

POLYORTHA. 273 
Hab. Panama: currieut: Volcan de Chiriqui, 4000-6000 ft, 1881-2 (G. . 
Champion). ‘Two specimens. 
In a second specimen (66274 @) there is a conspicuous roundish fusccus spot 
touching the costa at about one-fourth from the base. 
6. Polyortha fluminana, sp.n. (Tab. VIII. fig. 18.) 
Antennae, Palpi, and Head olive-grey. Thorax olive-grey, with a slight brownish tinge. Forewings, with 
the costa hirsute; olive-grey, slightly speckled with a darker shade; with a strong curved band of pale 
reddish fawn, commencing on the middle of the base and following the fold, bending upward from the 
middle of the fold to the outer fourth of the costa, where it becomes almost white along its upper edge ; 
there are three or four tufts of raised scales, corresponding to the colour on which they rest, the two 
most conspicuous being a small parti-coloured spot at the lower edge of the pale band below the fold, at 
one-third of its length, and a long parti-coloured ridge crossing the fold at two-thirds, which reaches 
the dorsum at its lower extremity, and halfway across the pale band at its upper extremity ; cilia pale 
olive-grey. wp. al. 25:5 mm. Hindwings pale yellowish brown; cilia lighter. Abdomen yellowish 
brown. Legs pale cinereous. 
Type 2 (67071) Mus. Wlsm. (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. 
Hab. Guatemata: ToronicapaM: Totonicapam, 8500-10,500 ft., VIII. 1880 (G. C. 
Champion). Unique. 
7. Polyortha niveipunctata Dgn. 
Polyortha niveopunctata Dgn. Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. 49 85~6 (1905) *. 
Type Q (6545 Drnt. Det. 1911) Mus. Dognin. 
Hab. AMERICA, C-S. Central America—Panama: cuiriqur: Volcan de Chiriqui, 
2000-8000 ft., 1881-2 (G@. C. Champion). South America—CoLoMBIA: MAGDALENA : 
Minca, Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, 2000 ft., VI. 1899 (H. H. Smith): touma: 
Sierra del Libano, 6000 ft., V. 1899 (H. Hl. Smith)—Ecuapor*: tosa*: Loja’. 
8. Polyortha hirsuta, sp. n. 
Antennae pale brown, banded above with fuscous. Palpt brown, projecting a little more than the length of 
the head beyond it; terminal joint shaded with fuscous. Head and T'horaw tawny brownish, the latter 
tutted behind. Horewings tawny brownish, mottled with reddish fuscous; with three conspicuous tufts 
of grey scales—one at the base of the fold, one below the middle of the fold, and one near its outer 
extremity, contiguous to the dorsum ; other patches of raised scales are less conspicuous—one near the 
middle of the base, and one above and before the tornus; the costa is marked throughout with tawny 
fuscous spots at irregular intervals, the largest of these, at one-fourth from the base, being produced 
obliquely outward to a blotch of the same colour, resting on the upper edge-of the fold; the apical 
fourth of the wing shows also some tawny fuscous mottling, passing somewhat obliquely from the costa 
to the termen (as in tersa Wlsm.)—the forewings are unusually narrow for this genus ; cilia brownish, 
mixed with tawny fuscous; underside with the costa and termen much mottled. Lup. al. 18 mm. 
Hindwings brownish grey ; cilia slightly paler; underside with the costa and termen much mottled. 
Abdomen brownish grey. Legs pale cinereous, the tarsi shaded with grey. 
Type Q (66277, Boquete) Mus. Wlsm. (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. [PT. (66279) US. Nat. Mus.] 
Hab. Central America —GuATEMALA: QUEZALTENANGO: Cerro Zunil, 4000-5000 ft., 
1880 (G. C. Champion)—PaNAaMA: CHIRIQUI: Boquete, 3500 ft., VIII. 1881 (G. C. 
Champion). ‘Two specimens. 
gioL. CENTR.-AMER., Heter., Vol. IV., Apri/ 1914. 2 nn 
