1822 CATALOGUE OF 



SlPPHARARA EUCIIR0MIELLA. 



Mas et foem. Nigra; anfennce apice albce ; thorax ochraceo tri- 

 vittatus ; abdomen subtus ochraeeum ; alee anticce squamis 

 nonnullis viridibus micantibus, vitta lata fiexa fo.sciaque mar- 

 ginali ochraeeis ; postica fascia marginali ochracea. 



Male and female. Black. An ten nee silvery white towards the 

 tips. Thorax with three orange or crimson stripes. Abdomen 

 orange beneath. Fore wings with a broad orange stripe, which 

 occupies two-thirds of the length of the costa and is bent to the inte- 

 rior angle, where it joins an orange marginal baud ; some brilliaDt 

 green speckles in the black part. Hind wings with an orange mar- 

 ginal band, which is broadest in front. Length of the body 6 — 7 

 lines; of the wings 18 — 20 lines*. 



a. Java. Presented by the Secretary of the India Board. 



b. Sumatra. From Sir Stamford Raffles' collection. 



c. Gilolo. From Mr. Wallace's collection. 



d. ? From M. Beckei's collection. 



Genus CERVaRIA. 



Mas. Corpus robustum. Proboscis valida. Palpi robu^ti, 

 sqnamosi, oblique asceiulentcs, verticem paullo superantes ; articuius 

 3us minimus. Antennae pectinata\ apice serrata?. Abdomen alas 

 poslicas sat superans; fasciculus apicalts minimus. Pedes robusti, 

 squamosi, longiusculi ; calcaria longa, valida. Ala? antics longa?, 

 latiusculap, subacute, margine exteriore convezo sat obliquo. 



Male. Body stout. Proboscis robust Palpi stout, squamous, 

 obliquely ascending, rising a little higher than the vertex ; third joint 

 conical, not more than one-tenth of the length of the second. Antenna? 

 moderately pectinated, serrated near the tips. Abdomen extending 

 somewhat beyond the hind wings ; apical tuft extremely small. Legs 

 stout, squamous, rather long; spurs long, stout. Wings long, rather 

 broad. Fore wings slightly acute ; costa hardly convex ; exterior 

 border convex, rather oblique ; second inferior vein as uear to the 

 third as to the first ; third twice further from the fourth than from 

 the second. 



