Addenda. By L. B. Protjt. 
135 
D. cyanorrhoea Lower (= cyanorrhaea Turn.). The unique type of this species, a from Alice Springs, cyanor- 
Central Australia, has been redescribed by Turner. 24 mm. Face with a strong, porrect, flattened, corneous 
projection, its anterolateral angles prolonged into a pair of sharp spikes. Palpi rather long and slender, ter¬ 
minal joint very short. Pectinations in 5. Forewing elongate, narrow, costa straight almost to apex, termen 
strongly oblique, toothed on veins 3, 4 and 6; grey; a suffused fuscous line from ] / 3 hindmargin, very oblique 
towards, but not reaching, costa before apex, slightly bisinuate, followed by a broad, bisected whitish suffusion; 
cilia dark grey with some whitish scales between dentations. Hindwing rather broad, apex obtusely rounded, 
angled and toothed on vein 3; 6 and 7 short-stalked; grey, a suffused, whitish, transverse median band, con¬ 
taining a fine grey line (Turner, abbreviated). 
To p. 25, Lissocraspeda: 
L. bicome Auriv., described as the type of a new genus Bumetopon and ascribed to the Notodontidae, bicorne. 
is evidently only a very slight modification, or even a synonym, of eremoea. To judge from the figure (un¬ 
coloured) of the type §, the postmedian line arises at scarcely % instead of at 5 / 6 and is less oblique, and the 
hindwing does not show the wavy lines except near the abdominal margin, where they suffuse into an ill-defined 
dark spot. Broome, N. W. Australia. 
To p. 29, Thaumat. singularis: 
var'egata B.-Bak., described under the Eupterotidae as the type of a new genus Neuroanomala, if not variegata. 
a synonym of singularis (2 g), is at most a somewhat light-coloured aberration. Mount Kebea, British New Guinea. 
To p. 30, Eumelea: 
A few new species and forms have been discovered or differentiated in this interesting genus since the 
publication of sheet 5 in 1921. The position which I assign to the new species is indicated below. 
To p. 31, after biflavata: 
E. incensa Prout. 64 mm. Like an overgrown feliciata (p. 32) but less yellow-mixed than most of the incensa. 
$ forms of that species, the median line of the forewing almost straight, the outer band on both wings con¬ 
siderably broadened, on the underside bright rosy purple, entirely without the grey admixture. Possibly a 
much larger race of biflavata, but without the characteristic yellow postmedian spots and with broader outer 
band. Menado, Celebes, only the type $ known. 
To p. 31, unipuncta: 
latiparies Prout. Forewing with costal edge more uniformly purple than in u. unipuncta (2 i), in which latiparies. 
the costal edge is much strigulated with yellow and grey; the first two lines (bands) broader, especially the 
second. Hindwing with median line correspondingly broadened. Underside heavily suffused with purple. 
Rather less deep yellow than that of the name-type; median line broadened as in the <$. Burn. It should 
be remarked that the quotation of the Solomon Islands as a locality for unipuncta arose from a misidentification. 
E. ludovicata Guen. (2 i, not 2 h). The name-typical race, strictly defined, is only found in Ceylon and ludovicata. 
S. India and is duller than most of the races, especialty in the <$, which almost entirely lacks the rosy or vina- 
ceous shadings and has the yellow patches small and indefinite. — biclarata Prout is on an average smaller biclarata. 
(E 51—-54 mm, $ 55—60 mm), in the much brighter, with all the yellow patches more or less developed, 
somewhat recalling biflavata. $ rather more variegated than in l. ludovicata. India (except the south) and 
Burma. —- referta Prout. Similar in size and coloration to biclarata <$, also with the yellow patches more or referta. 
less developed, but in varying relative proportions, those at the distal margin (apex and tornus) nearly always 
conspicuous, the latter as a rule extended forward to the 3rd radial; dark markings of forewing generally broa¬ 
dened. Founded on 7 GS from Sipora (Mentawi Islands) and 4 from the Batu Islands. —- rhodeogyna Prout, rhodeo- 
ffomNew Ireland and New Hanover, has the sexual dimorphism much less pronounced than in the other races, gyua. 
the $ having all the irroration, clouding and maculation strong, rosy-purple: <$ intermediate between the more 
typical forms and rubra, perhaps nearer to the latter. 
To p. 32, vulpenaria: 
ab. flavata Moore is invariably $, not “J” as misprinted in the English edition. 
E. lipara West. Distinguishable by its “Kaiser brown’’ (tern of Ridgway) and more sharply bent lipara. 
postmedian line, on the hindwing beneath strongly curved. Slight yellow maculation on fold between post- 
median and subterminal of forewing. Luzon, only the type known, its hindlegs wanting. 
E. stipata Prout, described as a form of rosalia, is a good species, differing from australiensis not only stipaia. 
in its coloration but also structurally, the 3 hindtibia wanting the fringe of fine hair which is developed in all 
forms of rosalia. The genitalia are smaller, with differently shaped saccus and less developed coremata, and 
the form of the uncus (“crux” behind — i. e. dorsal to —- “chartae”, seep. 30) groups it definitely with mar - 
ginata and semirosea. 
