170 GEOMETRID A. 
Sect. III. (Borbacha). Antenne pectinated with uniseriate 
vy, branches in both sexes. 
3150, Synegia pardaria, Guen. Phal.i, p. 420; Moore, Lep. Ceyl. iii, 
pil... 199, fic. 9; C. & S.no. 3585, 
Anisodes sarawackaria, Guen. Phal. i, p. 420. 
Yellow, irrorated with orange; head black. Wings with an 
antemedial band composed of grey marks outlined with rufous, 
angled in cell of fore wing and becoming subbasal on hind wing ; 
similar postmedial and submarginal bands, but composed of distinct 
lunules, interrupted on fore wing and double at middle on hind 
wing ; black specks at end of the cells. Underside with the ground- 
colour pale. 
Hab. Khasis; Ceylon; Borneo. wp. 44 millim. 
Sect. IV. Antenne of male almost simple; retinaculum a tuft ; 
' claspers large. 
3151. Synegia lunulosa, Moore, Lep. Atk. p. 250, pl. 8, fig. 8; 
C. & S. no. 3570. 
\/ Heterostegania nigrofusa, Warr. P. Z. S. 1893, p. 415. 
3. Ochreous, irrorated with rufous and black. Fore wing 
with ferruginous antemedial band with waved inner edge, ex- 
- panding towards inner margin and diffused outwardly; a black 
speck at end of cell; a postmedial band narrow towards costa, 
very broad below vein 4, with lunulate outer edge and diffused 
inwardly ; a short sinuous black mark below apex. Hind wing 
with black speck at end of cell; the basal half rufous with lunulate 
outer edge. 
The form nigrofusa has a black patch on the postmedial band of 
fore wing at vein 2. 
Hab. Sikhim. xp. 36-40 millim. 
Genus HYPOCHROSIS. ~~. 
Hypochrosis, Guen. Phal. 11, p. 536 (1857). 
Achrosis, G'uen. Phal. ii, p. 539. 
Omiza, Wik. Cat. xx, p. 246 (1860). 
Celenna, Wik. Cat. xxii, p. 519 (1861). 
: Pagrasa, Wik. Cat. xxiv, p. 1086 (1862). 
>,  Patruissa, Wik. Cat. xxvi, p. 1691 (1862). 
Marcala, Wilk. Cat. xxvi, p. 1764. 
Capasa, Wik. Cat. xxxvi, ie 1565 (1866). 
Phenix, Butl. A. M. N. H. (5) vi, p. 122 (1880). 
Type, H. sternaria, Guen. 
Range. Madagascar; China; Himalayas; Ceylon; Assam and 
Burma; Andamans; Sumatra; Borneo; Aru. 
Palpi usually not reaching beyond the frons; antenne bipecti- 
nated in both sexes, the branches in male longer than in female ; 
claspers of male very large; fore leg with the process reaching 
h 
