> PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM VOL. 120 
incorrectly labeled. To my knowledge, the species has not been col- 
lected in Cuba by any of the Cuban lepidopterists. 
Caularis undulans Walker 
Caularis undulans Walker, 1857, List of the specimens of lepidopterous insects in 
the collection of the British Museum, pt. 12, p. 801. 
Eudryas bartholomaet Boisduval, 1874, Rev. Mag. Zool., ser. 3, vol. 2, p. 59. 
This species (fig. 18) may be separated from C. lunata Hampson (fig. 
16) by the absence of the discal spot in the hindwing. C. undulans 
Walker differs from C. jamaicensis, new species (fig. 17), in that the 
white scales near the tornus of the forewing form a short longitudinal 
bar as in dunata, and the basal tuft of the abdomen is white medially, 
not a uniformly black transverse patch. 
The original description was based on a male from Santo Domingo 
[Dominican Republic]. The type of the synonym, EF. bartholomaet 
Boisduval, is a female from Saint-Barthélemy Island. In addition to 
the types, there are three specimens in the British Museum (Natural 
History). The additional specimens are an unlabeled female, a male 
from Jamaica, and another male from Puerto Rico. Seven specimens 
from Puerto Rico and one specimen from Cruz Bay, Saint John, 
Virgin Islands are in the collection of the U.S. National Museum. 
Caularis lunata Hampson 
Caularis lunata Hampson, 1904, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol. 14, p. 169. 
Hampson described this species from two females from Nassau, 
Bahamas. In the British Museum the only specimens are the two 
syntypes. Both are labeled “Bahamas, Sir. G. Carter [accession 
number], 1904-200.’ One specimen marked as type has rather faded 
hindwings. It has been selected and labeled as lectotype because it 
was marked type, and because it obviously was the specimen figured 
by Hampson, 1910 (Catalogue of the Lepidoptera Phalaenae in the 
British Museum, vol. 9, p. 406, pl. 145, fig. 31). Three males in the 
collection of the U.S. National Museum (two received as a gift from 
Ing. Zayas) from localities in Oriente Province of Cuba are referable to 
this species. Both sexes possess a moderately heavy, terminal, 
fuscous band between veins Sc+ R, and M; of the hindwing. 
This species is easily recognized by the presence of a large dark discal 
spot in the hindwing (fig. 16). 
Caularis jamaicensis, new species 
Caularis undulans Walker.—Hampson, 1910, Catalogue of the Lepidoptera 
Phalaenae in the British Museum, vol. 9, p. 406, fig. 191. 
Description: Eyes large, hemispherical, naked; ocelli small, located 
above margin of eye immediately caudad of base of antenna; antenna 
