110 Mr. L. B. Prout on new 
Rio Pastaza, E. Keuador (IZ. G. Palmer): Alpayacu, 
3600 feet (type); El Rosario, 4900 feet. Also two worn 
? ? from Intaj, Keuador (Buckley), rather larger, with 
antennal ciliation short. All ex coll. H. Druce. 
Subfam. Heurrzrrm az. 
3. Mimandria cataracte, sp. n. 
(Pl. VIL. fig. 25.) 
¢ .—34 mm, 
Face black. Palpus whitish, with third joint and most of 
second blackish above. Tongue present, but quite short. 
Vertex and front of thorax mostly light brown; body other- 
wise whitish grey, irrorated with light brown. 
Fore wing broad, with termen rather less oblique than in 
insularis; SC* anastomosing at a point with C and with 
SC? ; whitish grey, irrorated with darker grey and with light 
brown, costal margin mostly dark grey ; lines blackish grey ; 
antemedian at nearly one-third, shallowly lunulate outward 
-in cell and in submedian area; postmedian slender, 3-4 mm. 
from termen, lunulate-dentate, a little incurved in submedian 
area, the tooth on R! acute, the lunule between R*® and M* 
more shallow than the adjacent ones ; an elongate dark cell- 
mark, somewhat interrupted in middle ; subterminal pale line 
almost obsolete, accompanied proximally by a small wedge- 
shaped brown spot between R' and R? and another behind M’, 
a larger and broader one between the medians, the rest of 
the series almost or altogether obsolete ; triangular blackish 
terminal dots ; fringe rather pale, very weakly marked. 
Hind wing with first line wanting; cell-spot brown, 
rounded, slightly ocellated; the rest as on fore wing. 
Underside dirty pale grey, the hind wing rather more 
whitish; both wings with small cell-spot on DC? and ill- 
defined, somewhat interrupted, dark brown-grey submarginal 
shade; terminal dots a little weaker and more elongate than 
above. 
Victoria Falls, Rhodesia (ZH. H. Druce). 
Differently shaped from the only hitherto-known species 
(insularis, Swinh., from Madagascar), more resembling an 
Lypipristis ; the rows of spots distally to the postmedian line 
much less complete, less brightly coloured—in insularis they 
are reddish, though Swinhoe calls them “ greyish ochreous.” 
