148 
Cl DARIA. By L. B. Prout. 
unicata. 
centralisata. 
anerythreia. 
sabinata. 
brunneata. 
undulosa. 
yokohamae. 
subangulata. 
goniodes. 
tonnaichana. 
deangulaia. 
euscopus. 
orMcnlata. 
on Galium verum, seemed close to those of unicata; but after the 4th moult they recalled a Eupifhecia. perhaps 
extraversaria; pale sea-green to porcelain-white with a very fine blue-green dorsal line, which broadens at the 
hinder end of each segment into an irregularly quadrate, deep brown-red spot, laterally with irregular triangular 
spots of the same colour; head and legs light brownish green, venter and prolegs light greenish. 
C. unicata Guen. (Vol. 4, pi. 10 a) is smaller, more sharply marked; probably much the more distributed 
species in collections. The type came from Amasia and it occurs freely in Anatolia and several parts of Asia 
Minor, N. Syria, Greece, Macedonia, Albania and even in the Caucasus. The genitalia show considerable dif¬ 
ferences. — centralisata Stgr. (131) generally represents unicata also at Angora and our figure is taken from 
a specimen from that locality; a minority of more typical specimens may also be found there. The early stages 
of corollaria have recently been described by Dr. Draudt. Egg reddish yellow. Newly hatched larva greenish, 
with somewhat browner head. The moults follow one another at periods of about 5 days and the larva develops 
dark subdorsal and lateral bands; after the 4th it closely resembles cuculata in markings: sulphur-yellow, with 
extremely fine violet-red dorsal and subdorsal and broad lateral and sublateral bands, the latter almost meeting 
ventrally. It readily accepted Galium verum. 
G. cuculata Hufn. (Vol. 4, pi. 10 a) ab. anerythreia BbL, founded on a <$ from the Mistelbach district, 
Lower Austria, has entirely lost the usual reddish admixture on the forewing, both in the basal and in the 
distal area. The specimen is quite fresh. - sabinata Dawehl, from the Sabine Mountains, is said to be a good 
local race, differing materially from the type in the colour-scheme; all the shades incline towards red, the bands 
being red-brown instead of black-brown, the normally brown parts quite light brown or fawn; no bluish sheen 
in the distal area; subordinate lines weak; hindwing lighter. — brunneata D. Luc. is also treated as a subspecies; 
if such it be, it requires a new name, as brunneata is preoccupied in Cidaria (Packard). Only 2 examples, however, 
are yet known, both from Le Tarf, Algeria (May and September); these agree in that the pale parts of the fore¬ 
wing are more yellowish, the dark parts paler mixed, the hindwing greyish. undulosa Warxecke is founded 
on 9 specimens (both sexes) from Central Asia: Issyk-kul, Urnmtschi (Thian-shan) and Djarkent. Larger, with 
one exception, than European cuculata; ground-colour of forewing more grey-yellowish, median area and 
posterior part of distal area occupied by distinct wavy lines which reach the hindmargin, so that these parts 
of the wing do not appear so light as in the name-type; hindwings correspondingly darkened by more conspicuous 
lines, the dark marginal area in consequence less differentiated. The dark parts of the forewing are not pure 
black, but more or less tinged with red-brown. 
C. yokohamae Btlr. (15 c). We figure a $ of this apparently scarce species from Asamayama. I have 
not yet been able to find any constant difference in the E. Siberian rogenhoferi Graes. Sterneck records the 
species from Pekin. 
C. subangulata KoU. (Vol. 4, pi. 10 b). As in so many Cidaria with this scheme of markings, the $ shows 
some tendency to have the median band broader than in the <J; the sexual dimorphism is not, however, so 
strongly marked here as in many others and our figure (from a $ from Gurais Valley, Kashmir) gives a good idea 
of both sexes. Antenna of the $ simple. 
C. goniodes Proud (15 c). Intermediate between subangulata and mediovittaria Moore (see Vol. 4, p. 247) 
but nearer to the latter. Median band as broad (or almost as broad) as in subangulata and with a similar (blunt) 
central tooth outward which is virtually wanting in mediovittaria; distal area nearly as in the latter. Hind- 
wing similar to that of mediovittaria. A more detailed differentiation from that species will be given in Vol. 12. 
The type series came from Chumbi Valley, Sikkim Tibet, but it is mentioned here because it occurs also in 
Kashmir, particularly at Gulmarg. 
C. tonnaichana Matsumura (— tomaichana B.-Haas) is said to be “somewhat allied" to unangulata and 
although the figure is very small it could conceivably represent a member of that group. 27, $ 26 mm.” 
Forewing with cellspot large, proximal and median bands about as continuously darkened as in luctuosaria and 
cineraria , with some reddish-brown and fuscous costal maculation, postmedian gently sinuous, not angled, 
white band beyond bisected, distal area and hindwing much as in unangulata , subterminal of hindwing broad. 
S. Saghalien, in July and August. 
C. unangulata Haw. (Vol. 4, pi. 10 b) ab. deangulata Orstadius. Outer edge of median band running in 
an even S-shaped curve, without the tooth at the 3rd radial. Founded on a $ from Angermanland, Sweden. 
1 have an English example; the ‘S’ shape is of course exceedingly weak. — ab. euscopus V. Schultz has all the 
dark parts of the forewing much lighter brown, in the most extreme form (which was made the type) with the 
median area, excepting its narrow band-like boundaries, particularly light (almost whitish). Type from Viern- 
heim (Hesse). — ab. orbiculata Dannehl has the cell-spot, of the forewing set in a more restricted (light blue- 
grev) space than ab. euscopus. the median band otherwise complete; distal area with bluish suffusion strong 
