BY E. MEYRICK. 77 



103. r. autocasis, ri.sp. 



^. 11-12 mm. Head pale grey, yellowish-tinged, face more 

 whitish. Pal[)i, anteniiiie, thorax, and abdomen grey. Forewings 

 very elongate, costa gently arched, apex round-pointed, termen 

 very obliquely rounded; grey, densely irrorated with white, and 

 transversely strigulated with darker grey; an indistinct cloudy 

 darker spot on dorsum beyond middle, not cro.'-sing fold, and 

 another on tornus : cilia grey, on costa mixed with white. Hind- 

 wings gre}^ with brassy and purplish reflections; cilia grey. 



Sydney, ]New South Wales; Albany, West Australia; in Octo- 

 ber and April, two specimens. 



16. Yponomeuta Latr. 

 lO-t. Y. inte7-jiellusWa.\k. 



(Hyponomeiita internellus Walk. 533; H. ptistulellus ib. 533, 

 Turn., Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.Wales, 1903, 77; H. grossipunctella 

 Gn., Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1879, 282.) 



Mackay, Townsville, Brisbane, and Warwick, Queensland; Glen 

 Innes, Newcastle, and Sydney, New South Wales; from June to 

 January. 



105. Y. myriosemus Turn. 



[Hyponomeuta myrioseryia Turn., Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Austr., 

 1898, 200.) 



Duaringa, and Brisbane, Queensland; Katoomba, New South 

 Wales; in August and November. 



106. Y. interruptellus Saub. 



{Teinoptila hiterriqytella Saub., Semp. Schmett. Phil, ii., 701, 

 pi. Ixvi., 16.) 



Port Moresby, New Guinea; a specimen received from Dr. 

 Turner; occurs also in the Philippines. A curious blackish species, 

 with two or three very irregular rather large white spots towards 

 dorsum of forewings; it is a true Yponomeuta, and the genus 

 Teinoptila Saub., lapses. 



