44 LEPIDOPTERA INBICA. 



tai'si moro bristly, tarsus five jointed, each with a lateral short spine, the terminal 

 joint furnished with a pair of small curved claws, paronycliia, and a pulvillus. 



Larva and pupa unknown. 



Distribution. — The habitat of the only known genus {GalUui(ja)oi this sub-family, 

 is in the Western and Eastern Himalayas, Upper Burma, Upper Siam, and Western 

 and Central China. 



Genus CALINAGA. 



Calinaga, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. East Ind. Company, i. p. 102 (1857). Lucas, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, 

 1884, p. 86. de Niccvillo, Butt, of India, etc., ii. p. 142 (1886); id. Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, 

 1900, p. 150. Staudinger and Schatz, Exot. Schmett. ii. p. 134 (1887). Leech, Butt, of China, 

 etc., i. p. 117 (1892). Jordan, Nov. Zool. v. p. 38G (1898). Watson, Mem. Manchester, Lit. and 

 Phil. Soc. 1899, pp. 123. 



Imago. — Forewing elongated, triangulate ; anterior margin slightly arched, 

 apex broadly rounded ; exterior margin about half the length of the anterior, obliq\ie, 

 very slightly uneven ; posterior margin recurved, two-thirds the length of the 

 anterior, angle rounded. Veins stout, costal vein extending to full}^ two-thirds of 

 the margin ; subcostal vein well separated from the costal, its first branch arising at 

 fully two-fifths from the base or one-fifth before end of the cell, second branch at a 

 short distance before end of the cell, third branch at two-fifths beyond the cell, 

 fourth at about three-fifths, the fifth extending to below the apex; cell extending 

 to more than half length of the wing, rather broad ; upper discocellular veiulet 

 extremely short, middle and lower discocellular concave, the middle shortest ; 

 njedian veinlets equidistant apart, middle veinlet emitted at some distance before 

 lower end of the cell; submedian vein nearly straight. Hindioing elongated, some- 

 what quadrate, rather broad ; anterior margin lobately-convex at its base, thence 

 quite stx'aight and extending beyond the posterior angle of the forewing, apex 

 rounded, exterior margin obliquely convex and somewhat angular in the middle, 

 abdominal margin lobately-convex at the base, thence nearly straight, the anal angle 

 being convex; precostal vein rather indistinct, curved inward, arising at some distance 

 from above the base of subcostal ; costal vein arched near the base, then straight, ex- 

 tending to costal margin at three-fourths of the wing ; subcostal vein very straight 

 to two-fifths of the wing, whence the first branch starts slightly upward and extends 

 to the apex, second subcostal branch starting at a very short distance from the first ; 

 discocellulars very oblique, rather long, ujoper shortest and slightly concave, lower 

 slightly convex ; cell large, broad across the middle, extending to half the wino- ; 

 basal cell* (formed by the peculiar conformation of the costal, subcostal and median 

 veins in conjunction witli an interno-costal veinlet) very narrow, and perceptible 



'•' See Watson, I.e. p. 13. 



