REVISION OF GENUS ZAMARADA 5 



Indonesian material; Monsieur C. Herbulot of Paris, who freely made available 

 the Zamarada that he had collected in Ivory Coast and Cameroun; Dr E. C. G. 

 Pinhey of the National Museum of Rhodesia for the loan of material, mostly of 

 his own collecting, from Zambia, Rhodesia and Uganda; Dr Lajos Vari of the 

 Transvaal Museum for the loan of Janse types and for the loan of extensive collections 

 from South Africa, and Dr P. Viette of the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle 

 for the location and loan of Guenee types and for the loan of Madagascan material. 

 Thanks are extended also to Dr B. Banerjee, Tea Research Association, Assam; 

 Dr G. Bernardi, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris; Mr J. Deeming, 

 Institute of Agricultural Research, Zaria, Nigeria; Dr W. Forster, Zoologische 

 Sammlung des Bayerischen Staates, Munich; Dr G. Friese, Deutsches Entomolo- 

 gisches Institut, Eberswalde; Dr F. W. Gess, South African Museum, Cape Town; 

 Dr Mahmoid Hosni, Ministry of Agriculture, Cairo; Dr F. Kasy, Naturhistorisches 

 Museum, Vienna; Dr O. Lindner, Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde, Stuttgart; 

 Prof. D. F. Owen, previously of the University of Sierra Leone; Mr R. Revell, 

 previously of Bo, Sierra Leone; Dr Heinz Schroder, Natur-Museum und Forschungs- 

 Institut Senckenberg, Frankfurt a. M.; Mr D. G. Sevastopulo, Mombasa, Kenya; 

 Dr Jaroslav Stehlik, Moravian Museum, Brno and Mr E. Taylor, University Museum, 

 Oxford. 



TREATMENT 



Previously known species are re-described in the same style as those species 

 described for the first time, the same basic pattern of description being followed 

 throughout the paper. The colour names used in the descriptions are taken from 

 the Methuen Handbook of Colour (1967); all the plate numbers cited in parentheses 

 after colour names refer to this work. 



The wing measurements given represent the range of wing length from the smallest 

 to the largest of each sex; the measurement is of the fore wing from mid-thorax 

 to apex. The antennal measurements are those of the longest pectinations, at 

 about mid-shaft; these are related to the diameter of the shaft. 



The genitalia of both sexes, when known, are described and illustrated. Drawings 

 of fabricated male and female genitalia illustrate the range of characters referred 

 to in the descriptions (Text-figs 2-4). Drawings for most of the text-figures have 

 been prepared by Mr Arthur Smith, A.R.C.A. and Mrs Maureen Lane; others have 

 been prepared by Mrs Janet Adams, Mr Alan Palmer, Mrs Kathleen H. Smiles, 

 Miss Sally A. Sharpe and by the author. The initials of the artists who prepared 

 the drawings are included in parentheses in the legends. The scale placed by each 

 drawing represents one millimetre. The half-tone illustrations of the moths and 

 of the female genitalia have been prepared from photographs taken by Mr J. Brown 

 and Mr P. York of the Photographic Section of the British Museum (Natural History). 



A key to the species-groups based on characters of the male genitalia precedes 

 the taxonomic part of the work; keys to species level are provided after each species- 

 group heading in the text. The female genitalia do not appear to show characters 

 for the separation of species-groups; a key to species level using these structures 



