98 NEW GENERA AND SPECIES OF LEPIDOPTERA, 



CoRULA DISPILA, 11. Sp. 



(J. 27 mm. Head whitish-grey. Palpi whitish, external sur- 

 face irrorated with dark fuscous; second joint with long spreading 

 scales at apex. Antennse grey; in malew4th a pair of bristles on 

 each joint ("i) and evenly ciliated (1), towards apex simple. 

 Thorax grey, mixed with whitish and dark fuscous. Abdomen 

 grey. Legs grey; posterior pair white: anterior tarsi dark fuscous, 

 aniiulated with white. Forewings elongate-oblong, costa strongly 

 arched near base, thence nearl}^ straight, apex rectangular, termen 

 slightly rounded, hardly oblique; pale grey, mixed with white, 

 markings dark fuscous; a fine angulated basal line from costa to 

 dorsum; a line from costa at J to dorsum at J; a squarish ring 

 enclosing a whitish area represents the orbicular, a similar more 

 elongate dark-centred ring the reniform; a line from costa beyond 

 middle, bent outwards at a right angle beneath costa, and twice 

 again in disc, so as to partly enclose reniform, thence to dorsum 

 at J; an interrupted acutely dentate transverse line at f, ending 

 in a dark fuscous suffusion at tornus; a black interrupted sub- 

 terminal line, and a fine black terminal line: cilia whitish. 

 Hind wings with termen nearl}^ straight to vein 2, thence curved, 

 slightly wavy; grey, towards base paler; cilia whitish. 



Brisbane, Q.; in November; one specimen. 



COKULA METABLETA, n.sp. 



(^9- 24-28 mm. Head grey, sometimes brownish. Palpi grey. 

 Antennae grey; in male shortly laminate, moderately ciliated (1), 

 with longer bristles (3). Thorax grey, mixed with fuscous. 

 Abdomen grey; rarely pinkish-tinged. Legs grey, irrorated, and 

 tarsi annulated, with dark fuscous. Forewings elongate-triangular, 

 costa moderately and evenl}^ arched, apex round-pointed, termen 

 rounded, slightly obli(j[ue; gre}', mixed with whitish-grey; lines 

 dark fuscous, varying in intensity in different specimens : an 

 outwardly curved line near base, usually distinct only near costa; 

 an outwardly curved line from I costa to J dorsum, sometimes 

 nearly obsolete, sometimes thickened and conspicuous; orbicular 



