178 
black. Hindwings with termeii gently waved, rounded ; 
whitish, becoming fuscous on posterior two-thirds : discal dot 
and second line as in forewings, fuscous : cilia dark fuscous. 
Probably nearest Milvaria, Gin., but abundantly dis- 
tinct from any other described species. 
Mount Darling, Western Australia. One specimen : in 
November. 
Orsonoba (?) euryscopa, n. sp. 
Male, 44 mm. Head, thorax, palpi, and abdomen yel- 
low, abdomen speckled with fine fuscous scales. Antennae 
fuscous, bipectinated, pectinations 2. Legs ochreous-yellow- 
ish, posterior pair spotted with fuscous. Forewings elongate- 
triangular, costa gently arched, apex acute, termen faintly 
waved, strongly bowed in middle ; sinuate beneath apex ; yel- 
low-ochreous, becoming broadly paler along costa, from one- 
third to apex ; a narrow blackish waved line from costa before 
one-third to just above dorsum at two-fifths ; a well-defined, 
oblique, fuscous line, edged posteriorly by its own width of 
white, which colour is again edged suffusedly by a similar 
width of dull purple, from apex to dorsum in middle : a round 
pale whitish-yellow spot lying on upper edge of fuscous line, 
just below middle; cilia ochreous. Hindwings faintly waved, 
more or less strongly near angle ; colour and cilia as in fore- 
wings ; a moderate waved fuscous streak, from one-fifth costa 
to one-fifth dorsum ; a similar parallel streak before middle 
of costa to before middle of dorsum ; a fine waved fuscous line 
from costa at three-fourths to dorsum before anal angle, ob- 
scure on lower half. Wings beneath pale yellowish, finely 
irrorated with fuscous, all markings, except streak of fore- 
wings from apex, obscurely reproduced. 
Mackay, Queensland. One specimen ; in November. 
MONOCTENIAN^. 
Homospora rhodoscopa, Low. 
Onychodes (?) ihodoscopa, Low., Tr. Roy. Soc, page 228, 
1902. 
Homos fora procrita, Turn., I.e., page 229, 1904. 
I am sorry that Dr. Turner has re-named this species, as 
I pointed out to him when in Brisbane that I had already 
given it a MS.S. name. However, the discovery of the male 
has made it necessary to erect a new genus to receive it, and 
has borne out my conclusions that it is allied to 0?ij/rhodes, 
Gin., the female of both genera having the antennae very 
shortly pectinated ; it differs, however, from that genus, as 
Dr. Turner points out, by the frontal projection of head and 
different neuration. 
