208 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



MOTILLA AESYCA, Sp. nOV. 



Black ; the head and thorax red ; the front femora and the basal 

 three-fourths of the four posterior rufous ; the lower part of the petiole 

 rufous ; a quadrate spot on the centre of the petiole, a broad band on 

 the apex of the third segment, widest in the middle, the apex of the 

 penultimate, and the sides of the last segment covered with silvery 

 pubescence. ? . Long. 11 mm. 



Hah. Borneo. 



Antennas entn-ely black ; the third joint more than double the 

 length of the fourth ; the fourth and fifth equal in length. Front and 

 vertex rugosely punctured, and sparsely covered with longish black 

 hair ; the front indistinctly keeled down the centre. Antennal tubercles 

 dark rufous, smooth. Mandibles black, rufous at the apex ; their base 

 punctured ; their apical tooth long, rounded at the apex ; the hair on 

 their base long and pale fulvous. The head is broader than long, but is 

 largely developed behind the eyes ; the occiput is roundly incised, not 

 transverse or convex. Thorax twice longer than broad; the base and 

 apex almost transverse, with their sides rounded ; the outer edge of 

 the mesonotum is irregular ; the sides of the apex above bear four 

 stout teeth. The top of the median segment has a rounded slope ; it 

 is sparsely punctured, and is keeled down the centre. Pleuras smooth 

 and shining ; the upper part projects. Legs black; the front femora 

 entirely, and the four posterior, except at the apex, rufous ; they are 

 covered with long white hair ; the tibial spines apparently are few in 

 number, and are black ; the spurs are pale ; the tarsal spines are 

 rufous ; their basal joints are thickly covered with pale pubescence. 

 The abdomen deep black ; there is a square mark of silvery pubescence 

 on apex of the petiole, in the middle there is a broad band of similar 

 pubescence, broadest in the middle, on the apex of the second segment ; 

 a broader one on the penultimate, and the sides of the pygidium are 

 thickly covered with silvery pubescence ; the last segment is punctured 

 at the base ; the apical half is smooth, shining, and piceous. The 

 keel on the basal ventral segment does not project much, and is 

 rounded at the base and apex ; the second segment is smooth and de- 

 pressed on the basal half, and is there indistinctly keeled in the middle ; 

 the epipygium is closely punctured, and is distinctly bordered laterally. 

 On the side of the second segment is an elongated patch of dark rufous 

 pubescence. 



(To be continued.) 



A LIST OF TORTRICES TAKEN IN SOUTH ESSEX 



BETWEEN 1885 AND 1901. 



By a. Thurnall. 



(Concluded from p. 193.) 



Catoiotria wimmerana, Wilk. — Strictly confined to the salt marshes 

 along the Thames, and on the coast. Wakering, near Shoeburyness, 

 Thames Haven, Fobbing, and Benfleet. Larva in September and 

 October spun up in the tops of Artemisia maritima. 



