Tortricidx, and Tineidex of the Madeira Islands. 549 
pale greyish-fawn, each segment narrowly margined with blackish. 
Legs whitish-fawn, the anterior pair much shaded with umber- 
brown. zp. al., 17-22 mm. 
In some specimens the umber dorsal patch is almost 
entirely obliterated, the markings fainter and more suf- 
fused, and the dots around the apex and apical margin 
coalescing and forming a brownish-grey line along the 
base of the cilia, which is reduplicated along their middle 
towards the anal angle. 
Blastobasis fuscomaculella, Rag. 
N. syn. = seevoldiella, Kreithn. = marmorosella, Rbl. 
(nec. Wlstn.). 
(Heophora fuscomaculella, Rag., Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr., 
13795 ex,’ 
(icophora seeboldiella. Kreithn., Sitzb. Z.-B. Ges. 
Wien, XXXI., 20-1 (1881). 
Blastobasis marmorosella, Rbl., Ann. K. K. Hofmus. 
Wil; 276-78, 288), PLO XVI yo 302)" Ex, 
18, 90-1 (1894). 
Portugal,! Spain,” Canaries.3 Madeira (British 
Museum). 
The types of Gcophora marmorosella, Wlstn., in the 
British Museum, show that this species has veins 5 and 
3+4 of the hindwings distinctly stalked, whereas 
(cophora seeboldiella, Kreithn., from Bilbao, which Dr. 
Rebel has identified with this species, has these veins 
arising from a point, and therein agreeing with a larger 
and wider-winged species in the British Museum, and 
with a single specimen in my own collection from the 
Canaries which was determined for me by Dr. Rebel as 
marmorosella. 
The name fuscomaculella must stand for the larger 
form, and marmorosella for the smaller and narrower- 
winged species. I have seen the type of fuscomaculella, 
Rag., and consider it the same as seeboldiella, Kreithn., 
and marmorosella, Rb]. (nec. WIstn.). 
B-veins 5 and 4 of the hindwings coincident; 5 and 3+4 
stalked. 
Blastobasis desertarum, Wlstn. 
N. syn. = Ptervlonche (?) maderensts, Stn. 
Coleophora desertarwm, Wlstn., Ann. and Mag. N. H, 
(3 s.), I., 122 (1858). 
