118 Mr. L. B. Prout on new 
at the ends of the segments. Hind tibial process rather 
longer than the first tarsal joint. 
Fore wing moderately broad, apex not produced ; duller 
and more greyish green than the allies ; costal edge very 
narrowly brownish ; cell-dot rather large, black ; lines weak, 
represented only by brown-blackish dots on the veins, the 
postmedian nearer to the cell-dot than to the termen, gently 
curved anteriorly, then almost straight ; no terminal line ; 
fringe paler. 
Hind wing with termen scarcely at all bent at R®; cell-dot 
minute ; antemedian wanting ; postmedian dots almost 
parallel with termen. 
Underside paler, greenest in central part of fore wing, both 
wings becoming whitish distally ; costal edge of fore wing 
proximally more broadly brownish than above; both wings 
with -a small discal dot and a very feeble but continuous 
postmedian line, slightly darker grey-green than the ground- 
colour. 
Sierra del Libane, Colombia, 6000 feet (H. H. Smith), 
33¢. 
Possibly nearest nvetceps, Prout (Gen. Ins. fase. 129, 
p. 122), except in shape, which more associates it with mar- 
cida, Warr. (Nov. Zool. xvi. p. 79), an evident Phrudocentra, 
by lack of $*frenulum and general affinity with pupilluta, 
Warr. 
15. Oospila etreumdata striolata, subsp. n. 
(Pl. VI. fig. 24.) 
3S .—Abdomen above much darker than in name-typical 
circumdata, Warr. (Nov. Zool. xiv. p. 202). Both wings 
with cell-dot slightly enlarged; all the marginal rufous 
markings somewhat extended, heavily irrorated and striolated 
with blackish, leaving free only some small spots or patches 
at the wing-margins. . . 
Rio Ampiyacu, Putumayo, Peruvian Amazons (J. C. 
Mounsey) . 
Ina ¢ from Codajas, Upper Amazons, April 1907 (S. J/. 
Klages), in coll. Tring Mus., the tornal patches do not, as in 
the Putumayo specimen, cross M’, but it is certainly referable 
to this race. 
As the wings appear somewhat narrower than in ¢ circum- 
data, this may possibly prove a distinet species. The 
colouring must be nearly that of quinquemaculata, Warr. 
(Proe, U.S. Nat. Mus. xxx. p. 416), from French-Guiana, 
