BY FREDERICK A. A. SKUSE. 785 



yellow ; genitals concolorous with rest of abdomen ; fleshy lobes of 

 (J forceps (PL xxiv., fig. 52), with a short rostriform appendage, 

 the upper margin of horny plate between bases of basal pieces with 

 a shallow emargination (not dentate as in T. annulata and ccesarea). 

 Legs testaceous ; femora with a brown or black ring before the tip, 

 preceded and followed by ochreous-yellow; tip of tibise and terminal 

 joints of tarsi brown or black. Wings broad, with a pale yellowish 

 tint, with brown (blackish while fresh) ocellate cloudings; the 

 greater portion of second basal cell, and a transverse recurved band 

 across the middle of wing, clear of markings (except that there is the 

 pupil of an incomplete ocellus at tip of sixth longitudinal vein) ; an 

 almost complete ocellus, broken at the costa, has its pupil at the 

 origin of second longitudinal vein ; another almost complete one has 

 the supernumerary cross-vein for its centre ; the distal half of the 

 wing is covered with more or less confluent ocelli, the centre spots 

 of the most distinct being at sub-costal cross-vein^ small cross- 

 vein, basal half of great cross-vein and the cross-vein closing discal 

 cell ; a brown spot on the costa near base of wing encloses a pale 

 spot at or somewhat beyond the humeral cross- vein ; and another 

 enveloping tip of first longitudinal and marginal cross-vein has a 

 pale spot just before the tip of the former. Auxiliary vein reaching 

 costa a short distance before inner end of sub-marginal cell ; sub- 

 costal cross-vein a short distance before its tip ; first longitudinal 

 vein arcuated towards its tip, forming a considerable expansion of 

 the sub-costal cell ; third longitudinal vein considerably converging 

 towards the fourth at its tip. 



Mab. — Sydney and Como, N.S.W. (Skuse) ; Waverley, near 

 Sydney ; October (Froggatt). Three male specimens. 



Obs. — Baron O.-Sacken remarks that he knows at least three 

 easily distinguishable species from S. E. Australia and New Zea- 

 land ; the above-described is unfortunately the only one I have 

 been able to find, and that only rarely. 



Genus 6. Libnotes, "VVestwood. 



Libnotes, Westw., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1876, p. 505, pi. III. 

 fig. 6 b. j O.-Sacken, Studies II., p. 179, 1887. 



