Equatorial African Micro-lepidoptera. 47 
followed by an orange-ochreous space, also semicircular, but not 
attaining the margins, the apical space being dark olive. 
grey; cilia olive-grey, with an ochreous line along their base : 
2 with the orange-ochreous much less distinct than in the 2, 
although the same pattern can be traced. xp. al., 17-18 mm. 
ITindwings brown, cilia greyish. Abdomen brown. Legs pale 
cinereous. 
Type. &. Mus. Wlsm.; 2. Mus. Holland. 
Hab. French Congo—Kanegwé, Ogowé River (Rev. 
A.C. Good) ; two specimens. 
This African form differs from any of the Asiatic or 
Malayan group, so far as known to me, in that vein 8, 
forming the upper branch of 7 and 8 stalked, terminates 
at the apex instead of below it. In the palpi ofthe ¢ it 
approaches Jobula semilinea, Wkr., more nearly than the 
ordinary forms known under the name of Tortricomorpha, 
but the palpi of the @ differ scarcely at all from those of 
both sexes of the latter genus, 
:REMOTHYRIS, gen. n. 
(épijmos = destitute of, Svpis — a window.) 
Tyee. ff 2. Lremothyris hollandi, Wism. 
Antenne, two-thirds length of forewings, basal joint enlarged, 
flattened, in g biciliate (1). Labial palpi short, somewhat recurved, 
moderately slender, smooth, apical joint not longer than second. 
Maxillary palpi and ocelli absent. Haustellum naked. Head moder- 
ately clothed, not roughened above. Zhorax smooth. Forewings 
ovate, somewhat widened outwards. Neuration, 12 veins : 2 and 3 
from a short slightly recurved common stem at lower angle of cell, 
the others separate; 4 from near origin of 2+ 3 ; 5 further removed 
at the base from 4 than from 6; 6 and 7 approximated, 7 to below 
apex; 8 and 9 approximated, but parallel, 8 to costa; 9 and 10 
from upper angles of a small supplementary cell, formed by an 
internal vein runuing from between 7 and 8 to about midway be- 
tween 10 and 11; two internal veins, the upper from between 6 
and 7, and the lower from immediately above 5, unite at about 
half the length of the cell, and form a common stem, which is con- 
tinued nearly to the base, where it runs into the radius. /Hdénd- 
wings slightly broader than the forewings, subovate, the margin 
evenly rounded, the part occupied by the branches of vein 1 
