Publ. 16. I. 1929. 
ANGONYX; ENPINANGA; CIZARA. By Dr. A. Seitz. 
area are but very narrowly confluent at the apex. pallidior Mell is a name for the lighter coloured, hiber- pallidior. 
nating South-Chinese specimens. - - Adult larva green, similarly to tiridates the first 3 or 4 segments are 
laterally brown, the 4th ring with a feigned eye on the side, the rings 5 to 10 with a brown lateral stripe and 
similar dorsal spots which may be so large that the brown colour predominates over the green colour. On 
Araceae (Pothos seemanni, Amorphophallus variabilis), species of Alocasia and Colocasia, also on Phellodendron, 
Caladium, and on Vitis. If the larva is irritated, the lateral eye which was invisible before, suddenly appears 
with an enamel glitter, and the thickened anterior end of the larva looks like a snake’s head being swollen 
with rage. The imagines are not rare in some habitats (e. g. in Java). 
52. Genus: Angonyx Bsd. 
Only three species compose this genus which is recognizable by a slight indentation in the margin of 
the forewing, below the apex, a slight angulation or convexity below the centre of the margin, and a slightly 
produced anal angle of the forewing. The forewing is more or less tinted green and divided into two almost 
equally long halves by an almost vertical transverse stripe. Purely Indo-Australian. The imagines are rare 
almost -wherever they occur. 
A. testacea Wkr. (= emus Bsd., emilia Bsd., ella Btlr.,) is the darkest brown species; thorax and fore- testacea. 
wing with a dark olive tint; hindwing outside reddish cinnamon-brown. Transverse band of the forewing whi¬ 
tish, only few mm broad. North India to Ceylon and the Moluccas. - papuana R. & J., from Queensland to papuana. 
Tenimber and the Salomons, differs hardly in the exterior, but more distinctly in the male genitals. — The 
imagines sometimes swarm on blossoms in bright sunshine. 
A. boisduvali Rothsch. (64 c) is considerably larger than the two other species, of a lighter colouring, the boisduvali. 
fore wing with a broad whitish median band which is only proximad distinctly defined. Distal third of hind¬ 
wing light red-brown, shaded at the margin. Distal margin of forewing very convex, with a pointedly pro¬ 
jecting interior angle. Salomons. 
A. meeki R. db •/. (64 c) is distinguished from the two other species by the linear transverse stripe meelci. 
through the centre of the forewing, which is narrowly edged with white only on the outside. Disc of hind¬ 
wing in the rf orange, in the $ deep dark red-brown. Salomons. 
53. Genus: l^iipiiiang'a R. & J. 
Separated from the preceding genus by the smaller head, shorter antennae and short tibial spurs. The 
imagines exhibit a pointed apex of the forewing, below which the margin is distantly gnawed out: Only 4 spe¬ 
cies all of which seem to be rare. 
E. vigens Btlr. (= virens Smpr.) (64 d). Fore wing silvery grey with a very irregular margin, with a me- vigcns. 
dian transverse stripe and a thick central dot before it; hindwing blackish, towards the anal angle lighter, 
inner margin light grey. Beneath the forewing is loamy yellow near the median band. Malacca and Borneo 
to the Philippines. Rare. 
E. assamensis Wkr. Only a badly preserved is known. Similar to the preceding species, but in the assamensis. 
distal area of the forewing there is another line, and beneath the loam-colour is absent. Silhet. 
E. borneensis Btlr. (64 d) is near to assamensis and was even regarded as a form of it. Forewing beneath borneensis. 
likewise without the loam-coloured spot. Above with a large central spot, but without the strongly marked 
broad dark median transverse stripe. Malacca, Borneo; rare. 
E. labuana Rothsch. Fore wing not so deeply gnawed out below the apex; hindwing at the apex and anal labuana. 
angle pointed. Median transverse stripe of forewing indistinctly darker; the shade of the forewing is more a 
violettisn grey, suffused with purple. From Labuan in Borneo; rare. - oceanica R. db J., from the Andamans, oceanicci. 
exhibits the interior half of the forewing above more distinctly contrasting with the exterior half, the discal 
lines are more distinctly marked, and the whitish-grey place in the marginal area extends to the anal angle. 
Under surface much brighter red. 
54. Genus: Cizara Wkr. 
The very neat two species are at once discernible by the shape of the body. Particularly in the Au¬ 
stralian species the abdomen is short and stout, but at the end extended into a long point. Besides a straight 
white bar extends right across the forewing. 
C. ardeniae Leivin (= ardenia auct.) (63 e). Dark olive brown, abdomen with lighter belts and markings, ardeniae. 
In front of the margins of the forewing a bone-white thick stripe extends, in some places tinted with pink, 
the costal-marginal and inner-marginal portions of which are connected by the quite straight, white median 
transverse stripe. Near the shoulder, at the base of the fore wing a black dot in a bone-coloured halo. 
Larva brown, with a light subdorsal stripe, finely dotted whitish; the anterior segments below the longitudinal 
line deep blackish-brown; the other rings laterally with oblique shadows; horn large, rough. On Grevillea (ex¬ 
clusively Australian Proteaceae) in the east of Australia, Queensland, and New South Wales, in some places 
not rare. 
X 
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