516 LOUD WALSINGHAM ON THE [NoT. 1 ~, 



marrow-spoon, elongate, scarcely spatulate, with almost parallel 

 margins, rounded at the ends; uncus double. 



Legs pale fawn ; hind tarsi faintly spotted. 



E.cp. al. 30g milliin. 



Bab. West Indies — Cuba. 



Type, 6 Mus. Stgr. 



I have adopted the specific name from a label placed by Zeller on 

 Dr. Staudinger's specimen. 



r elderia, Wlsm. 



Felderia dimidiella, sp. n. (Plate XLI. fig. 15.) 



Antennae pale fawn-ochreous. 



Palpi umber-brown at the base, pale fawn-ochreous beyond. 



Head and thorax pale lawn-brown. 



Fore winys pale fawn, sprinkled, speckled, and shaded with 

 brownish scales ; a series of dark umber-brown spots — the first small, 

 a little below the costal margin near the base ; the second larger, on 

 the fold before the middle ; the third also large, on the fold beyond 

 the middle; the fourth at the end of the discal cell, a slight indi- 

 cation of a fifth spot ly'iig parallel with the middle of the apical 

 margin ; cilia very pale lawn. 



Mind winys dingy whitish fawn ; cilia scarcely paler. 



Abdomen dingv whitish fawn. 



Leys whitish fawn ; tarsi unspotted. 



Exp. al. 20 milliin. 



Hub. West Indies — Cuba. 



Type, S Mus. Stgr. 



The pectinations of the antennae are much shorter than in Felderia 

 doeri, "Wlsm., the type of the genus. This specimen is labelled in 

 Zeller's handwriting " Acrolophus vitellus nicht beschr." It cannot 

 be vitellus, Poey, as the antennas of that species are described as 

 simple. 



Bazika, Wkr. 



Bazira^Mkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxx. p. 1009 (1864). 



= §Eddara, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins.B. M. xxviii. pp. 517-8 (1863). 



Bazira xylin ella, Wkr. 



Eddara aiylinella, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxviii. p. 518(1863). 



Bazira ccylinella,\Wv. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. Al. xxx. p. 1009 (1864). 



West Indies — Jamaica ( Wkr.). 



The type of this species is erroneously recorded by Walker as a 

 male ; it is a female. In the absence ot the male, it is impossible to 

 say whether this genus can be regarded as distinct. The palpi are 

 short and porrect ; the fore wings have 12 veins, all separate, and 

 the hind wings 8 veins, all separate. I am inclined to think it is 

 allied to Pseudanaphora arcanella, Clem. 

 C-6] 



