134 November, 



DESCRIPTION OF AN EUDOREA NEW TO SCIENCE (EUDOREA 

 COXSPICUALIS). 



BY J. B. HODGKINSON. 



Expanse of wings {£) 8 to (?) 9 lines. Palpi light above, dark beneath. 

 Tongue yellow (a conspicuous object). Eyes large, dark. Head silvery-grey. 

 Antennce steel-grey, short. Thorax and abdomen silvery-grey. 



Fore-wings with the basal area silvery-grey (under a low power very quaintly 

 irrorated), with two dark lines proceeding from the base, of which the lower line is 

 the longer ; first line slightly curved ; the orbicular stigma oval, filled in with very 

 pale ochreous, the claviform stigma often linear or arched and attached to the first 

 line, often running well into it on the fold ; central area dark grey, irrorated, having 

 a well pronounced dark blotch on the costa above the reniform stigma ; this stigma 

 varies in form, often it is K- or B-shaped (rarely forming the figure 8), the B wanting 

 part of the top and bottom looks like the figures 13 ; the second line commences 

 with a rich dark grey patch below the costa pointing outwards, then inclines inwards 

 a little below the sub-costal nervure ; the posterior area is bright light silvery-grey, 

 having very light faint irrorate patches, dark near the margin, which has two rows 

 of well-defined streaks (not dots) at the inner edge of the cilia ; cilia light, long. 

 Hind-wings light silvery-grey. 



The general appearance is light silvery-grey, the form rather 

 broad ; intermediate between E. pyralella, TL, ingratella, Zeller, and 

 atomalis, Doubleday, it sits triangularly and may be known, when 

 at rest, from any other Eudorea by the distinct pale basal area 

 standing out as a whitish dot on the tree-trunk, on which the insect 

 rests. It appears in July and August near Windermere. I first met 

 with it 10 years ago, when in company with Mr. C. S. Gregson ; I 

 have since revisited the district and taken a nice series. When on 

 the wing it appears as pale as E. pallida. 



Spring Bank, Preston : 



September 18th, 1881. 



DESCRIPTION OF A NEW BUTTERFLY FROM THE MALAY 

 PENINSULA. 



BY W. L. DISTANT, V.P.E.S. 



Cethosia Logani, n. sp. 



3 . Above : anterior wings with the basal third bright red, remainder black with 

 white markings. Three pairs of narrow black longitudinal fascise crossing cell, the 

 last pair somewhat indistinct owing to proximity of the black area, an indistinct 

 arcuated spot beneath cell, and two somewhat waved linear spots, situated one 

 beneatb second median nervule near its base, and the other beneath the third 

 median nervule about one-third from its origin. The dark area contains the follow- 

 ing white markings : four spots a little beyond end of cell, of which the third is very 

 small, the others linear and transverse, beyond these are two rows of small rounded 



