Ugia is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae erected by Francis Walker in 1858.
Species
- Ugia albilinea <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia albooculata <small>(Saalmüller, 1880)</small> (Madagascar)
- Ugia amaponda <small>(Felder & Rogenhofer, 1874)</small>
- Ugia calescens <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia cinerea <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia disjungens <small>Walker, 1858</small> (Borneo)
- Ugia duplicata <small>Gaede, 1940</small>
- Ugia duplicilinea <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia egcarsia <small>(Bethune-Baker, 1911)</small>
- Ugia eugrapha <small>Swinhoe, 1907</small> (Bali, Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Thailand)
- Ugia flavida <small>Gaede, 1940</small>
- Ugia geometroides <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia hecate <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia insuspecta <small>Galsworthy, 1997</small>
- Ugia malagasy <small>Viette, 1966</small> (Madagascar)
- Ugia mascusalis <small>(Walker, 1859)</small>
- Ugia mediorufa <small>(Hampson, 1894)</small>
- Ugia minima <small>Gaede, 1940</small>
- Ugia navana <small>Viette, 1966</small>
- Ugia polysticta <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia radama <small>Viette, 1966</small> (Madagascar)
- Ugia radigera <small>(von Heyden, 1891)</small>
- Ugia roseata <small>Gaede, 1940</small>
- Ugia rufilinea <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia scopulina <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia serrilinea <small>Hampson, 1926</small> (Borneo, Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Sulawesi, Thailand)
- Ugia sestia <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia signifera <small>Walker, [1863] 1864</small> (Borneo, Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia)
- Ugia stigmaphora <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia straminilinea <small>Hampson, 1926</small>
- Ugia sundana <small>Hampson, 1924</small> (Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Thailand)
- Ugia taeniata <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia transversa <small>(Moore 1882)</small> (India)
- Ugia trigonalis <small>Kobes 1982</small>
- Ugia umbrina <small>(Holland, 1894)</small>
- Ugia violascens <small>Gaede, 1940</small>
- Ugia viridior <small>Holloway, 2005</small> (Borneo, Sarawak, Singapore)
Former species
References