PEEJDEEPANA.— PEOBLEPSIS. 
43 
PERIDREPANA, gen. iiov. 
Allied to Drepana and Auzata ; the primaries les-s falcated than in Drepana ; the discoidal 
cell of the secondaries a little more elongated ; the antennae of the male broadly plumose to 
the tips, as in the genus Nyssia amongst the Geometrites. 
Peridrepana hyalina. (Plate CXXV. fig. 1.) 
Drepana hyalina, Moore, I'roc. Zool. Soc. 1SS8, p. 401. 
Semitransparent white : the primaries crossed at basal third and again just beyond the 
middle by two [)arallel undulated grey lines, the outermost of these lines is dotted with little 
blackish dashes upon the veins from the subcostal to the median vein, and thence to the 
inner margin it is widened, the third line in the male is interrupted beyond the cell ; a fifth 
black-dotted subraarginal line is indicated ; two black dots placed obliquely at the end of 
the cell, and a more or less complete marginal series at the end of the nervures ; costal inargin 
ochreous : secondaries crossed from the middle to the abdominal margin by four ill-defined 
undulated grey lines, the outermost one dotted with blackish ; a more or less defined slender 
grey marginal line ; two blackish dots placed obliquely at the end of the cell : antennae pale 
creamy yellowish, with grey ciliation. Face, legs, and underside of costal margin of primaries 
pale ochraceous ; veins slightly ochraceous, markings below obsolete. Expanse of wings 
40-41 millim. 
Kulu, on trunks of trees in March. 
The Comibtena fenestraria of Moore, which seems to be the specularis of the same author, 
to judge by our examples, is a Drepanulid, closely allied to Auzata-^ one example was in 
Mr. Hocking's collection. The genus difters from Auzata chicuy in the long and acutely 
angulatcd upper discocellular veinlet in tiie primaries, the upper radial being emitted from 
the angle, also in the much greater distance between the emission of the subcostal branches 
of the secondaries and the consequent prominence of the anterior extremity of the discoidal 
cell. This genus may be called Macrauzata. 
PEOBLEPSIS, Hiibn. 
Problepsis vulgaris, sp. n. (Plate CXXV. fig. 2.) 
The commonest species in the genus : snow-white, with markings somewhat as in 
F. deliaria, but the central occlloid patches darker, more black-spotted, more brilliantly 
spangled with silver, a little more elongated, that of the secondaries frequently as distinct as 
those of the primaries; antenute paler than in the Ceyioncsc species. Expanse of wings 
33-34 naillim. 
Kangra. 
G 2 
