NOVITATES ZOOLOGICAB XXIII. 1916. 2? 



line, anterior to it a subcostal bar (intersected by the vein), connecting the ante- 

 median with the first postmedian ; the white band distally to the postmedian is 

 moderately broad and is scarcely visibly bisected except at costa ; subterminal 

 line broad, bounded on each side by a strongly crenulate olive line ; these (especially 

 the proximal) are thickest anteriorly and are connected between the radials by 

 two thick longitudinal dashes ; termen with olive patches on the veins, confluent 

 with the outer boundary-line of the subterminal and containing white dots (the 

 anterior two or three minute) at the extremities of the teeth ; fringe white, dark- 

 spotted at the ends of the veins. Hindwing with the two distal lines of median 



area continued, the white space beyond broadening from R 3 , containing olive dashes, 

 on R 3 , M 1 , M 2 and SM 2 ; subterminal area, termen and fringe nearly as on forewing. 



Forewing beneath strongly marked in anterior half, extremely feebly ia 

 posterior ; hindwing very feebly throughout. 



Mount Goliath, Central Dutch New Guinea, 5000-7000 ft., January 1911 

 (A. S. Meek). Type in coll. Tring Mus. 



Closely related to viridata Warr. {Nov. Zool. xiii. 107, as Hastina), which 

 must be transferred to this genus ; longer-winged aud much more white. 



60. Heterophleps sinuosaria nubilata subsp. nov. 



S, 40 mm. Much less brown than sinuosaria sinuosaria Leech, the ground- 

 colour of the forewing being drab, with a strong purplish-grey suffusion in proximal 

 half; discal mark feeble; hindwing rather paler; lines less sharp, especially 

 beneath. 



Vrianatong, Tibet. Type in coll. L. B. Prout. 



61. Sauris fasciata graphica subsp. nov. 



Distinguishable from the N. Indian race fasciata Moore (= normis Hmpsn.) by 

 having the lines of the forewing better expressed, the postmedian marked with 

 short black dashes proximally, subterminal with dark shading proximally in addition 

 to the blotch at the radials, discal spot generally large and thick. 



Mount Goliath, Central Dutch New Guinea, 5000-7000 ft., January 1911 

 (A. S. Meek). Type in coll. Tring Mus. 



I have not yet been able to study the species throughout the intermediate 

 regions. 



62. Megaloba rubripicta Warr. 



The insect which Warren (Nov. Zool. xiii. Ill) described as the ? of his 

 rubripicta certainly belongs to the following new species. I have before me a ? 

 from Mount Goliath, January 1911, which may be the missing ?, as typical 

 rubripicta was taken at the same time and place (but so, too, was the new species 

 in both sexes). Size of the $, forewing closely similar, slightly more sharply 

 marked, the light bands which limit the median area paler and broader ; hindwing 

 above and both wings beneath uniformly rosy. 



63. Megaloba crypsipyrrha sp. nov. 



<5 ? , 40-41 mm. Similar to rubripicta Warr., but larger, more strongly 

 glossy. 



Forewing much more sharply marked, very pale green, with blaclush green 



