ADDENDA AD CIDARIA. By L. B. Prout. 
245 
p. 108. to L. achatinellaria. —r ab. ochroleuca Djakonov. Very light, almost uniformly yellow in colour, ochroleuca. 
only with the patch at ter men near apex light-brown. The type from S. Kansu (Ngai-men-hou-tou, a mountain 
valley at about 2000 m) is unusually large (“41 mm"), but Djakonov has a much smaller, very similarly coloured 
9 from the Altai. 
p. 109, to L. pyropata ab. melanoxantha F. Wagn. As a synonvm is to be added ab. excelsa Stertz (1927). melanoxan¬ 
tha. 
p. 110, to Lygris: 
L. fricedista sp. n. (17 a). A very interesting addition to Sect. C (Vol. 4. p. 213). Head and thorax tncedisla. 
darkened. Forewing above as in a dark G. fixseni (Vol. 4, pi. 8 f) excepting the shape of the median band, 
beneath more clouded; sexual patch as in G. flavata. Hinclwing more as in L. flavomacularia (Vol. 4. pi. 11 h) 
and with the same discocellulars. A further link between the so-called genera.. W. China, ex coll. Oberthur; 
type from Ta-tsien-lu, in the British Museum. 
L. tristis ( Sterneck ) Prout (17 a). This fine insect, referred to under the following genus, is not a form tristis. 
of G. fixseni but a good species, nearer to L. flavomacularia (Vol. 4, pi. 11 h), among which 4 (Ta-tsien-lu, 3: 
Siao-lu, 1) have been found in the Oberthur collection. Structure essentially the same; distinguishable bv 
the costal spots (the outer continued, though suffusedly, to the apex), loss of most of the transverse white 
maculation, predominantly fuscous hindwing beneath and acuter angulation (particularly obvious beneath) 
of the postmedian band of the forewing. 
p. 110, to C. fulvata. kashmirica Moore is a mere aberration, of/, nugata, with the postmedian line kashmirica. 
of the hindwing present on the upperside. 
p. 110. after G. fulvata: 
C. antauges sp. n. (17 b). Very similar to kashmirica Moore , possibly a further form of the same species, antauges. 
Hindwing yellow 7 , almost as bright as forewing, its line like that of kashmirica. Forewing with the median band 
fawn-colour, in the type altogether, in the paratype more or less (except costallv) overlaid with greyish suf¬ 
fusion, its constriction about the fold not extreme, its angulation outward at 3rd radial acute, reaching w'ell 
beyond the blunt tooth of 1st median (evidently variable within limits); a distinct oblique dark terminal dash, 
sometimes also an incomplete subterminal shade, distinct only at costa. Kashmir: Koksar (Me Arthur). 2 
in the British Museum. 
C. ochraceata Leech (= propinqua Warr.) (Vol. 4, pi. 13 o). $ plentiful in W. China; of the hitherto ochraceata. 
undescribed, I have now seen 4 and find that (as 1 conjectured) they are much lighter than the GS- as well 
as larger. 
p. 110, to C. ochripennis Prout (17 d). We now figure a topotypical q (Koko-nor. Tibet not “and ochripennis. 
Tibet”, as misprinted in Vol. 4, p. 215, German edition). The broader median band, acutely angled antemedian 
and weakened subterminal shades (especially the proximal shade anteriorly) w ill distinguish it from ochraceata 
father than the colour. 
p. Ill, to C. ocellata L. Heydemann supports Pierce in recognizing this as a true Lampropteryx. ocellata. 
differing only from the rest in slight details (face, $ antenna, etc.) and in a measure connected by tunkinskata 
Heydem. (infra). T readily accept this transference: see below. 
p. 112, to C. variata Schiff. A much worn $ from the Sven Hedin expedition (Kansu, ca. 3500 m; variata. 
1 August) entirely agrees with this in the genitalia; it seems to have been weakly marked, especially in the 
distal area, where the subterminal line is only quite weakly indicated. cembrae Lift. M. Seitner has an cembrae. 
article (Zbl. ges. Forstw., Vol. 61, p. 293, 1935) on this race, from which I gather that it might become a serious 
enemy to Pinus cembra but that it is kept pretty rnell in check by various parasites. It is single-brooded. June- 
August. larvae in the summer, hibernating among pine-lifter and pupating in a very loose web. britannica britannica. 
H. J. Turn. Hitherto I have had records only from the S. and southern central counties of England and sup¬ 
posed this to be the extent of the range of variata in Britain. But recent investigations into the fauna of the 
Hebrides have resulted in the discovery of a few- - larvae on Canna, feeding on spruce (J. W. H. Harrison). 
p. 114. to C. (Thera), sect. B. before C. sounkeana: 
C. cyphoschema Prout (18 i), founded on a long series from the Kachin Hills, seems to be still more cypho- 
abundant at Tse-ku, on the confines of the Palaearctic Region and is therefore figured here. Pectinations very schema. 
short, scarcely more than long teeth. Variation very slight, though the Yunnan form is perhaps on the whole 
larger than the Burmese. 
p. 115, to C. miata L. It appears that this species was only added to the fauna of the Netherlands as miata. 
recently as 1935, w'hen Lempke announced one as taken in Amsterdam 1913 by J. de Boer. 
