Heterocerous Lepidoptera from Japan. i 
the cell of the secondaries dusky; expanse of wings, 
2 inches 9 lines. 
Male. Tokei (fenton). 
It appears to me that the genus Gona might be advan- 
tageously united to Eutricha; a comparison of CE. segre- 
gata with the male of Eutricha pini will at once show their 
uniformity of character; the type of Qona (Ci. punctata) 
is the female of ‘‘ Odonestis” sodalis, and identical with 
O. abstersa. 
30. Hutricha zonata, n. 8. 
Allied to the preceding and to (. segregata; deep 
chocolate-red; primaries with a silvery white disco- 
cellular lunule; a broad piceous oblique central belt, 
pounded internally by a white bisinuated stripe, and 
externally by a dentate-sinuate white line, very sharply 
defined; a broad dark purplish brown external border, 
deeply bisinuated internally, and partly edged with 
whitish as usual; disc between the central belt and the 
outer border ferruginous; wings below with the basal 
three-fifths dark chocolate-brown, bounded externally by 
an abbreviated whitish streak, beyond which they are 
paler brown; expanse of wings, 2 inches 10 lines. 
Male. Tokei (Fenton). 
31. Hutricha fenton, n.s. 
Pale rosy ferruginous; primaries with the base, a 
bisinuated stripe immediately beyond the cell, a second 
dentate-sinuate stripe half way between the latter and 
the outer border, and the inner edge of the outer border 
dark ferruginous; outer border broad, and slightly 
darker ferruginous than the ground colour; an oblique 
lunate white disco-cellular spot upon a dark abbreviated 
streak; an interrupted diffused whitish stripe bounding 
the outer border internally ; costal border of secondaries 
and body pale; antenne with greyish brown pectina- 
tions; under surface pale sandy reddish ; wings crossed 
by a darker reddish streak just beyond the middle; an 
~ ill-defined discal series of darker spots; primaries with 
the basi-internal area creamy whitish and sericeous ; 
expanse of wings, 3 inches 2 lines. 
Male. Tokei (Fenton). 
Nearest to EH. superans, male (Odonestis superans, 
Butl.), but evidently quite distinct. 
TRANS. ENT. soc. 1881.—PaRT I. (APRIL.) D 
