218 HETEROCERA. ° 
(Champion), Coban (Conradt) ; Panama, Chiriqui (ibbe, in mus. Staudinger ; Arcé, in 
mus. D.).—Ecuapor; Brazin'*. 
Five specimens, agreeing with a large series from Ecuador in my own collection. 
2. Atheropoda remusalis. (Tab. LXI. fig. 5.) 
Botys remusalis, Walk. Cat. xviii. p. 597°. 
Hab. Cosra Rica, Volcan de Irazu 6000 to 7000 feet (Rogers).—CoLomBIa, Bogota}. 
We have received a single specimen of this species from Costa Rica. I have 
examined the type in the Oxford Museum. 
3, Atheropoda corylalis. 7 
Megaphysa corylalis, Guen. Sp. gén. des Lép. viii. p. 214’; Walk. Cat. p. 381°. 
Atheropoda corylatis, Leder. Wien. ent. Monats. vii. p. 418 °. 
Hab. Panama, Chiriqui (Trétsch, in mus. Staudinger ).—CotomBia ! ? °. 
One specimen. It is very like A. majoralis, but has the lines on the primaries in a | 
different position, that on the secondaries extending straight across the wing but not 
reaching the outer margin. | 
4. Atheropoda pontealis, sp.n. (Tab. LXI. fig. 6.) 
Primaries and secondaries pale yellow; the primaries crossed from the costal to the inner margin by two 
narrow brown lines—the first straight, near the base, the second curved, beyond the middle,—the wing 
on the outer side of the second line shaded with pink, a small spot in the cell and one at the end of it, 
the veins near the outer margin, and the fringe brown; the secondaries crossed about the middle by 
a dark brown line, the base semihyaline ; the underside very much as above: head, thorax, abdomen, and 
legs dark yellow, the antenne brown.—Female. Very similar to the male. Expanse 2 inches. 
Hab. Mexico, Rinconada in Vera Cruz (Schaus); Guatemala, Panajachel 5000 feet 
(Champion); Costa Rica, Volcan de Irazu 6000 to 7000 feet (Rogers); Panama, 
Chiriqui (Arcé, in mus. D.)—Hcuapor. » 
Of this species I have seen four specimens only from our region, but from Ecuador 
I have a very large series, varying slightly in colour. A. pontealis bears a great 
resemblance to Sparagmia gigantalis, Guen., from which it may be at once distinguished 
by the very different shape of the primaries. A specimen from Panajachel is figured. 
POLYGRAMMODES. 
Polygrammodes, Guenée, Sp. gén. des Lép. vill. p. 818 (1854) ; Walker, Cat. xvii. p. 547. 
1. Polygrammodes sanguinalis, sp. n. (Tab. LXI. fig. 7.) 
Primaries and secondaries white, crossed from the costal to the inner margin by a series of reddish-brown 
zigzag lines, which become broader uear the base, the fringe white; the underside white, with a few 
reddish-brown spots on both wings: head white, with a small red spot on each side; the palpi black 
above, white beneath; the antenne pale brown; the collar white; the tegule white at the base, pale 
