Lord Walsingham on Asiatic Tortrieidse. 445 



This species has much the appearance of sanguinana, Tr., 

 but the markings are more blurred and veins 7 and 8 of the 

 fore wings are stalked. 



PilALONiA, Hb. 

 866(1). Phahnia cestiva, sp. n. 



Antennce white. Palpi white, the median joint shaded 

 with brown externally, the terminal joint fuscous. Head and 

 thorax white, the latter shaded with light brownish ochreous. 

 Fore icings white, with light brownish ochreous markings ; 

 three equidistant costal spots with ferruginous dots between 

 tliem, one before, one at, and one beyond the middle ; an 

 oblique medio-dorsal blotch pointing outward and reaching to 

 the middle of the cell, below which it is margined on both 

 sides with silvery grey and some fuscous scales ; a fainter 

 blotch before the tornus, less distinctly margined, and some 

 pale ochreous spots on the terminal and apical area accom- 

 panied by silvery scaling; cilia whitish ochreous, dusted with 

 fuscous. Exp. al. 18 mm. Hind icings brownish grey; cilia 

 whitish, with a shade-line running through them. Abdomen 

 brownish grey. Legs white, the tarsi dusted with fuscou.3. 



Type, ? (60865) ; $ (60866) Mus. Wlsm. 



Eab. Asiatic Turkey — Haleb— Shar Deve3y (Native 

 Coll. 1890). Three specimens. 



872. Phalonia Ricliteriana, F. R. 

 Cochylis Richteriana, Stgr. & Wk. Cat. Lp. Eur. 245. No. 872 (1871). 



Bab. Europe. Japan — Yesso (Pryer } 1882). 

 Hysterosia, Stph. 



= Idiogjiapi£Is j Ld. 



Stephens, who had originally placed inopiana, Hw., in the 

 Phaloniad genus Xanfhosetia, Stph., seems to have recognized 

 its divergence from hamana, L., and its allies in proposing 

 the genus Hysterosia for its reception. Wilkinson, finding a 

 costal fold in the male, placed it in the genus Halonota, Stph. 

 (Olcthreutina). In the same year (1859) Lederer charac- 

 terized Idiograpkis, of which he made inopiana the type, 

 placing it as a subgenus under Tortrix, Tr. ; he was followed 

 by von Heinemann and Staudinger & Wocke. Walsingham, 

 in 1879, placed the genus Idiographis between Betinia, Gn., 

 and Conchylis, Tr., recognizing the structural character 

 " vein 2 of the fore wings arising from the outer third of the 

 Ann. & Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 7. Vol. vi. 30 



