Lepidoptera Heterocera from Neic Zealand. bbb 



59. Ci'/an'a hi'ata (No. 47^. 



Gidaria heata, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc liS77. p. 3U7 ; pi. 

 xliii, fig. (I. 



A fragment only of this beautiful species arrived. 



HO. Cidaria.' iitclurafu (No. 46). 



Cidaria inclaratn. Walker, Lep- Het. xxv, p. 1411, u. 75 

 (1862). 



Three good specimens. " Common in the Inish," W.S. 



Gl. Elvia f/laticafa (No. 52). 



Elviu glaucata, Walker, Lep. Het. xxv, p. 1431, n. 1 (1<S(J2). 



Three examples, but all more or less injured. " In Manuka 

 scrub," W.S. 



The remaining GeimiHrde^ are all too much broken for 

 certain identification. 



HYPENID.^. 



^i. Rhapsa scotos/ali'^ (No. 21). 



Hhapsa scotosialis, Walker, Lep. Het. Suppl. iv, p. 1150, 

 (1850). 



Two specimens, one of Avhich is muc^h damaged. 



• PYRALID.^:. 



63. Pjirulis Jdriiinlis {1^0. 121). 



P/iiil(f'n((-P//ndis farimdis, Linneus, Syst. Nat. p. .SSO, n. ;}27. 



One fair specimen of this widely distributed European species. 

 M. Skellon says of it "No. 121 I think must be an English 

 naturalized one, it is caught in houses." 



64. Deana jxao/idlis (No. 49). 



Sco/iula ■' p(nofi<di-s, Walker, L(;p. Ilct. xviii, p. 797, n. 52 

 (1.S59). 



One example, slightly ill jurcd, •' (lonunon in tlie busli." IK-V. 



