74 
Mr. G. T. luric-Baker’s Bxvision of the 
the postniediau stripe. The otlier spots have little to call for 
dilTerentiatioii. 
llab. Angola. 
Type in the Britisli Museimi. 
Triclema iisamcnus, Holland. (Plate III, fig. 13.) 
Lycacnesthes iisamcnus, Holl., Psyche, p. 52 (1891); id. 
Aiiriv., Rhop. Aethiop., p. 849 (1898). 
g. Both Avings uniform dull brown above. Underside pale 
brownish grey with no basal spots in eitlier wing. Primaries with 
a spot closing the cell; postmedian stripe conlluent and evenly 
curved to vein 2 ; the sjiot l)elow this is shifted inwards, a narrow 
dark subterminal line. Secondaries with a sub-basal spot below 
the costa and a small one on the abdominal margin; a small spot 
near the end of the cell; postmedian stripe with two confluent 
spots on the costa, below which it is resolved into an indefinite 
waved line ; subterminal dark line slightly waved. 
Hal. Ogowe River. 
Type in the Carnegie Museum. 
The absence of basal spots should enable this species to 
be recognised very easily. 
Trichma hades, sp. nov. (Plates III, fig. 9 ; XI, fig. 41.) 
g . Both wings uniform dark brown. Primaries with an obscure 
dark spot closing the cell and an obscure dark subterminal arched 
line of even width, and not parallel with the termen from the costa 
to the .inner margin. Underside : both wings dark brown with 
slightly darker spots finely edged with whitish. Primaries with a 
lu’oad, wedge-shaped sub-basal mark, an olilong spot closing the cell, 
above which is a small costal spot; postmedian stripe irregular, first 
and second spots confluent, the second the larger of the two, third 
and fourth spots larger, confluent, slightly angled internally, the 
fourth the larger with its outer edge shifted outwards, both being 
shifted well out from the second, fifth and sixth large shifted right 
in, extending below the spot closing the cell and touching it, sixth 
spot the larger, its inner edge extending rather beyond the fifth, 
seventh spot very oblique shifted right in so that its inner edge 
nearly touches the wedge-shaped mark, a broadish arched sub¬ 
terminal line (showing through on the upper side), followed by a 
fine, even, preterminal line. Secondaries with the basal broad band 
broken up into two, the upper part subovate, the lower part 
