1 6 Lloyd's natural history. 



internal, margins, but not toothed. Hind-wings rounded at the 

 tip, and shghtly produced near the anal angle at the extremity 

 of the sub-median nervure ; margins entire. 



Two rather inconspicuous West African species are referred 

 to this genus. 



EULOPHURA SARDANUS. 

 {Plate XCVIL, Fig. 2.) 



Enyo sardamis^\^2\\iQ.^., List Lepid. Ins. Brit. Mus., viii., p. ii6, 



no. 7 (1856). 

 AspUdon (?) sardamis, Boisduval, Spec. Gen. Lepid. Heter., i., 



p. 308 (1875). 



" Blackish brown. Abdomen with three rows of indistinct 

 luteous spots. Fore-wings slightly and partly clouded with 

 cinereous bloom, very acute at the tips, concave from thence 

 to a very obtuse angle, which is much in front of the middle 

 of the exterior border ; interior angle slightly hooked. Hind- 

 wings hardly paler than the fore-wings. Length of the body, 

 10 lines; of the wings, 22 lines" {JValker.) 



This moth was brought from Sierra Leone by the Rev. 

 C. F. Morgan, to whom the British Museum is indebted for a 

 very large collection of insects from that locality. It is now 

 figured for the first time. 



■&' 



SUB-FAMILY 11. CHCEROCAMPIN/E. 



The ChcvrocaiupuKe, or Elephant Hawk-moths, have long 

 narrow pointed wings, a stout thorax, and a long and frequently 

 rather slender abdomen, with no distinct anal tuft. The fore- 

 wings are generally brown, and often striated (sometimes they 

 are green), and the hind-wings are usually brightly coloured, 

 or banded with red or yellow. The palpi are generally 

 rounded externally, the antennae are slender, and the eyes 



