SELENTS. 407 
A common species in Tropical South America and the West-Indian Islands, but 
apparently rare in Central America. The pale costal streak varies very considerably 
in colour; in some specimens it is very much brighter than in others. Examples from 
Rio Janeiro in my own collection are greyer in colour than any from Central America. 
2. Selenis lanipes. 
Selenis lanipes, Guén. Sp. gén. des Lép. vii. p. 363, Noct. t. 24. £.4(¢)*; Walk. Cat. xv. p. 1584. 
Hab. GuaTeMata, Coban (Conradt); Panama, Chiriqui (Arcé, in mus. D.), Bugaba 
1000 feet (Champion). 
Specimens from Chiriqui agree well with Guénée’s figure; the one from Coban is 
darker in colour and rather larger, but I have no doubt that it belongs to the same 
species. We have only received one specimen from each of the above localities. 
Guénée’s type was from an unknown locality 1. 
3. Selenis dentata. 
Seienis dentata, Walk. Cat. xxxii. p. 1067’. 
' Selenis anguinea, Feld. & Rogenh. Reise der Nov., Lep. t. 118. f. 2, Erkl. der Taf. 118. no. 2( 9)’. 
Hab. GuateMata, Volcan de Atitlan 2500 to 3500 feet (Champion); Panama, Volcan 
de Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet (Champion).—Co.omBi4, Bogota!; Ecuapor ; Braziu 2. 
Judging from the series before me, this species varies very much in colour, though 
none are quite so pale as Felder and Rogenhofer’s figure. Walker’s type is now in 
my own collection. 
4. Selenis agarrha, sp.n. (Tab. XXXIII. fig. 13.) 
Primaries pale brownish-white at the base and along part of the costal margin, the apex and the rest of the- 
wing dark brown, crossed beyond the middle from the costal to the inner margin by a waved black line, 
exterior to which are several indistinct brown lines, the spot at the end of the cell white and A-shaped, a 
marginal row of small greyish spots extending from the apex to the anal angle; secondaries pale brownish- 
white, crossed between the base and the middle by three waved lines—the first two brown, the third 
black,—below which two indistinct pale lines cross towards the apex, the costal margin broadly bordered 
with dark brown; the underside fawn-colour, clouded with dark brown along the outer margin of the 
primaries and at the apex of the secondaries: head (except in front), thorax, the base of the abdomen, and 
the anus pale greyish-brown, the rest of the abdomen brown ; the antennz, the front of the head, and palpi 
dark brown ; the legs and the underside of the thorax and abdomen pale greyish-brown. Expanse 17 inch. 
Hab. Mexico, Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith). 
One specimen of this pretty little species was captured by Mr. Smith in March 1888 ; 
it is not closely allied to any other known to us. 
5. Selenis agna, sp.n. (Tab. XXXIII. fig. 14.) 
Primaries pale fawn-colour, shaded with darker brown, with a dark brown band extending from the apex to 
the inner margin close to the anal angle, a large brown mark (almost like an inverted V) between the 
band and the base on the inner margin, two narrow brown lines crossing close to the base from the costal 
to the inner margin, a white streak at the end of the cell, and beyond this a faint pale-coloured line; 
secondaries the same colour as the primaries, crossed beyond the middle by two narrow whitish lines ; the 
