Pard, Brazil, and other Localities. 489 
10. Syntarctia enone (Butl.). 
Hahsidota enone, Butler, Trans. Entom. Soe. Lond. 1878, p. 50, pl. iii. 
fig. 3 (tio Jurua, Rio Purus), 
1 3, unlabelled. 
11. Pelochyta brunnescens, Rothsch. 
Pelochyta brunnescens, Rothschild, Aun. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (8) iv. 
p- 226 (1909) (Sto. Domingo, Carabaya). 
1 g caught, Chanchamayo District. 
[ Hlysius bicolor (Weym. & Maass.). 
Elysius bicolor, Weymer & Maasser, in Stiibel’s Reisen in Sud Amer, 
p. 182, pl. v. fig. 1 (1890) (Putzulagua, Mcuador). 
This species has been wrongly identified by Sir George 
Hampson, myself, and others: the description and figure 
emphasising the yellow-red costal area of fore wing should 
have been sufficient to prove that the two or more Peruvian 
insects placed under the name bicolor (=walkeri and mossi, 
infra) could not be that insect. | 
12. Elysius walkert, sp. n. 
3. Pectus dark brown; antenne umber-brown ; head 
and thorax sooty black-brown; abdomen above basal two- 
thirds brightly yellowish buff, long-haired, anal one-third 
brown. 
Fore wings sooty wood-brown, very thinly scaled, nervures 
reddish brown. 
Hind wings semihyaline milk-white, abdominal area 
buffish, costal and terminal fringes grey. 
@.. Similar, larger ; fore wings more densely scaled ; abdo- 
men, basal portion greyish buff, anal portion brownish 
wood-grey. 
Length of fore wing, ¢ 26 mm., ? 30 mm. ; expanse, 
6 60 mm., ? 68 mm. 
13,1 2 caught, Lima, Peru (do type). 
Named after Commander J. J. Walker, who took the first 
specimen. 
13. Llysius cellularis, sp. u. 
é. Pectus dark mahogany-brown ; antenne, shafts black, 
pectinations rufous-brown ; head and thorax black ; abdo- 
men sooty wood-brown. 
Fore wing basal two-fiftlis and costal area black, outer 
Ann. & Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 9. Vol. ix. 32 
