolescent (the dotted subterminal the least indistinct), apparently 

 much as in contraria Wlkr., from Sarawak, of which this may just 

 possibly be a local race, though the length of antennal pectinations 

 differs, the shape of fore wing agrees rather with latimargo Umipsn., from 

 Burma, and it differs also from contraria in the entire absence of the 

 antemedial pale band, which is nearly always present in that species ; 

 some diffused dark shading about the postmedial line and at termen ; 

 a fine dark terminal line, broken by slight whitish spots at the veins ; 

 fringe dark purplish brown. 



Hind wing nearly as in contraria, but a little more contrasted, with 

 dark terminal shading ; costa conspicuously white. 



Underside of both, wings ochreous-white irrorated with pink, the 

 posterior half of fore wing (except at termen) tinged with fuscous ; 

 postmedial line nearly as in contraria, but rather more strongly bent 

 outward from costa, stronger and almost broken into spots by the pale 

 veins ; fore wing with moderately strong subterminal line and some 

 dark suffusion at termen. 



2 , 44 mm. 



Almost without the olivaceous distal shades of the 3 ; fore wing 

 with double, dotted white postmedial line and a few white antemedial 

 dots, as in contraria ; underside greyer than in the 3 , with the dark 

 postmedial line weaker, more continuous, and the subterminal almost 

 obsolete. 



Manusela, 6,000 feet, October to December, 1919, two 3 3 , one ? . 



3 antenna with the pectinations five or six times diameter of shaft 

 in length, longer than in any other Savara species known to me. 



62. Anomis bicolor sp. nov. 



= Cosmophila bicolor Warr. MSS. 



3 , 42 — 48 mm. 



Head and thorax ochreous-brown, patagia usually with a few white 

 scales, sometimes tinged with rufous ; abdomen above pale greyish- 

 ochreous, usually shaded with reddish-grey ; abdomen beneath, pectus 

 and legs deeper greyish-ochreous, the pectus and tibiae with some 

 brighter golden shades, fore-tibia with a tuft of pure white hair. 



Fore wing typically ochreous-brown with a slight silvery sheen 

 between postmedial and subterminal lines ; markings often obsoles- 

 cent, the most distinct being a costal white spot at origin of post- 



