Australia and the South Pacific. 257 



Tetralopha piratis, n. s. 

 $, 28 rum. Head, palpi, thorax, and anterior legs white 

 sprinkled with fuscous ; tuft of maxillary palpi yellow-whitish. 

 Antennae grey-whitish. Abdomen white, segments suffused with 

 dark fuscous towards base. (Middle and posterior legs broken.) 

 Fore wings elongate, posteriorly strongly dilated, costa bent beyond 

 middle, apex obtuse, hind margin somewhat oblique, straight, 

 rounded beneath ; white, irrorated with fuscous and dark fuscous ; 

 basal third wholly fuscous except towards costa, bounded by first 

 line ; a strong black line from one-third of costa to two-fifths of 

 inner margin, forming a tuft of raised scales in disc ; first line 

 from two-fifths of costa to middle of inner margin, clear white, 

 margined with black on both sides but less completely posteriorly, 

 somewhat sinuate irregularly below middle ; a transverse curved 

 fine linear dark fuscous mark in disc beyond middle ; second line 

 white, ill-defined, obscurely fuscous-margined, from near before 

 apex to near before anal angle, angularly indented beneath costa ; 

 veins posteriorly obscurely dark fuscous, interrupted on second 

 line ; a dark fuscous interrupted hind-marginal line ; cilia white 

 mixed with fuscous, with an obscure fuscous line. Hind wings 

 grey-whitish, semitransparent ; costa posteriorly and hind margin 

 very narrowly grey ; a dark grey hind-marginal line ; cilia whitish, 

 with a grey line. 



Queensland ; one specimen (coll. Lucas). 



Etiella, Z. 



Etiella chr y sopor ella, Meyr. 



Also from Duaringa and Toowoomba, Queensland ; 

 Bathurst, New South Wales ; Geraldton and Carnarvon, 

 West Australia. 



Etiella Behrii, Z. 



Also from Brisbane, Queensland ; Glen Innes, Bathurst, 

 and Cooma, New South Wales ; Perth, West Australia. 



Epicrocis, Z. 



I consider this generic name is to be used for the 

 genus now generally known as Salehria, Hein. The 

 name Salehria was first used by Zeller in 1846 for that 

 section of Pempelia characterised by scale-tufts on surface 

 of wings ; afterwards Heinemann described as Salehria 



