Mr. A. G. Butler on the Genus Azelina. 31 
“Gonodontis” felix, Butler, was never intended to be 
regarded as an Azelina. In naming this species I followed 
Felder. Whether the name Gonodontis can be retained for 
this and allied species I leave Mr. Kirby to decide in his 
forthcoming Catalogue of Moths; and at the same time I take 
this opportunity of thanking him for lending me his list of 
the species of Azelina collated from Walker’s Catalogues and 
the ‘Zoological Records’ up to 1876 ; the remaining ‘ Records’ 
and one or two species referred to other genera than Azelina 
I have looked up subsequently to going through Mr. Kirby’s 
catalogue list. 
List of Species. 
1. Azelina lustraria. 
_Axzelina lustraria, Guénée, Phal. i. p. 156. n. 242 (1857). 
Rio Janeiro, Rio Jurua (Trail). B.M. 
The example from the Amazons is rather redder in colour 
than those from Rio Janeiro: the species approaches in 
structure the genus Meticulodes. 
2. Azelina stuposaria. 
©. Azelina stuposaria, Guénée, Phal. i. p. 160. n. 252 (1857). 
Azelina fuscularia, Felder & Rogenhofer, Reise der Nov., Lep. v. 
pl. exxiii. fig. 11 (1876). 
6 2, Rio Janeiro. B.M. 
The male is smaller than the female; the obtuse apical and 
subapical denticles are very feebly indicated ; and the secon- 
daries are entire; the basal area of the primaries to the discal 
line is much darker and washed with lilacine, but the exter- 
nal area is distinctly paler and more flesh-tinted. 
3. Azelina Trailit, sp. n. 
g. Allied to A. stuposaria. Primaries above with the 
basal third pale sandy brown, obliquely striated on the costa 
and transversely below the costa with grey; second third 
occupied by the central belt, which is reddish olivaceous, 
bounded by the ordinary lines, which are blackish; the inner 
line undulated, the outer line slightly sinuous, obtusely bian- 
gulated ; a large ochreous spot just within the superior angle 
of the cell; reniform spot linear, grey, with a white dot on 
its upper half; an irregular and badly-defined external grey 
border to the central belt, followed immediately by three 
unequal black spots; external third testaceous, covered with 
little transverse blackish striations; apex dusky; one or two” 
submarginal black dots ; two or three dull rust-coloured spots 
