Geometridac of the Argentine Re-pnblie. 211 
I have little doubt that the insect recorded by M. Dognin 
(in litt.) as Aiolodes minuata, Walk., is this species. 
Walker’s type is apparently lost, his type label having 
been attached to a North American specimen, belonging 
to Synchlora aerata, Fab.; Walker’s description and data 
(Santa Marta, collected by Bouchard) sliow that this 
cannot possibly be right. 
Guenee is in error in stating, under his generic diagnosis 
of Synchlora, that the antenna is merely thickened 
anteriorly in the ^. The accepted determination of his 
frondaria is evidently correct, or even if his description 
can really apply to some other species, it will certainly be 
a close ally (e. g. Pachycoims tridentata, Warr., Nov. Zooi., 
iv, 428), while there is no allied species in which the $ 
antenna is not bipectinate. One must suppose that he 
had two females of Aplodes frondeevia before him, and 
mistook the sex of one. 
5. Lissochlora sanguinipunctata (Dognin). 
Lissochlora sanguinipunctata, Dognin, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., 
1, 204 (1906). 
Tucuman (type), in coll. Dognin. 
6. Miantonota erina (Dognin). 
Achleyi'a erina, Dognin, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., xl, 143 (1896). 
Miantonota erina, ab. di^uncta, Warren, Nov. Zook, xvi, 81 
(1909). 
Tucuman (type of ab. disjuncta), in coll. Rothschild. 
The typical form of the species is distributed from Mexico 
to Rio Janeiro, and I believe stands in coll. E. Dukin- 
field Jones (from Casti’O, Parana) as Geometra apiciata 
(Schaus, MS.). 
7. Auophylla multiplagiata (Warren). 
Auophylla multiplagiata, Warren, Nov. Zook, iv, 424 
(1897). 
Tucuman, in my collection and those of M. Dognin and 
Dr. Bastelberger. 
o 
The species was described from Paraguay, and I know of 
no further localities than these two. 
