394 Annals of the South African Museum. 



Indian males and find them to differ from the above account in 

 nothing but their darker abdomen and longer flagellum, and in no 

 way from a male bred "Natal, Durban, H. W. Bell Marley; Host, a 

 Noctuid, August, 1912." 



TRIBE CAMPOPLEGIDES. 



CAMPOPLEX, Gravh. 

 Iclm. Europ. iii, 1829, p. 453. 



CAMPOPLEX JUVENTAS, sp. nov. 



$ only. A black and slender species with white capital and 

 thoracic pubescence, and both legs except coxae and anterior tro- 

 chanters, and abdomen except disc of second segment, fulvous ; 

 mandibles except apically, palpi, radices, tegulae, anterior trochanters 

 and front coxae, stramineous. Head constricted and narrow behind 

 eyes; frons unicarinate between the simple scrobes, but not impressed ; 

 metathoracic spiracles elongate; areolet slightly petiolate and not 

 small; basal abscissa of radius in hind wing not longer than its 

 recurrent nervure ; nervellus very slightly geniculate far below its 

 centre. Length, 8 mm. It is very closely allied to, and possibly 

 110 more than a local form of, C. juvenilis, Eorst., but with the basal 

 segment and anus entirely pale red. 



The type was taken at Durban in Natal by W. Haygarth during 

 1914. 



CYMODUSA, Holmgr. 

 Act, Ac. E. Luec. xv, 1860, p. 321. 



CYMODTTSA FLAVIPES, Brisch. 

 Schr. Nat. Ges. Dantzig, 1880, p. 144, $ . 



A couple of males from the south-western district of Cape Colony 

 and taken by L. C. Peringuey at Cape Town during September, 1913, 

 are referable to this palaearctic male, which (Iclm. Brit, v, 1914, p. 105) 

 I have synonymised with C. antennator, Holmgr. I have, however, 

 seen no African females and, since the synonymy is not yet quite 

 proved, I here retain the male name. They were doubtless imported 

 from Europe. 



CASINAEIA, Holmgr. 

 Act. Ac. E. Luec. xv, 1860. 



CASINARIA MOESTA, Grav. 



Iclm. Europ. iii, p. 599. 



Another palaearctic and doubtless imported species, of which a 

 typical male was taken at Cape Town during 1915 by Peringuey. 



