MACEDA. — CYMATOPHOROPSTS. 397 



Genus MACEDA. 



Maceda, Wlk. Cat. xiii, p. 1140 (1857). 

 Calduba, Wlk. Cat. xv, p. 1815 (1858). 



Type, M. mansueta, "Wlk. 



Range. Ceylon ; Borneo ; N. Australia. 



Palpi slender, and reaching just above vertex of head ; antennae 

 ciliated ; abdomen with coarse hair on dorsum of proximal seg- 

 ments ; tibiae nearly naked. Tore wing without raised tufts ; the 

 apex almost rectangular ; male with the retinaculum bar-shaped ; 

 the end of the cell rounded and dilated, with a small patch of 

 ribbed hyaline membrane, probably for stridulation with the spines 

 of the mid tarsi. Hind wing with veins 3 and 4 stalked. 



2275. Maceda mansueta, Wlk. Cat. xiii, p. 1141 ; Moore, Lep. Ceyl 

 hi, pi. 154, figs. 4, 5 ; C. $ S. no. 2233. 

 Calduba obtenta, Wlk. Cat. xv, p. 1815. 



Bather pale red-brown ; abdomen fuscous, with slight white 

 rings. Fore wing with short sub- 

 basal line; oblique nearly straight 

 antemedial line ; spot at end of cell ; 

 waved postmediallineexcurved beyond 

 the cell ; a sinuous series of sub- 

 marginal specks. Hind wing fuscous 

 black, with an ill-defined white patch 

 on the disk ; the margin white towards 

 Fig. 219. ana l angle. 



Maceda mansueta, tf. \. Ra ^ ^^ . Andamans . Borneo . 



N. Australia. Exp. 34 millim. 



Genus CYMAT0PH0R0PSIS, nov. 



Type, C. sinuata, Moore. 



Range. Himalayas. 



Palpi obliquely upturned, and not reaching vertex of head ; 

 antennae simple in male ; metathorax with slight tufts ; abdomen 

 with tufts on the two proximal segments ; tibiae moderately 

 hairy. Pore wing with the apex rounded ; no raised tufts. 



2276. Cymatophoropsis sinuata, Moore, P. Z. S. 1879, p. 405; 

 C. 8r S. no. 1178. 

 Eisoba confluens, Moore, Lep. Atk. p. 92 ; C. fy S. no. 1634. 



Head and thorax dark red-brown ; the collar white ; abdomen 

 fuscous. Pore wing black-brown, with a large basal white patch 

 with obliquely waved outer edge and a large brown patch on it ; 

 a series of similar marginal spots, the one at apex large, and that 

 at outer angle very large, irregular, and almost joining the basal 



