610 BHOPALOCERA. 



1. Palga sciras, sp. n. (Tab. CIV. figg. 5, 6, 6 .) 



Alis nitente aureis, stigmate occulto, anticis apice et margine externo late, venis ad basin et margine costali, 

 nigro-fuscis ; posticis marginibus, ad angulum analem latiore, coloris ejusdem : subtus anticis obscure 

 fuscis, plaga magna subovali discali ochracea, apice fulvo, costse dimidio basali flavo ; posticis pallide flavis, 

 maculis duabus discalibus miuutis, interiore minore, fuscis, fascia indistincta inargini externo subparalleli ; 

 corpore supra fusco, infra flavo. 



$ ignota. 



Hab. Honduras (Wittkugel, in coll. Staudinger). 



Dr. Staudinger has lent us a single male of this species from Honduras ; it is nearly 

 allied to F.jeconia (Butl.) from Venezuela, of which we have the type. 



B. Terminal joint of the palpi short. 



ENOSIS. 



Enosis, Mabille, Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1889, p. ix. 



M. Mabille referred four Tropical- American species to this genus, one only of which, 

 E. quadrinotata, Mab., from Chiriqui, is known to us, and we cannot say therefore 

 whether they are really congeneric. He does not allude to the brand on the primaries 

 of the male, distinctly visible in his type of E. quadrinotata, of which he notes the sex. 

 This insect, from which the characters of the genus are here taken, is uniformly fuscous 

 above, in this respect not differing from many other Central-American Pamphilina?. 



The antennae are exceedingly elongate, about two-thirds the length of the costa, and 

 have a slender elongate club, terminating in a long crook. The third joint of the 

 palpi is short and bluntly conical. The primaries are moderately elongate, arched 

 on the costa, and blunt at the tip ; the cell is less than two-thirds the length of the 

 costa ; the discocellulars are oblique, the upper one about three times the length of 

 the lower, the latter short and of the same length as the third median segment ; the 

 lower radial is strongly depressed at the base ; the first branch arises before the middle 

 of the median nervure, the second near the lower angle of the cell. The secondaries 

 are slightly lobed at the anal angle ; the discocellulars are faint. The body is rather 

 slender, the head large. The legs are very elongate ; the middle tibia? are without 

 spines, the hind tibiae have two pairs of spurs. The primaries of the male have an 

 indistinct brand formed of three portions : (1) a triangular piece in the angle between 

 the base of the second median segment and the first median branch ; (2) a short 

 longitudinal streak below this ; (3) a similar streak in front of the submedian nervure 

 before the middle. 



1. Enosis quadrinotata. (Tab. CIV. fig. 7, e .) 



Enosis quadrinotata, Mab. Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1889, p. x \ 



Alis fuscis, stigmate concolore : subtus pallidioribus, anticis margine interno angulum analem versus late 

 • grisescente, strigula indistincta venam medianam ad basin rami mediani secundi transeunte,' puncto 



