1910. ] E. Meyrick: Indian Micro-Lepidoptera. 231 
costa moderately arched, apex obtuse, termen somewhat rounded, 
oblique; 9 and 10 short-stalked; dark purplish-fuscous mixed 
with blackish, strewn with small leaden-bluish dots; a suffused 
round subhyaline spot in middle of disc; an irregular bright 
yellow streak along dorsum from base to tornus, edge emarginate 
beneath discal spot; a bright yellow blotch beyond discal spot, 
almost reaching costa; an irregular bright yellow apical spot 
extending along upper half of termen, more or less produced 
anteriorly into irregular streaks on lower part of wing ; all these 
yellow markings are more or less edged with ferruginous suffusion : 
cilia bright yellow, on costa dark fuscous, except towards apex. 
Hindwings bronzy-grey ; cilia whitish-grey. 
Kurseong, E. Himalayas, 5,000 feet, in September (Annan- 
dale); Khasi Hills: four specimens. 
Monopts dicycla, Meyr. 
Bred from larvae destroying woollen cloth, Calcutta, in Sep- 
tember (Annandale). 
Tinea fuscipunctella, Haw. 
Kurseong, 5,000 feet, in July (Annandale); Dharampur, Simla 
Hills, 5,000 feet, in May (Annandale). 
Tinea pachyspila, Meyr. 
Trivandrum, Travancore, in November (Annandale). 
Tinea nestorva, 1. sp. 
@. 17-Igmm. Head and antennae yellowish-white. Palpi 
dark fuscous. ‘Thorax rather dark purplish-fuscous. Abdomen 
pale brassy-ochreous. Forewings elongate, costa moderately 
arched, apex round-pointed, termen very obliquely rounded; pale 
greyish-ochreous, more or less tinged and sprinkled with fuscous ; 
base suffused with dark fuscous, extending as a narrow streak 
along costa to 2; a small undefined spot of dark fuscous suffusion 
on end of cell: cilia light ochreous, sometimes tinged with fuscous. 
more whitish towards tips. Hindwings grey, with brassy-yellowish 
and purplish reflections ; cilia grey-whitish, sometimes infuscated 
towards base. 
Phagu, Simla Hills, 9,000 feet, in May (Annandale); Dal- 
housie, Kashmir, in May; two specimens. 
Pylactis mimosae, Stt. 
Calcutta, at light, in July (Annandale). I have now ascer- 
tained that seminivora, Wals., and ophionota, Meyr., are both 
synonyms of this. 
