BY A. J. TURNER. 67 



a point before tornus ; cilia white, on tornus and inner margin 

 dark fuscous. 



Yic. Birchip, in May, one specimen in Coll. Lyell— S.A. Ade- 

 laide (Felder). 



22. DiSCOPHLEBIA BLOSYRODES, n.Sp. 



[(:i\ocrvp(o8r]s, of stern appearance.] 



9. 43 mm. Head grey, with a blackish line across crown, and 

 a,nother across middle of face. Palpi and antennae grey. Thorax 

 grey; patagia tipped with dark fuscous. Abdomen dark fuscous; 

 apical segments pale ochreous. Legs gre3^ Forewings elongate- 

 oval; costa very strongly arched, termen obliquely rounded; iron- 

 grey; veins partly finely ontlined with black; lines black, a short 

 basal line from costa, not reaching but produced parallel to dorsum 

 for a short distance; a thick nearly straight line from l costa to 

 I dorsum; a finer line from costa slightly beyond this, outwardly 

 curved to mid-dorsum; a third line from costa before middle to J 

 dorsum, obtusely angled in disc; cilia whitish-grey, narrowly 

 intersected with blackish opposite veins. Hindwings with termen 

 rounded; dark fuscous; termen narrowly white except at tornus; 

 cilia as forewings, but on tornus and inner margin dark fuscous. 



Type in Coll. Turner. 



N.Q. Townsville, in October; one specimen received from Mr. 

 F. P. Dodd. 



23. DiSCOPHLEBIA LUCASII. 



Discophlehia lucasii, Rosen., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist.. 1885, p. 421, 

 pi. xi., f. 4. 



Type in British Museum. 



I have before me a specimen from Victoria which I believe to 

 belong to this species, but as the identification is not quite certain 

 I forbear to describe it. 



Gen. 15. Gall a b a. 



Gallaha, Wlk., Brit. Mus. Cat. xxxii. 457. 



Head rough-haired; face with projecting cone of hairs. Eyes 

 naked. Tongue well developed. Palpi long (2J times breadth 



