36 IN MEMORIAM. 



Myelois Rosellaj Scop. (Pudorella, Hiib.), but not to be 

 confounded with that species. It is generally larger, has 

 the anterior wings longer, with yellow cilia, not preceded by 

 dark lines. In the red disc are two or three elongate deep 

 red spots. The dark grey posterior wings have also yellow 

 cilia, and on the underside the costa is broadly red. The 

 antennae are longer; the femora and tibiae red. Dupon- 

 chel's solitary specinaen also came from Spain. 



Myelois cruentella, H.-S., is well known as the M, cru- 

 della, Zell. (1865.) 



Teras Hippophaeana, n. sp., Hevden (E. Z. 1865, 

 P-377). 



Alis anterioribus cinereis, apice obsolete obscurioribus ; 

 squamulis parcis, elevatis, parvis, nigricantibusj alis 

 posterioribus nigro-reticulatis. 



Exp. al. 10—11 lin. 



This species resembles the grey specimens of T. Tris- 

 tana, Hiib., and Sponsana, F. The anterior wings are only 

 slightly curved on the costa, broad, with the apex scarcely 

 pointed, silky, dark ashy-grey, sparingly clothed with single 

 raised, small, black scales. The large dark triangle on the 

 costa, which we find in the allied species obliquely truncate, 

 is here very faint, and is continued only a little darker to the 

 inner margin. On its anterior edge is a row of small black 

 spots, and a larger spot about a quarter of the length of the 

 wing from the hind margin. Towards the apex and at the 

 hind margin some very small spots are perceptible. The 

 cilia are concolorous with the wings, and have likewise at 

 their bases a row of indistinct darker spots, and sometimes 

 a paler intersecting line. The underside is unicolorous, 

 paler. 



The posterior wings are broad, paler grey, with the veins 



