242 
ADDENDA AD ANAiiTIS. By L. B. Prout. 
lecerii. 
mundata. 
rosncrn. 
poneformaia. 
interrupfa. 
pseudopla- 
giata. 
so rdatta. 
ejjorinata. 
fuscofa-scia- 
ta. 
iraudulen- 
tata. 
balcanica. 
obsitaria. 
pseudopalli- 
dnta. 
serlata. 
externata. 
p. 86. to Ghesias: 
Ch. lecerfi D. Luc. Expanse 32 mm." Forewing above reddish brown, paler between the extrabasal 
and median; costa near the apex luteous. Extrabasal blackish, at first perpendicular to the costa, then to 
the inner margin, where it meets the median, which is of the same colour and for the most part parallel with the 
termen, but incurved near the costa. Subterminal straight, blackish, touching the termen at each end. Beneath 
yellowish brown, median line visible in its anterior part. Hindwing above and beneath unicolorous reddish 
brown, the fringe paler reddish. A very good specimen, taken near Rabat, 6 October 1931. Unknown to me. 
iunless it is a form of my “ L." biermis. 
p. 86, to A, mundata Stgr. The larva, according to Wiltshire, feeds on Hypericum serpyllifolium and 
is full-grown in April; it is green, with a crimson-lake spiracular line, white-edged above, the other lines faint 
or pale. 
p. 86. to A. praeformata. ab. rosacea Kiefer. F. Hoffmann substitutes aphrodite because Scha- 
werda's article was presented to his Gesellschaft on 3 March! It was published 20 June. Kie¬ 
fer's rosacea on 22 March. 
p. 86. to A. poneformata Stgr. (6 b). S. Kansu is to be added to the range. 2 $6 from Kung-ta, in 
Ka-tien-kou, differ considerably in size; 1 collected on 5 October at Tan-chang, suggests the possibility of 
a 2nd brood, the others being dated July. 
p. 86, to A. plagiata. - ab. interrupta Klern. is diagnosed as having the median area of the forewing 
broadly interrupted. Described from Lvov. 
p. 86. to A. corsalta. pseudoplagiata Byt.-Salz. A second Sardinian specimen, a 3 from Aritzo. 
1st September 1935, shows a still more pronounced brown coloration in the region of the rust-red apical streak 
than the one from Gennargentu already recorded and thus confirms, in the author’s opinion, the differentiation 
of the Sardinian race of corsalta. Except in the genitalia, scarcely distinguishable from plagiata. 
p. 86, to A. sardalta Byt.-Salz. A second S °f this rarity was captured at Aritzo on 2nd September 
1935, the day after the corsalta: it would seem that both may represent a second brood. The occurrence of 
all four of the plagiata group at Aritzo is very remarkable and it seems legitimate to wonder whether the geni¬ 
talia of corsalta and sardalta are not yet entirely stabilized. 
p. 87. to A. efformata Guen. Lempke has collected a number of records for Holland, including ab. 
tangens , which “occurs everywhere among the species", and ab. fasciata. ab. fuscofasciata Lempke. “The 
area between the two dark lines" (rightly groups of lines) “entirely filled in with dark brown, forming a band". 
This is only a slightly more extreme development of ab. fasciata: the one name might have sufficed for both. 
p. 87. after efformata: 
A. fraudulentata H.-Sch. (18 k). We are now able to give a figure of this large and easily recognizable 
species, a $ from Zounguldak. N. coast of Turkey. 
p. 87. instead of A. simpliciata bulgarica. balcanica Zullich ( bulgarica Prout). Both these names 
were founded on material from the same localities. My manuscript, passed for the press on 15 October 1935. 
was not published until long after the name balcanica Zullich, which appeared on 1 November 1936. In addition 
to the large size and sharp markings, attention is called to the connection, in nearly half the specimens, of 
the two bands of the postmedian by some dark central shading, a concomitant of a tendency towards the 
narrowing of the median area. 
p. 88. to A. obsitaria Led. (16 e). We figure here a very sharply marked $ of the name-typical race, 
from the Weiirli collection, to show the extreme of the difference from o. evanescens (9 b). pseudopallidata 
Byt.-Salz da Brandt has about the ground-colour of o. evanescens. the markings of the forewing reduced to a 
narrow basal band, strong dark ante- and postmedian, the former double, the latter triple at costa, single at 
hindmargin, and large cell-spot. Nissa, Elburs Mountains, 1 <$, at about 3000 m. Possibly a high-altitude 
race: bid the Elburs material which 1 have seen is more like evanescens. 
p. 90, to N. sertata Hbn. The reported occurrence in Pomerania has been confirmed, though it is there 
comparatively rare. 
Oulobophora externata H.-Sch. (Vol. 4, pi. 6 f). Wiltshire has bred this species in the Lebanon and 
gives a brief description of the larva: “dark green, darker between the somites, % inch long, with a yellow - 
green spiracular stripe; dorsal and subdorsal lines almost invisible; on the anal somite 2 small points." On 
terebinth in April and May, the imago emerging in March. 
( 
