392 mh. a. g. butler on heterocerotjs [May 1> 



line ; outer border dentated, black ; fringe alternately brown and 

 wbitish ; body grey : wings below bright ochreous, crossed by several 

 black lines, much as in the preceding species ; outer border black, 

 intersected by a crenated yellow stripe, which in the secondaries 

 unites with the ground-colour at the apex and in the second median 

 interspace ; pectus white, venter creamy whitish. Expanse of wings 

 1 inch 4 lines. 



Three examples. Coll. J. D. Enys, Esq. 



A mountain form, found at from 3000 to 5000 feet. 



6fi. FiDONiA ANCEPS, n. sp. (Plate XLIII. fig. 3.) 



Allied to the preceding species, but paler; the secondaries above 

 straw-yellow, dusky at the base, crossed by three parallel central 

 dark grey bands ; also with a confused zigzag submarginal band of 

 the same colour. Expanse of wings 1 inch 3 lines. 



Two examples. Coll. J. D. Enys, Esq. 



Also a mountain species. 



67. FiDONiA FEROx, n. sp. (Plate XLII. fig. 8.) 



Primaries dark shining grey, crossed by numerous darker undu- 

 lated and lunular lines ; two of these form a central band, relieved 

 on each side by a tint of bronzy brown ; outer border broadly tinted 

 with bronzy brown, and bounded within by a double lunulated 

 line ; fringe long and grey ; secondaries fiery orange, greyish at base, 

 crossed from the basal third by five black lines, the first and last 

 thickest, the first two straight, the two next lunulated and angulated, 

 the fifth lunulated and arched, submarginal ; margin black ; fringe 

 long and brown, grey at the tips ; body greyish brown, abdomen 

 annulated with whitish : wings below golden orange ; external half 

 crossed by lunulated black and silvery white Hues ; body below 

 white. Expanse of wings 1 inch 2 lines. 



Coll. J. D. Enys, Esq. 



The prettiest of all the orange-winged species. Found at from 

 3000 to 5000 feet elevation. 



68. FiDONIA ? ABROGATA. 



Aspilates abrogata. Walker, Lep. Het. xxiv. p. 10/5 (1862). 



Fidonial servidaria, Guenee, Ent. Mo. Mag. v. p. 43 (1868). 



Colls. Ur. Hector and J. D. Enys, Esq. 



I believe this to be a species of Acidalia ; it certainly has very 

 little in common with Fidonia, and does not at all agree with 

 Aspilutes. 



69. Fidonia? catapyrrha, n. sp. (Plate XLIII. fig. 2.) 

 cj , 5 . Primaries above whitish, clouded and banded with brown ; 

 the principal markings are an angulated transverse subbasal dark 

 brown band ; two central bands forming a band, its inner edge 

 Bubangulated, its outer edge very irregular, projecting within the 

 median interspaces; an interrupted submarginal brown streak; a 

 brown apical spot, and five oval marginal red spots enclosing black 



