(443) 



(SC^ and SC, — veins 7 and 8) are stalked as stated b}' Staudinger. As the 

 foretibia does not bear a spnr, there remains nothing to distinguish Tnope from 

 Procris (= Iiid), in which genus the subcostals 4 and 5 are occasionally also 

 stalked. Iiiope, therefore, sinks as a synonym of Procris. 



(iraeser's //Imieora has only one pair of hindtibial spurs. Herr Max Bartel, 

 who has acquired the Dieckraann collection containing (iraeser's types, also has 

 found but one pair of hindtibial spurs in the types, according to a note on the labels 

 of Herr R. Pilngeler's specimens. The species, however, bears a long spur on the 

 foretibia, and therefore must be placed with Illiberis Walk. (1854) = _Xort/iia 

 Walk. (1854, preocc). 



The third species, impellucida Graeser (1888), bears two pairs of spurs on the 

 hindtibia, as stated by the author. The subcostals 4 and 5 of the forewing are 

 stalked and the foretibia has a long epiphysis. The species agrees in these 

 characters with Clelea, where it should be placed. 



The three species of Inope, therefore, part company, each finding a resting- 

 place in a different genns. 



Procris heterogi/na Stand. (1887) is similar in colouring to Procris elegans 

 Ponj. (1886), which also occurs in Araurland, and is frequently identified with 

 Illibtris sinensis Walk. (1854), a species only known with certainty from China and 

 belonging to a different subfamily. The colouring of the body and the dark portions 

 of the wings is of a much blacker tone in heteroyijna than in /'. elegans. The 

 antennae are thinner, and the branches of the c?-antenna only slightly clnb-shaped, 

 hairy, with a few scales on the dorsal surface, the branches contrasting strongly 

 with those oi P. elegans-i, in which they are strongly widened and densely scaled, 

 as in P.pruni Schiff. (1776). Both wings are narrower than in P. elegans; the 

 subcostals 4 and 5 are stalked, and the anterior cell-angle of the hindwing is much 

 less obtuse than in P. elegans, being slightly over 90'. The clasper of the c? 

 apparently has no prominent tooth. 



