462 HETEROCERA. 
3. Tortricodes alucitalis? (Tab. XX XVIII. figg. 5, 5a, 3; 6, 2.) 
Tortricodes alucitalis, Guen. Sp. gén. des Lép. viii. p. 73 (¢) *; Walk. Cat. xvi. p. 1317; Herr.- 
Schiff. Corr.-Blatt zool.-min. Ver. Regensb. 1870, sep. copy, p. 43°; Warren, Trans. Ent. Soc. 
Lond. 1889, p. 254%. 
Hab. GuatemaLa, Volcan de Atitlan (Champion); Panama, Chiriqui (idbe, in mus. 
Staudinger).—Amazons*; Braziu}2; Cusa?. 
Mr. Champion captured one male of this insect in Guatemala; both sexes are con- 
tained in Dr. Staudinger’s Chiriqui collection. The specimen from the Amazons in 
the National Museum is a small one and in poor condition. Our figures are taken 
from Chiriqui examples. 
GABERASA. 
Gaberasa, Walker, Cat. xxxiv. p. 1197 (1865) ; Warren, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1889, pp. 254, 255. 
This genus was founded by Walker upon the male of a species from North America, 
but it is not included in Grote’s ‘Check-list of North-American Moths.’ Gaberasa 
is allied to Tortricodes, from which it is at once distinguished by the entire absence of 
the tuft of hair on the costal margin of the primaries of the male; in all other respects 
the two genera are very much alike. 
1. Gaberasa anxa, sp.n. (Tab. XXXVIII. figg. 7, 7a, ¢; 8, 2.) 
Male. Primaries deeply cleft on the outer margin, pale brown, crossed from the costal to the inner margin by 
three dark brown bands—the first wide, the third simply a waved line at the base of the cleft,—and with 
a pale yellow spot, bordered on the apical side with dark brown, on the outer margin; secondaries dull 
brown, paler at the base, and crossed beyond the middle by two faint brown lines ; the underside pale 
brown, both wings crossed by a submarginal narrow waved whitish line: head, thorax, abdomen, and 
legs brown, the palpi and antenne dark brown. The female very similar to the male, but generally 
darker in colour and with the submarginal line more distinct on the upperside. Expanse, ¢ 12, 
© 1 inch. 
Hab. GuateMata, San Isidro 1600 feet, Cerro Zunil 4000 to 5000 feet, Volcan de 
Atitlan 2500 to 3500 feet (Champion); Panama, Chiriqui (Ridde). 
Mr. Champion captured a fine series of both sexes of this species in Guatemala ; it 
is allied to G. ambigualis, Walk. 
2. Gaberasa manes, sp.n. (Tab. XX XVIII. figg. 9, 9a,¢; 10,2.) 
Male. Primaries rather widely cleft on the outer margin, pale brown, with a narrow pale yellowish-brown line 
crossing near the base from the costal to the inner margin, broadly bordered on the outer margin (from 
the inner margin to the middle of the wing) with dark brown, a large pale yellowish-brown spot just 
above the cleft, and a submarginal pale brown line extending from near the apex to the anal angle, the 
fringe dark brown; secondaries uniformly dull brown, slightly paler at the base and along the costal 
margin, two submarginal indistinct pale brown lines extending from the costal margin near the apex to 
the inner margin above the anal angle, the marginal line black with white points, an indistinct small 
brown spot at the end of the cell, the fringe dark brown; the underside of both wings pale greyish-brown, 
the submarginal line white and very distinct, the spot at the end of the cell on the secondaries deep 
