56 DR. W. J. HOLLAND ON THE AFRICAN (Jan. 14, 
191. K. parser”, Trim. 
Cyclopides barberw, Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1873, p. 120, 
pl. i. fig. 11; 8. Afr. Butt. vol. iii. p. 306 (1889). 
Hab. Cape Colony ; Mashonaland. 
192. K. WALLENGRENTI, Trim. 
Thymelicus wallengrenti, Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1883, 
p. 361; 8. Afr. Butt. vol. iii. p. 304, pl. xi. fig. 7 (1889). 
Hab. Natal; Mashonaland. 
193. K. nivEostrica, Trim. 
Pamphila? niveostriga, Trim. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (3) vol. ii. 
p. 179 (1864); Rhop. Afr. Austr. vol. ii. p. 298, pl. vi. fig. 7 
(1866); Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1870, p. 389. 
Thymelicus niveostriga, Trim. S. Afr. Butt. vol. ii. p. 303 
(1889). 
Hab. 8. Africa. 
194. K. renestRatus, Butl. (Plate II. fig. 16.) 
Baracus fenestratus, Butl. P. Z. S. 1893, p. 673. 
Hab. Zomba, British Central Africa. 
This species is. very closely allied to, if not identical with, 
K, wallengrenii, Trim. 
195. K.(?) tunvieinosa, sp.nov. (Plate IV. fig. 22.) 
@. On the upper surface having the general appearance of a 
female of the genus Osmodes, to which genus, however, it plainly 
cannot be referred, owing to the form of the palpi, which are more 
nearly those of the genus Kedestes. The palpi, head, thorax, and 
abdomen are black. On the underside the palpi are ochraceous, 
and the lower side of the abdomen is ochraceous. The primaries 
are black, marked with two moderately large subapical yellow spots 
in the usual position, two small confluent yellow spots at the end 
of the cell, and three moderately large discal yellow spots forming 
a diminishing series extending from intervals 1 to 3 below the 
cell. The secondaries are crossed beyond the cell on the middle 
by a broad curved yellow discal band, diminishing inwardly toward 
the base. The primaries have the costal margin and the apex 
broadly ochraceous. The cell and the lower half of the wing are 
broadly black, upon which the two spots at the end of the cel] and 
the three forming the discal transverse series on the upperside 
reappear sharply defined against the dark ground. The secondaries 
are uniformly pale greenish-ochraceous, marked by a few distinct 
round black spots, one on the cell near its upper margin between 
veins 6 and 7 beyond the end of the cell, one on either side of vein 
3 halfway between the cell and the outer margin, one on interval 1 
below the cell near the base, a larger one on the same interval 
chalfway between the base and the outer margin. The cilia of: the 
