537 



Well marked by the angular, pointed wings, by the common line being 



diffuse externally, and beneath forming a very distinct dusky line, reaching to 



the costa in both wings, and on the hind wings much more curved than in 



any other species. 



Desiderata. 



Caberodes interlinearia Guen., Phal., i, 140, 1857.— "35 mm . Elle se dis- 

 tingue de toutes les autres par une troisieme ligne droite et oblique qui est 

 placee a moitie entre les deux ordinaires des ailes supe"rieures. Au reste, l'ex- 

 trabasilaire est elle-meme droite et oblique, et la coude'e est un peu flexu- 

 euse. L'angle des quatre ailes est assez bien marque'. New York. Deux $ ." 



Caberodes? varadaria Walk., List, xx, 251, I860.— "Male. Testaceous. 

 Palpi short, slender, porrect, extending very little beyond the head; third 

 joint very minute.. Antennae broadly pectinated. Hind tibiae slightly incras- 

 sated. Wings rather short with an exterior, nearly straight brown line, 

 beyond which they have a somewhat darker hue ; marginal points brown, 

 elongated. Fore wings somewhat rounded at the tips; exterior border slightly 

 convex, moderately oblique. 



"Length of the body 4 lines; of 'the wings 8 lines. Georgia." 



Caberodes? agreasaria Walk., List, xx, 252, 1860, is^zEndrojria duaria. 

 DREPANODES Guenee. Plate 6, fig. 11. 



Drcpanodcs Guen., Phal., i, 66, 1857. 



Walk., List Lep. Het. Br. Mus., xx, 69, 1860. 



Head rather narrow in front, nearly as much so as in Eutrapela, full, with 

 the scales close. Palpi slenderer than in Eutrapela, porrect, not ascending, 

 reaching a little beyond the front, the third joint small, button-shaped. An- 

 tenna? heavily pectinated, the branches even, stout, extending to the tip. Fore 

 wings more falcate than usual, the costa being unusually full toward the apex, 

 which is more produced than usual. Outer edge sinuous, being excavated 

 below the apex and full in the middle. Hind wings full and rounded, the 

 outer edge very convex, neither bent nor sinuated ; they reach slightly beyond 

 the tip of the abdomen. Venation much as in Eutrapela, but the subcostal 

 cell is open. The two genera differ from any preceding ones in the costal 

 region being narrow, the free end of the costal vein being equal in length to 

 the first, second, and third subcostal veins; apical area small. The fifth sub- 

 costal venule is rather short, while the discal venules are equal in length and 

 68 p H 



