326 HETEROCERA. 
5. Dysodia oculatana. 
Dysodia oculatana, Clem. Proc. Acad. Phil. xii. p. 350°. 
Platythyris oculatana, Grote, List of North-American Moths, p. 13 (1882) *. 
Varnia plena, Walk. Cat. xxxiii. p. 826°. 
Platythyris fasciata, Grote & Robinson, Ann. Lyceum New York, viii. p. 362, t. 18. figg. 4 (9), 
5(3)*. 
Hab. NortH America }?3, Virginia 4—GuATEMALA, Panima in Vera Paz (Champion) ; 
Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui (Champion). 
This species has been described three times by different authors; Clemens’s name has 
five years’ priority over that of Walker, and seven over that of Grote and Robinson. 
INGURA. 
Ingura, Guénée, Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p. 809 (1852) ; Walker, Cat. xii. p. 874. 
Walker in his Catalogue includes nine species in this genus, all from North or 
South America or the Antilles, and a tenth has recently been described by Moschler 
from Jamaica; three are known to us from Central America. 
The genus Orthoclostera, Butl. (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1878, p. 70), based upon a 
single species, O. peculiaris, Butl., from the Rio Negro, and the type of which in the 
National Collection appears to be considerably distorted in setting, seems to me to be 
quite inseparable from Jngura; in fact, one of our species, £. murina, very closely 
resembles it. 
1. Ingura abrostoloides. 
Ingura abrostoloides, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p. 83117; Walk. Cat. xii. p. 875°; Grote, List of 
North-American Moths, p. 33 (1882) *. 
Hab. Nortn America 1? *,—Costa Rica (Boucard, in mus. D.), Rio Sucio (Rogers) ; 
Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 4000 to 5000 feet (Champion).—Brazit, Rio Janeiro. 
A specimen taken at sea off the coast of Panama by Mr. J. J. Walker, R.N., late of 
H.M.S. ‘ Kingfisher,’ is identical with our Costa Rican and Chiriqui examples. 
2. Ingura lunodes. 
Ingura lunodes, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vi. p. 8310’; Walk. Cat. xii. p. 876%. 
Hab. Honpuras!?; Panama, Flamenco I. (Salvin). —Gutana, Cayenne 12; Brazit, 
Rio Janeiro !2; ANTILLES, Dominica. 
I am indebted to Mons. C. Oberthtir for the loan of Guénée’s type of this species ; 
it is allied to L. abrostoloides, but much paler in colour. 
3. Ingura murina, sp.n. (Tab. XXX. fig. 8.) 
Primaries dark purplish-brown, darkest along the costal margin from the base almost to the apex, the inner 
margin much paler, with a double narrow waved reddish-brown line, crossing from the apex to the inner 
