298 " ^ 



EUMACARIA Packard. Plate 3, fig. 7. 



L'umacaria Pack., Fiitb Rep. Pe.ab. Acid. Sc, 67, 1873. 



Front rather narrow; scales rather lung, closely ajipressed io the surface. 

 Palpi long, narrow, ascending; a third of second joint surpassing the front; 

 third joint minute, pointed. Antennae broadly pectinated nearly to the tip; 

 in female, subpectinated, serrate. Tlrorax rather stout. Primaries: costa a 

 little convex; apex a little produced, but much less so than usually in Semio- 

 thisa or P/msiane, slightly subfalcate; outer margin not so oblique as in 

 Semioihisa, hardly excavated below the apex, rather convex in the middle. 

 Venation much like that of Semiothisa and Fhasiane; the costal vein is, 

 however, longer, and ends beyond the subcostal areole by a distance equal to 

 half the length of the areole, while in Semiothisa it ends opposite the end 

 of the areole; thf>. costal also connects with the areole in its middle, while in 

 the two other genera named it joins the areole near the inner end. The first 

 subcostal venule is longer, and the second much shorter, than in Seiniothisa 

 or Phasiane. The discal venules are as in Semiothisa. Secondaries with the 

 internal angle rectangular, even with the tip of the abdomen. Apex much 

 rounded; middle of outer margin not produced, obtusely slightly angulated, 

 above slightly scalloped. Legs short and feeble; hind tibiae slightly swollen, 

 the two pair of spurs not remote, slender, ])ointed, sui>eqiial; tarsi half as 

 long as the tibial. Abdomen very slender, with an anal tuft. 



Coloration: cinereous, dusted thickly with brown; an outer obscure line 

 of black spots; margin dark-brown. 



By the pectinated antenna?, long, slender palpi, and short, obtusely-angu- 

 lated secondaries, as well as the peculiar coloration, it may be readily distin- 

 guished from Semiothisa. The markings and the antenna? remind us more 

 of Epione and allied forms than Semiosthisa, Phasiane, and its allies. In the 

 venation, it entirely differs from Epione and its allies. Anticii)ating Epione, 

 etc., in the characters of the antenna? and coloration, and its peculiar asjject, I am 

 inclined to regard this as a synthetic or prophetic ty[)e, and therefore a true 

 mimetic form, and indicating that by its present mimicry it has been preserved 

 longer than the species possil)ly cotemporaneous with it. 



EuMACARiA BKUNNEARiA Pack. Plate 10, fig. 22. 



Eumacaria brunncuta Pack., Fifth Rep. Peab. Acad. Sc, 67, 1873. V 



4 (? and 2 9. Pearl-ash, with chocolate-brown markings. Head, palpi, 

 and antenna? chocolate-brown. Abdomen witli two rows of dorsal spots. 



