BY A J. TURNER. 833 



spot with silvery lustre in disc at j beneath cell, triangular with 

 a slight prolongation towards base; this is succeeded by two simi- 

 larly white short streaks along veins 3 and 4, broadly confluent 

 in middle; a dark fuscous streak runs between base and first spot, 

 which is preceded and followed by a brown spot; two dark fus- 

 cous dots followed by ochreous-whitish on costa near apex; a 

 fuscous patch at apex; an oblique dark fuscous shade in mid-disc 

 at about ^; a short pale ochreous area on termen beneath apical 

 patch representing the costal streak of $; cilia gray, above mid- 

 termen mixed with brownish-fuscous and whitish-ochreous. 

 Hind wings as in 9. 



The O I have already described. The two sexes are very dis- 

 similar, and I would not have suspected their relationship if Mr. 

 F. P. Dodd had not bred both from the same larvae, feeding on 

 Fongamia glabra. 



N.Q. : Townsville. Also from Borneo, Malay Peninsula, and 

 India. 



CeRURA AUSTRALIS. 



Cerura multipunctata, Bak., (Nov. Zool. 1904, p.381) from New 

 Guinea, is I suspect only a local form of this species. Inter- 

 mediate varieties may be expected to be discovered on the 

 Queensland coast. 



(EnOSANDA BOISDUVALIl. 



9. Lomatosticha nigrostriata, Motschulsky, Stett. Ent. Zeit. xxxiii. 

 p.359 (1872). 



Sir George Hampson kindly forwarded me a copy of Motschul- 

 sky's description. 



DaNIMA BANKSI.E. 



N.Q. : Townsville; from larvae feeding on Grevillea striata 

 (Dodd). 



TpEMERASTIS AMALOPA,"*^ n.sp. 



9. 46 mm. Head and palpi dark brown. Thorax pale 

 brownish; collar dark brown. Abdomen grey. Legs brownish. 

 Forewings elongate, costa strongly arched, apex rounded, termen 



dfxaXoiTTos, soft-looking. 



