876 REVISION OF AUSTRALIAN LEPIDOPTERA, 



Mount Wellington (3300 feet), Tasmania, in December ; three 

 specimens. 



91. Das. eticlidiata, Gn. 



(Coremia euclidiata, Gn. X, 420 ; C. glyphicata, ib. 420.) 



(J. 18-20 mm. Head, palpi, and thorax pale ochreous, mixed 

 Avith white and with a few black scales ; palpi 3. Antennae 

 whitish, spotted with dark grey, filiform, ciliations \. Forewings 

 elongate-triangular, hindmargin hardly waved, bowed, oblique ; 

 pale brownish-ochreous, mixed with white in disc, and irrorated 

 with black, forming cloudy rather irregular lines ; a curved white 

 line about ^ ; median band limited by well-marked white lines, 

 edged internally more strongly with black, anterior from beyond 

 J of costa to ? of inner margin, gently curved, posterior from | of 

 costa to f of inner margin, slightly sinuate, median third forming 

 a moderately strong tolerably acute projection ; a black median 

 discal dot ; a whitish subterminal line, not waved, preceded by a 

 darker suffusion ; a short oblique whitish apical dash ; an inter- 

 rupted black hindmarginal line : cilia rather dark grey, terminal 

 I barred with white. Hindwings with hindmargin hardly waved, 

 rounded ; ochreous-yellow ; basal third mostly sviffused with dark 

 fuscous, limited by a straight line ; a cloudy dark fuscous fascia 

 from before middle of costa to f of inner margin, outer edge 

 forming a triangular projection in middle, followed by a faint 

 whitish line ; a parallel dark grey line near beyond this, inter- 

 rupted in middle ; a moderate dark fuscous hindmarginal band, 

 anterior edge rectangularly indented in middle, including a 

 whitish subterminal line ; a hindmarginal series of yellowish 

 dots ; cilia as in forewings. 



Melbourne and Mount Macedon, Victoria ; two specimens 

 received from Mr. G. H. Raynor. My previous identification of 

 this species with the New Zealand catapyrrha, Butl., I now find 

 to be erroneous, the two insects being structurally and in fact 

 generically distinct, although superficially extremely similar. 

 According to Guenee the $ of this species resembles the ^. 



