
DICHRORAMPHA. 257° 
brilliantly iridescent above and beneath in certain lights; a dark line along the base of the dark grey 
cilia. Abdomen greyish fuscous. Legs greyish externally, white on their inner sides, with three white 
tarsal annulations ; spurs white. , 
Type & (66423) Mus. Wlsm. (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. [P7. (66424) US. Nat. Mus.] 
Hab. Mexico: Guerrero: Sierra de las Aguas Escondidas, 9500 ft., VIL. (H. I. 
Smith); Omilteme, 8000 ft., VII. (H. H. Smith). Two specimens. 
5. Dichrorampha leopardana Busck. 
= *tincarnana (nec Clms.) Krft. | 
Hemimene leopardana Busck Pr. Biol. Soc. Wash. 19 177, 181 (1906) '. *“Hemimene incarnana 
Krft. Bull. Am. Mus. NH. 28 167 Pf. 8° 14 (1907) *. 
Type & (10185) US. Nat. Mus. | 
Hab. AMERICA, N-C. United States'—Maryianp': Hyattsville (A. Busch) '— 
PENNSYLVANIA!: Pittsburg (H. Engel)*, 29. V. 1906. Central America—MExico: GUER- 
RERO: Amula, 6000 ft., VIII. (7. H. Smith): tapasco: Teapa, IIT. (A. H. Smith). 
_ It is difficult to understand how Kearfott could have named the insect he figured 
“ incarnana Clemens ”—it does not agree with the description of Halonota incanana 
Clms., and some error in determination has obviously occurred. 
6. Dichrorampha eulepidana, sp. n. 
Antennae fuscous. Palpi yellowish white at their base, greyish fuscous beyond. Head and Thorax brownish 
fuscous. Forewings shining, brownish, with a slight ochreous tinge on their lower half; a series of 
about nine, oblique, pale straw-coloured costal streaklets, of which two before the middle, and others 
beyond it, emit shining steel-blue lines—the first of these terminates at the apex of a conspicuous, 
elongate-ovate, medio-dorsal, straw-coloured patch, placed a little obliquely; the second, tending outward, 
reverts to the tornus, much dilated on its lower half; the third crosses before the apex, reaching the 
slight subapical indentation which is marked by a small yellowish spot, four black spots lying on the 
termen below it; cilia shining, lilac, Hwp. al.9 mm. Hindwings brownish, with a strong blue and 
green iridescence, in certain lights, which extends to the pale blue-grey cilia. Abdomen steel-grey. 
. Leqs shining, whitish, with grey-banded tarsal joits. ; 
T'y pe @ (66426) Mus. Wlsm. (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. [PT. (66427) US. Nat. Mus.] 
Hab. Mexico: GUERRERO : Amula, 6000 ft., VIII. (1. H. Smith). Two specimens. 
7. Dichrorampha panterpes, sp. n. 
Antennae brownish. grey. Palpi whitish ochreous; the terminal joint short, greyish. Head brownish grey. 
Thorax brownish fuscous. Forewings stone-grey, with minute, transverse, brownish fuscous striae; a 
short straight basal patch, scarcely reaching one-fourth, is brownish fuscous, and on the middle of. the 
costa is a small cloudy spot of the same; from a little beyond this, a slender blue streak runs obliquely 
outward from the costa to the subapical incision on the termen, enclosing in the space above it two pale 
eaks before the apex, the outer one. of which forms an oblique band, followed by a 
ochreous costal str : vo 
greyish fuscous line at the base of the apical cilia; the termen from the tornus to the subapical incision 
is marked by a series of six black quadrate spots, separated from each other by golden yellow lines, a 
slender, pale violet, metallic line separating the series :from the greyish cilia which are also slightly tinged 
with violet—about the-end of the cell is a group of rather inconspicuous longitudinal blackish streaklets ; 
the underside shows very plainly the six black marginal spots and the comb-like arrangement of yellow 
lines which separates them. Exp. al. 9-10 mm. Hindwings brownish fuscous, with two or three, 
slightly paler, small and inconspicuous, dorsal spots; cilia paler, a narrow dark basal shade running 
BIOL. CENTR.-AMER., Heter., Vol. IV., Aprid 1914. 2 Ul 
