440 Mr. R. Rosenstock on Australiayi Lepidoptera. 



Underside of both wings glossy lead-grey ; front wings 

 somewhat darker. 



Species resembles Clnmahacclie Cinderella, Newm . Tr. E . S. L. 

 new ser. vol. iii.p. 288, pi. xviii. fig. 6 (a species which must 

 also be referred to this genus, differing utterly from Chima- 

 bacchidai in neuration), but is darker, shorter, and narrower in 

 the wings, with the dark marking on fore wings forming 

 distinct stripes instead of spots. 



Agriojpliara diminuta $ , n. sp. 



Head, palpi, thorax, legs, and abdomen ashy grey. Fore 

 wing cinerous irrorated with whitish, and with a series of 

 small linear dark fuscous spots along the margins of wings, 

 especially distinct on outer margins, and with dark fuscous 

 irrorations scattered over discal region of wing ; fringes 

 whitish grey, irrorated with blackish. 



Hind wings leaden grey, darker along outer margin and 

 around apex. 



Under surface of front wings dark leaden grey j of hind 

 wings glossy whitish grey. 



Expanse 17 millim. 



In form and markings similar to Cinderella and cinerosa, but 

 very much smaller. 



CONCECA, Scott. 

 Conceca, Scott, Austral. Lepid. pt. iii. p. 26. 



(423.) Conceca irrorea $ , Feld. 

 Cvnceca irrorea, Feld. Novara Het. pi. cxxxviii. fig. 40. 



A damaged and worn specimen ; its generic characters 

 agree perfectly with those of Conoeca, and I have little doubt 

 as to its being the female of Felder's species, the figure of 

 which appears to me a poor one. 



The atfinities of this genus are doubtful. I have left it 

 among the Tineidje, where Felder placed his species. Scott, 

 followed by Walker, placed it among the Psychid^, with which 

 it has nothing in common, except that the pupa builds a case. 

 Perhaps it is safest to consider it provisionally as an aberrant 

 Tineid. 



(Ecophoridje (Meyr.). 



Palpaeia, Wing. 



(848.) Palparia euryphanella'9 , Meyr. 



Palparia euryphanella ?, Meyr. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. W. vii. p. 435. 



I believe this to be Mr. Meyrick's species, though the 



