64 Lord Walsingham on 



that other African forms not dealt with in this paper 

 can be rightly referred to some of them. The Indian 

 genus Timyra, Walker, is now found to occur in Africa. 



Some few corrections are made in the synonymy of 

 described genera : Nigilgia, Walker, is identified as equal 

 to Phy codes, Guenee ; Polyhymno, Chambers, turns out 

 to be the same as the South American genus Copocercia, 

 subsequently described by Zeller ; my African genus 

 Teratopsis is Heinemann's Cacochroa, with which I have 

 only lately become acquainted in Europe. 



Nine new genera are characterised in this paper, 

 seventy-one new species are described and figured, 

 while additional localities are given for many previously 

 known ; moreover, some few omissions in my former list 

 of South African species are corrected. 



TOETEICIN^E. 



TERAS, Tr. 



Teras (Acleris, Hb.) algoana, F. & K., Eeise Nov. Lp., 



PL CXXXVIL, 50. (1875), ? . 

 Grahamstown (Cape Colony). 



This species, with which I am unacquainted, was acci- 

 dentally omitted from my former paper (Trans. Ent. 

 Soc. Lond., 1881), which professed to give a complete 

 catalogue of South African Tortricidce. 



CACCECIA, Hb. 

 Cacoecia adustana, Wlsm. 

 Grahamstown (Cape Colony) ; one specimen (Druce). 



I am only acquainted with the $ of this species ; the 

 reception of the $ may perhaps prove that it should be 

 referred to Pandemis. 



[PL iii., fig. 1.] 

 Cacoecia occidentalis, sp. n. 



Antenna reddish brown. Palpi reddish brown. Head deep 

 reddish brown. Fore wings, $ , reddish brown, paler beyond the 

 oblique median fascia, much shaded with purplish fuscous scaling 

 from the base of the dorsal margin nearly to the anal angle ; this 



