NO. 3560 AGARISTINE MOTHS—TODD 15 
ment; a pair of coremata and grooves on sternum of first abdominal 
segment. Legs with large tufts and fringes of long, white hair. 
Pectus also clothed with hair. Forewing triangular, broad, termen 
evenly rounded; inner margin nearly straight. Hindwing broad, with 
termen evenly rounded. Pattern of maculation as illustrated (figs. 
11, 21). Venation of wings uncomplicated. Forewing with R, and 
Cuz from outer third of either side of discal cell; R; from Ry adnate 
with R,i,; and R, to form accessory cell; R3+R,,; shortly stalked; 
R;+R, also shortly stalked; M, from upper angle of discal cell; Me 
from below middle of discocellulars, base slightly curved, convergent 
with M,; M; from just above lower angle of discal cell; Cu, from lower 
angle of cell. Hindwing with Sc+R, fused with cell near base only; 
Rs and M, shortly stalked from upper angle of discal cell; M2 weak, 
from near middle of discocellulars; M; and Cu, connate from lower 
angle of discal cell; Cu, from outer third of cell. Male genitalia as 
illustrated (fig. 24), uncus explanate distally, apex hooked, a thin 
dorsal, longitudinal carina present; tergumen simple; vinculum with 
elongate dorsal arms, saccus scarcely developed; juxta large, tri- 
angularly emarginate dorsally; valves symmetrical, moderately broad, 
apex rounded, corona nearly absent, clasper large, curved toward 
apex of valve, sacculus emarginate at apical third; apical half of aedea- 
gus reduced in diameter, strongly sclerotized, extreme apex a rounded 
knob. Female genitalia as illustrated (fig. 25), simple, a slight 
irregular sclerotization around ostium; ductus bursae extremely small, 
elongate, membranous; bursa copulatrix an oval membranous sac; 
ductus seminalis about as large as ductus bursae, originating from 
caudal end of bursa copulatrix. 
Cisaucula peruviana (Druce), new combination 
Copidryas peruviana Druce, 1910, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, vol. 6, p. 168.— 
Strand, 1912, Lepidopterorum catalogus, pt. 5, p. 28.—Draudt, 1919, im 
Seitz, Die Gross-Schmetterlinge der Erde, vol. 7, p. 4. 
According to the original description, Druce had at least a male and 
a female from Santo Domingo, southeast Peru, 6000 feet, wet season, 
G. Ockenden, but he failed to indicate which was the type. The male 
illustrated in the present paper (fig. 21) is labeled type, and it is se- 
lected as lectotype. It is in the collection of the British Museum 
(Natural History). There are five males and one female from Inca- 
chaca, Cochabamba, Bolivia, J. Steinbach, in the collection of the 
U.S. National Museum. 
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1966 
