AZAMORA.—TOSALE. 191 
1891, p. 611) places Lederer’s genus Amblyura under Azamora, but I believe them to 
be distinct. 
1, Azamora penicillana. (Tab. LIX. fig. 17, 2.) 
Torda penicillana, Walk. Cat. xxviii. p. 4377. 
Azamora penicillana, Warr. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1889, p. 239 ?. 
Thylacophora tortricoidalis, Ragon. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1890, p. 491 (57), t. 5. figg. 2, 2a (o)*. 
Hab. Costa Rica, Santa Clara Valley (Zurcher); Panama, Obispo (Salvin, in mus. D.). 
—Gulana, Cayenne?; Amazons?, Para}, 
Three specimens, all females, agreeing with Walker’s types in the National Museum. 
An example from Costa Rica is figured. 
AMBLYURA. 
Amblyura, Lederer, Wien. ent. Monats. vii. p. 357 (1863) ; Walker, Cat. xxxiv. p. 1290. 
Lederer founded this genus upon a single species from Brazil; we nuw add two 
others from our region. 
1. Amblyura proclea, sp. n. (Tab. LIX. fig. 15, 3.) 
Male. Primaries dark brown, the base and two rather wide bands partly crossing the wing from the inner 
margin pale reddish-brown, a very distinct white dot about the middle of the costal margin, beyond which 
nearer the apex is a very minute white streak, a marginal row of very minute white spots extending from 
the apex to the anal angle, the fringe dark brown; secondaries uniformly greyish-brown : head, antenna, 
tborax, abdomen, and legs pale brown.—Vemale. Very similar to the male, but without the pouch at the 
base of the primaries. Expanse ;% inch. 
Hab. Mexico, Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith); Panama, Bugaba (Champion). 
We figure a male from Bugaba. 
2. Amblyura cecropia, sp.n. (Tab. LIX. fig. 16,2.) 
Male. Primaries dark glossy brown, crossed beyond the middle from the costal to the inner margin by 
a narrow pale yellowish-brown line, a marginal row of minute white dots extending from the apex to the 
anal angle, the fringe dark brown; secondaries slightly paler than the primaries ; the underside as above. 
—Female. Similar to the male, but without the fold at the base of the primaries. Expanse 4 inch. 
Hab. Muxico, Atoyac in Vera Cruz (H. H. Smith); Guaremata, El Reposo 800 feet 
(Champion). 
Two males and one female. <A male from Atoyac is figured. 
TOSALE. 
Tosale, Walker, Cat. xxviii. p. 447 (1863) ; Ragonot, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1890, p. 499. (65). 
Fabatana, Walker, Cat. xxxiv. p. 1265 (1865). 
Siparocera, Grote, Check-list of North-Am. Moths, p. 52 (1882). 
This is a small genus, of which, at most, two or three species are known; they closely 
resemble Tortricide, in which family Walker placed his genus Tosale. Several of the 
