342 Mr. M. A. C. Tlinton on a 



median lino, wliicli is angled at the costa ; postmedian area 

 very broadly ashen-grey, the upper part of it being less solid 

 than the part on the fold ; a series of preterminal blackish 

 points, from each of which a minute fine white dash emanates 

 towards the termen. Secondaries similar to the primaries, 

 but tlie postmedian ashy area is far from solid, being much 

 interrupted. 



Expanse 48-56 mm. 



Hah. Ekeikei (1500 feet) ; March and April [Pratt). 



Type in my collection. 



At first sight it might appear that this was only an aberra- 

 tion of the previous sjiecies, but I have both forms in both 

 sexes with a series of each, and tliere are no intermediates, so 

 I have described them as species. 



Ericeia setosipedes, sp. n. 



(J . Head, thorax, abdomen, and both wings pale ashy 

 grey. Primaries with l)iio:htish chestnut-coloured marks ; 

 a small subbasal spot divided by vein 1 a ; a large reniform 

 stigma, beyond which most of the postmedian area is suffused 

 with chestnut-colour, indefinite and indistinct lines being 

 apparent in it, wliilst its outer edge has a distinct, irrogubn-, 

 pale wavy line therein ; beyond this the ground-colour is 

 resumed up to the termen, which has preterminal, dark, inter- 

 neural points. Secondaries with a dirty ochreous median 

 stripe, finely edged with greyish and again externally with 

 whitish ; a small pale rusty spot well above the tornus, 

 beyond which is a pale, scalloped, fine indistinct line ; anal 

 portion of the terminal area rather wliitish ; termen very 

 finely scalloped with dark grey, with the usual interncnral 

 dark points. In both wings the pale ashy-grey areas arc 

 finely and sparingly irrorated with greyish. 



Expanse 60 mm. 



JIah. Dinawa (4000 feet), ^May-July ; Brilisli New Guinea 

 (Pratt). ^ 



Type in my collection. 



This species will come next to eriopJiora. 



XL. — On a 7}fw Sjecics of ^lyopusi from Central Asia. 

 By MaKTIN A. C. lIlNTON. 



I AM indebted to Mr. Oldfield 'J'homas for permission to 

 ])ublish the following account of an interesting new species 

 (jf Mijopua from Central Asia. 



