136 •^- Arsöne Girault: 



of tlie submarginal vein and near the apex, caudad; posterior wings 

 ligliter toward apex and in most of the fumated area, mottled with 

 clear spots. Eyes red. 



Fore wing moderately broad for the genus, but considered apart, 

 moderately narrow, clavate, its shape normal to the genus, about 

 six tim.es longer than its greatest width, its discal ciliation sparse, 

 consisting of but two lines near the cephalic margin ; the f irst or cephalic 

 of these is finer, running distad from the venation at the wing edge 

 to the apex, commencing to leave the edge at little over halfway out 

 and following the margin of the wing aronnd the apex to the beginning 

 of the caudal margin, hence encircling the distal and of the second 

 line; proxim.ad its cilia are farther apart from each other in the line; 

 the second line is somev/hat coarser, its cilia separated farther in the 

 line proximad and also increasing in length proximad, the line being 

 just cephalad of the midlongitudinal line of the wing blade and disappe- 

 aring at a distance distad of the apex of the marginal vein as the latter 

 is long. There is also a short line of three or four minute discal cilia 

 near the caudal margin just distad of the dilatation. Marginal vein 

 shorter than the submarginal but moderately long, about eigth times 

 longer than broad, its distal endcurvedcauda-distad,ending in a rounded 

 knob like a sessile stigmal vein. Marginal cilia of fore wing A^ery long 

 and fine along both margins, the longest (caudo-distad) somewhat 

 twice longer than the greatest wing width and distinctly longer than 

 the longest cilia of the posterior wing. The latter instead of narrowing 

 distad, broadens gradually and is slenderly clavate; it is also curved 

 at the distal fifth; its marginal vein is strong, moderate in length, 

 clavate, obliquely truncate distad. Marginal cilia of posterior wing 

 where longest, about three times longer than the greatest wing width, 

 the shorter ones of the cephalic margin about a fourth longer than 

 the wings greatest width. Discal cilia of posterior wing consisting of 

 a distinct line along the whole of each wing margin, away from the 

 wing edge, both rounding the apex to meet; extremely proximad, the 

 caudal line is paired, several cilia of the usual line at the wing edge 

 there appearing; no cilia in the midlongitudinal line excepting one 

 (or maybe several) in the extreme apex, inclosed by the marginal lines. 



Parapsidal furrows complete, distinct; mesoscutum cuneate, 

 broader cephalad, all margins straight but the lateral ones oblique. 

 Abdomen sessile, oval, only about two thirds the length of the thorax. 

 The four tarsal joints short; tibial spurs single; strigils present; the 

 proximal tarsal Joint of the cephalic legs longer than the same Joint 

 of the other legs. 



Antennae 13-jointed; scape long, rather deeply curved, longer 

 than the pedicel and first two funicle joints combined; pedicel short, 

 obconic; flagellar joints all short, but all longer than the pedicel, 

 longitudinally striate, each little over twice longer than wide, the 

 proximal Joint somewhat shorter. 



From a single specimen, 2/3-inch objective, 1-inch optic, Bausch 

 and Lomb. 



