150 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XX. 



blackish, raised, obscurely pale-edged, and a similar spot beneath and hardly 

 beyond it ; a faint cloudy line of darker irroration from ? of costa to dorsum 

 before tornus, posteriorly faintly pale-edged, angulated in middle and indented 

 above this : cilia fuscous, with pale base and darker subbasal shade. Hind- 

 wings and cilia grey. 



9. 15 mm. Palpi with second joint dark fuscous except apex, dark rings 

 of terminal joint broader. Forewings with ground colour dark fuscous, 

 markings blackish, first line posteriorly edged with whitish-ochreous. Hind- 

 wings becoming dark grey posteriorly. 



Palnis, 6,000 feefc (Campbell) ; five specimens. Immediately distinguished 

 from hemilyca by the absence of the pale blotch on costa posteriorly ; the 

 distinct dilation of the forewings is also a special characteristic. 



Macrosaces crocozona, n. sp. 



$9- 9-10 mm. Head, thorax and abdomen dark grey. Palpi dark grey 

 anterior edge and apex of joints yellowish. Antennae dark grey, obscurely 

 dotted with pale yellowish. Forewings elongate, rather narrow, costa gently 

 arched, apex obtuse, termen very obliquely rounded ; 3 present, separate : 

 ashy-grey irrorated witb blackish ; a short yellow subcostal dash towards base • 

 three ochreous-yellow direct transverse fascias, first at 5-, moderately broad, 

 usually narrowed on costa, posterior edge rather prominent in middle, second 

 narrow, enclosing raised black second discal stigma and a similar dot beneath 

 it, and reaching dorsum, but not costa, third narrow, running from about £ of 

 costa to tornus, sometimes somewhat dilated in disc : cilia grey, sprinkled witb 

 black on basal half. Hindwings with 5 absent ; grey ; cilia grey. 



Khasis, from July to October ; five specimens. This species differs from all 

 the rest in the absence of vein 5 of hindwings, but, though very distinct, it 

 is at the same time so obviously allied that generic separation is not called for. 



Eutorna, Meyr, 



A distinct genus, hitherto represented by ten Australian and two New Zea- 

 land species, with which the following species has close affinity. 



Eutorna insidiosa, n. sp. 



$9- 10-13 mm. Head and thorax ochreous, face whitish-ochreous. Palpi 

 pale ochreous, scales of second joint loosely expanded above towards apex. 

 Antennas whitish-ochreous, dotted with dark grey. Abdomen grey, segmental 

 margins suffused with ochreous-whitish. Forewings elongate, rather narrow, 

 costa anteriorly moderately, posteriorly slightly arched, apex rounded-obtuse, 

 termen extremely obliquely rounded ; deep ochreous ; costal edge blackish 

 towards base ; a broad ferruginous-brown streak beneath fold from base to 

 tornus, suffused beneath and posteriorly, edged above with some black scales 

 and then with whitish suffusion ; a triangular patch of ferruginous-brown 

 suffusion extending on costa from § to near apex and reaching half across 

 wing, edged anteriorly by a very oblique ochreous-whitish streak preceded 

 towards costa by some blackish irroration, and enclosing a shorter similar 

 streak from costa at f , second discal stigma round, black, edged with ochreous- 



