PHILOPATOR; CADPHISES; GORMA. By Dr. K. Jordan. 
27 
forewing with 3 subcostals, the 1. vein free, the 2. and 3. stalked; 2. and 3. radials likewise stalked; lower 
angle of the cell projecting beyond the upper. One North-West Indian and one Philippine species. 
B. carneola Moore (5a). Wings semitransparent, yellowish. Head and thorax grey, abdomen cameola. 
blackish. — Simla; Kangra; Dharmsala. Stebbing found hundreds of specimens dead on a path in a pine- 
wood in July, 1901. 
B. grisea Semp. Body grey, collar, breast and the black-ringed abdomen yellow. Forewing grey, grisea. 
with 2 indistinct lighter bands, the one running across the middle of the cell, the other near to the distal 
margin; hindwing grey, yellow at the base. — North-West Luzon: 1 <? in coll. Semper. Not known to 
me in nature. 
27. Genus: Philopator Moore. 
Frons projecting, broad, flat anteriorly, not narrowed above. Wing-scales not close together, the 
wings consequently semitransparent, the 3.—5. subcostals of the forewing stalked, 5. subcostal proximal, 
1. radial from the cell, 2. and 3. radials stalked, discocellular deeply angled, the lower arm longer than the 
upper, lower angle of the cell projecting somewhat beyond the upper one, the 1. median nearer to the 
angle than to the 2. median, the cell distinctly angled at the point where the 1. median branches off; 
hindwing distally rounded, the 2. median widely proximal, both angles of the cell truncate. — Two North 
Indian species, the cfcf darker than the ??. 
P. basimaculata Moore (5 a). Body yellow, spotted and ringed with black. Wings yellow at the basi- 
base, spotted with black; in the d both wings almost entirely suffused with black, white before the middle; maculata 
in the 2 a band before the middle of the forewing, the apex of the cell and the veins white, as well as 
the middle of the hindwing. — Sikkim; not rare at an elevation of 3—4000 ft. 
P. rotunda Hamps. (5a). Wings much shorter than in the preceding species; <? and $ with black rotunda. 
head and white frontal line, thorax spotted with white. Forewing with a white spot below the cell, hind¬ 
wing with white middle area. — Sikkim; Assam; Manipur. 
28. Genus: Cadpliises Moore. 
Frons broad, projecting. Tongue strong. Terminal segment of the abdomen and anal claspers of 
the a* pale, naked, claspers narrow, curved, forming a ring together, ventral plate of the 7. abdominal 
segment of the ? inflated, pale, naked. Wings broad; forewing with transverse veinlets from the costa to 
the margin, 1. subcostal free, 2.— 5. stalked together, 1. radial from the cell, remote from the subcostals, 
2. and 3. radials stalked, upper angle of the cell obtuse, projecting beyond the lower, the vein in the cell 
not divided at the tip. Hindwing with very long hindmargin, anal angle less rounded than the apical angle, 
the veins from the cell, upper angle of the cell obtuse, discocellular scarcely angled, 1. radial either as a 
direct prolongation of the cell-vein or arising posteriorly to it. — Two large species, both North Indian and 
both grey-black, thickly dotted with white, resembling no other Zygaenids in the markings, d and $ alike. 
C. maculata Moore (? = azim Doubl.) (5 e). Hindwing unicolorous yellow from the abdominal maculata. 
margin to the 2. submedian. — Sikkim; Assam. Doubledat’s description of azim fits both species; the 
type appears to be no longer in existence. 
C. moorei Btlr. (? = azim Doubl) (5e). Hindwing also spotted at the hindmargin; the white spots moorei. 
at the base larger, often confluent. — Sikkim, Bhotan and Assam. 
29. Genus: Conua Walk. 
Frons not pointed. Upper angle of the cell of the forewing very strongly produced, the 1. and 
2. subcostals free, the 3.—5. stalked, 3. subcostal proximal, the 1. radial from the cell, the 2. and 3. radials 
stalked, the 2. median much more proximal than the 1. subcostal; angles of the cell of the hindwing at 
about the same height, the 2. subcostal and the l. radial close together, the discocellular deeply angled, 
the 2. and 3. radials stalked or from a point. — The species are Indo-Chinese. 
C. maculata. Abraxas- like. Body yellow, spotted with blue-black. Wings white, spotted with pale 
brown, the spots more or less connected. North India and China. — In the Indian form, maculata Hamps. maculata. 
(5a), the hindwing is mostly white; d and ? are similar; the forewing has a white band before and another 
behind the middle, which are united anteriorly with a large cell-spot. Assam; Burma. — In South and 
West China the d is much darker than the ?, above the white markings are much reduced, the hindwing 
