293 Mr. Warren on the Pyralidina collected 



throughout, running parallel to the submedian into the hind 

 margin above the anal angle ; the disco-cellular angulated, so that 

 the end of the cell is wedge-shaped ; first median branch from the 

 middle of the wing ; second from the lower angle of the cell ; 

 third and fourth from the angle of the disco-cellular ; second and 

 third subcostal branches short, out of the fourth, which ends in the 

 apex ; fifth and radial from the upper angle of the cell. Hind 

 wing with the cell remarkably short, the end wedge-shaped ; first 

 median branch a httle before the end, second from the lower angle, 

 third and fourth from the angle of the disco-cellular ; subcostal 

 branch from the upper angle ; costal free, with two branches. 



113. Leptosteges pulverulenta, n. s. 

 Fore wing whitish, diffusely dusted with brownish atoms, espe- 

 cially beyond the second line ; with two transverse brown lines ; 

 the first at one-third, curved, and somewhat indistinct ; the second 

 distinct, broad, straight, running obliquely from the costa before 

 the apex to the anal angle ; costa brown half-way from the base. 

 Hind wing white, with the markings of the fore wing repeated, but 

 the first Une represented only by a small brown dash, the second 

 strongly expressed, the brown dusting beyond it still thicker than 

 in the fore wing. Fringes whitish, dotted with brown. Head, 

 thorax, and abdomen whitish ; palpi brown ; antennae whitish 

 above, but brownish underneath ; legs whitish, but the fore tarsi 

 brown outside. Under side whitish ; in the fore wing more or less 

 suflFused with pale brown. Expanse of wings, 16 mm. 



One 3" with the date and locality obliterated. 

 A small and delicate species, quite unlike any other 

 in the scaling and markings. 



ASOPIAD^. 

 114. Asopia acestealis. 



Samea acestealis, Wlk., Cat. Lep. Het. B. M., xvii., 



p. 352. 

 Salbia phcerusalis, Wlk., ib., xvii., 368. 



One $ , E. Javary, Dec. 3rd, 1874, and one ^ , Araras, 

 Nov. 15th. 



Walker's two types, both males, are from St. Domingo; 

 another example in the British Museum Collection from 

 Espiritu Santo, also a ^, agrees with them. The two 

 specimens above recorded are paler and clearer yellow, 

 the dark shading being less expressed. 



