BY FREDERICK A. A. SKUSE. 787 



apex ; tibise and first two tarsal joints at tip, and last three joints 

 entirely, brown or blackish. Wings almost hyaline, somewhat 

 opaline; veins pale ochreous (imparting a somewhat whitish 

 appearance to the wings), marked with numerous small longitudinal 

 brown sj^ots, the two most distinct on the first longitudinal vein 

 at origin of second longitudinal and tip of auxiliary vein ; distal 

 end of stigma, with tip of first longitudinal vein, slightly infus- 

 cated. Auxiliary vein joining costa almost opposite tip of fifth 

 longitudinal vein ; sub-costal cross-vein at its tip ; marginal cross- 

 vein close to tip of first longitudinal vein ; inner end of second 

 posterior cell much arcuated or rectangular, situated much before 

 that of the third, with slight trace of a small stump of a vein at 

 its angle ; discal cell long and narrow, the great cross-vein at about 

 one-third its length. 



Hah. — Barron and Mulgrave Rivers, N. Queensland (Froggatt) ; 

 also Fiji Islands. Five specimens. 



Obs. — I believe this insect to be the same as L. strigivena, 

 described by Walker, from Dorey, New Guinea. In arriving at 

 this conclusion I have been greatly assisted by the additional notes 

 on the venation of the wings in the table given by Baron O.-Sacken, 

 (Studies, II. p. 183). A single specimen in the Macleay Museum 

 labelled "Fiji," is undoubtedly identical with the above. Some 

 very large specimens, also from the same locality, may possibly 

 belong to a different species, but the venation and markings are 

 very similar. 



Section III. LIMNOBINA ANOMALA. 



" One sub-marginal cell ; normal number of the antennal joints 

 sixteen." (Osten-Sacken). 



An artificial group, proposed by Baron Osten-Sacken, to include 

 certain genera, the structural relation of which, one to another, is 

 in many instances obscure, if not distant. The normal number 

 of joints of the antennae is sixteen, as in the Eriopterina and 

 LiMNOPHiLiNA ; but the tibiae are spurless and the wings possess 



