Lepidoptera from the Haivaiian Islands. 37 



what pattern it has left seems to differ somewhat from 

 that of the smaller example, so that I feel a little doubt- 

 ful as to its identity. 



" Occurs near a stream about twenty miles from Hono- 

 lulu."— T. B. 



I find that the genus Scotomera is more nearly allied 

 to Stenia than to anything else. 



BOTIDID^. 



Mestolobes, n. g. 



Apparently more nearly allied to Phinjganodes and 

 Godara than anything else, but very distinct ; the form 

 of the primaries most like that of Godara, with the inner 

 margin close to the base lobed and fringed with long 

 scales, much as in Lophopteryx ; the secondaries have a 

 deep longitudinal fold, at the extremity of which the 

 outer margin is distinctly indented ; the discoidal cell of 

 the primaries is long, that of secondaries very short ; the 

 typical species has a broad curled pencil of long coarse 

 hairs between the wings at the base ; the head is large, 

 the palpi short and thick, the antennae thick (especially 

 in the type), the thorax robust, the 

 abdomen moderately broad, only ex- 

 tending a short distance beyond 

 the secondaries, with well-developed 

 anal tuft ; the type with two long 

 forked basal pencils of hair at 

 the sides ; legs rather slender, 

 compressed ; middle tibige coarsely 

 scaled, and with two long terminal spurs below, and an 

 acuminate terminal tuft above ; posterior tibige usually 

 with an expanded fan-like tuft of hair-scales above near 

 the extremity, with two long slender subterminal spurs, 

 and a similar terminal spur below ; the distal extremity 

 above acuminate, as in the middle tibiaB. Type, 

 M. (enone. 



8. Mestolobes anone, n. s. (No. 155). 



<? . Primaries above dark fuliginous-brown, crossed 

 by two black-edged angulated white lines, the first zigzag 

 at basal fourth, the second simply elbowed, but slightly 

 irregular at external fourth ; a submarginal cream- 



