Eastern and Australian Moths. 313 



stripe, terminating in a red spot at end of cell ; on the hind 

 wings the striations form a rather prominent and broad 

 central band, and on both wings are subraarginal red dots. 

 Underside as above, but the striations are darker, more red, 

 and more diffuse. 



Expanse of wings T V inch. 



Dawson, Queensland. One example. 



Family Schcenobiidae . 

 Cirrhochrtsta rauma, nov. 



<$ . Antennas and palpi chestnut-brown ; a stripe on palpi 

 above and top of head white; a large chestnut- brown spot 

 behind the head; body and wings shining white : fore wings 

 with a broad costal chestnut-brown stripe, which becomes 

 thin towards the apex; a large wedge-shaped spot of the 

 same colour attached to the costal stripe, descending to the 

 end of the cell, a stripe of same colour on the outer margin, 

 and a chestnut cilia : hind wings with some chestnut-red on 

 a small portion of the outer margin and cilia below the 

 middle. Underside and legs pure white, without markings. 



Expanse of wings 1^ inch. 



Brisbane. Two examples. 



Allied to C. ceth-erialis, Led. 



Family Pyraustidae. 

 Subfamily Dichocrociin^i. 

 Hedylepta vildersalis, nov. 



(J ? . Of a uniform olive-grey, glossy and nearly semi- 

 hyaline : fore wings with a brown dot in the cell outside the 

 first line, a brown lunule at the end : fore wings crossed by 

 two brown lines, the outer one crenulated, deeply bent 

 inwards underneath the cell-lunule, then straight to hinder 

 margin beyond the middle ; the inner line at one third, out- 

 wardly curved: hind wings with the inner line from costal 

 third straight to anal angle ; the outer line from the costa 

 beyond the middle straight down to vein 3 ; both wings with 

 a brown marginal line and brown cilia, interlined with white. 



Expanse of wings 1 inch. 



Cherra Punji. Twenty-two examples. 



The lines are disposed as in H. cuprealis, Moore, from the 

 Andamans, of which I have many examples, but the lines are 

 crenulated and not smooth as in that species, and the colora- 

 tion is altogether different. 



Ann. & Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 7. Vol. vi. 21 



