342 1 >r. I"' ran/ F^ritw on a in-to 



ViwnWy Tortricidas. 



Genus Attf.uia. 



Atten'a ricnlnrts^ n. sp. 



Nearly allied Xo A.rolcanica] rather more goklen in colour- 

 ing, the black costal area of primaries broader, and the ex- 

 ternal border narrower ; the transverse creamy-white streaks 

 of costal area longer, and not united to one another at their 

 lower extremities ; the branching a])ical external streaks more 

 transverse ; five black s])ots within the lower half of the cell, 

 one or two on the disk near the external margin, and some- 

 times several along the inner margin ; secondaries with three 

 disconnected marginal black spots at apex, and five along tiie 

 external margin : below as above. 



Expanse of wings 1 inch 3 lines. 



Hah. A^eragua {Sale in). Two specimens, B.M. 



This species evidently takes the place of the New-Granadan 

 A. volcanica at Veragua ; it is a very beautiful insect. 



Amongst the other Lepidoptera presented to the collection 

 by Mr. Salvin, I may mention the very beautiful Charidea 

 arrofjans of Walker, Flovinia h'ta, and Simena hictifera, of 

 Avhich we previously only possessed the types (of C. arrogans 

 four examples, and of the other two species a good series) ; 

 also two examples of Tosiomorpha longivitta^ Felder, which 

 was not previously in the collection, but only differs in its 

 superior size from Walker's Josia penetrata. 



XLV. — Tylenchus millefolii, n. sp., a new Gall-producing 

 AiigtiiUuUde. By Dr. Franz Low *. 



On the lowest leaves of the common milfoil {Achillea mille- 

 folium^ Linn.), which usually form a small turf, from spring 

 to autumn we find small gall-like inflations, 3-4 millims. in 

 length, which are generally seated upon the midrib, less fre- 

 quently at the base of the pinna^, but always in the neigh- 

 Ijourhood of the apex of the leaf. These inflations, which 

 show no means of entrance or exit any where, are covered 

 externally by the epidermis of the leaf, and are at first just 

 as green as the rest of the leaf and equally hairy. The walls 



• Translated by W. S. Dallas, F.L.S., from the 'Verhandlunjren dcr 

 k.-k. zoologisch-Hotanischen (tcsi'llf^rliaft in Wicn,' Band xxiv. (1874), 

 pp. 17-24. 



