1895.] FEOM BHITISH BAST ArRICA. 741 



114. EeMIGIA REPAjSDA. 



Noetua repanda, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. 2, p. 49 (1793). 

 Kampala and Uganda, Feb. 1894. 



115. Htpena telatipeknis. 



Hype-iia velatipennis, Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 4, 

 vol. xvi. p. 410 (1875). 



Kazamaza's, Euwenzori, 5300 feet, between 13th and 23rd 

 April. 



The single example obtained was so much worn and broken as 

 to be barely identifiable. 



116. ZeBEOIOA PODAtlRIAIilS. 



Sjjilomela podalirialis, Gruenee, Delt. et Pyr. p. 281. 

 Kampala and Uganda, Feb. 1894. 



117. COPTOBASIS OTALIS. 



Botys avails, "Walker, Lep, Het. xviii. p. 636. 



Kazamaza's, Euwenzori, 5300 feet, between 13th and 23rd 

 April. 



One much shattered and worn example, apparently referable to 

 this species. 



118. ACEOPTERIS EBYCDfAEIA. 



Micronia erydnaria, Guene'e, Uran. et Phal. ii. p. 30 (1857). 

 Kampala and Uganda, Feb. 1894. 

 One shattered example. 



119. Heteeabeaxas eoseotittata, sp. n. (Plate XLIII. 

 figs. 2, 3.) 



$ . Primaries creamy whitish, with pale golden reflections ; 

 coarsely and sparsely striated with short black lines and traversed 

 longitudinally by two divergent rose-coloured streaks, the first 

 passing through the cell and the second through interno-median 

 interspace ; faint traces of rosy streaks also between the subcostal 

 veins : secondaries silvery white flecked with black : head and 

 prothorax ocbreous ; antennae dull black ; meso- and metathorax 

 rose-colour ; abdomen ochreous, barred with grey and speckled 

 with black. Wings below sericeous white, with yellowish tinted 

 costal borders : primaries suffused with pale pink and Math fairly 

 well-defined rose-coloured longitudinal streaks as above ; transverse 

 striations mostly grey excepting on costal margin : secondaries 

 more strongly flecked with black than above : pectus and femora 

 rose-coloured, tibiae and tarsi fuliginous ; venter ochreous, mottled 

 with black. Expanse of wings 48 millim. 



$ , Kampala and Uganda, Feb. 1894. 



This very aberrant-looking Heterahraxas differs from its Indian 

 and European allies in its relatively smaller secondaries and the 

 straighter costal margin of the primaries ; the nervures, especially 



