100 Mr. A. G. Butler on Melbourne Lejndoptera. 



73. (Ecoi^liora hracteaiella^ A^'^alk. (36). 

 One example. 



74. (Ecophora interlineatella, Walk. (125). 

 One specimen. 



15. TlncjenaUfaciella'>,Y^a\k. {n'2). 

 One unusually large example. 



76. Cryptolecliia carnea^ Zell. (184). 

 One specimen Avithout abdomen. 



77. CryptolecMa triphcenatella^ Walk. (207). 

 One damaged specimen. 



78, Falimria aurata, Walk. (283). 

 A damaged example. 



79. Si/mmoca? herodiella, Felder (77). 



One specimen. 



The three following genera also appear to belong to this 

 family, although I am a little doubtful about the first of them, 

 the antenna? of which, being pectinated to the tips and rather 

 long, seem somewhat aberrant for the Gelechiida3. I believe, 

 however, that the natural position of this little genus will be 

 found to be near to Cryptopliasa j and I now name it 



CiiYPTOPEGES, gen. nov. 



Wings rather long, narrow, acuminate at apex ; primaries 

 truncated, with very slightly convex costal and dorsal mar- 

 gins and slightly oblique outer margin, grooved below the 

 costal vein at base ; discoidal cell very narrow and long, 

 placed in the centre of the wing and divided by a recurrent 

 vein ; costal vein terminating at about the middle of the 

 costal margin ; subcostal emitting three ])arallel branches at 

 equal distances before the end of the cell ; a fourth branch, 

 forked towards apex, emitted from the superior angle of the 



positive of the coiTectness of its generic location ; altliough in colours it 

 ■wonderfully resembles QL. araheUa, it dift'ers in form, especially in the 

 fringing of the wings and in neuratiou. 1 believe it to be a Conchylis, 



