MADEIEA AND THE CANARY ISLANDS. 159 



ii. p. 79, Stett. ent. Zeit. 1865, p. 220; M'Lacb. llevisiou & 

 Synopsis, p. 400, pi. xlii.). 



Madeira (Wollaston) . Near Punclial, 19tli November {JEaton). 



TiNODES QBisEA, JEEageu (Ent. Month. Mag. ii. p. 79, Stett. 

 ent. Zeit. 1865, p. 221 ; M'Lach. Eevision & Synopsis, p. 414, 

 pi. xliv.). 



Madeira (Wollaston, 5); at a " levada " on the cliff below 

 Sant' Anna, 26tli November {Eaton, 2c?). 



This species was described from a 5 only. I believe I am 

 right in coupling therewith two J collected by Eaton. If so, 

 the aflBuity with T. cinerea is much greater than anticipated. The 

 clothing of the head and anterior wings is entirely golden ; the 

 size is larger (but not so much as in the ? type). The anal 

 appendages arranged quite after the same plau. The principal 

 difference consists in the parts termed " intermediate " appen- 

 dages in my "Eevision." In cinerea these parts, if viewed late- 

 rally, are subcylindrical, not dilated, and regularly curved down- 

 ward: in what I consider the S oi grisea these parts, viewed in 

 the same position, are very much dilated and somewhat flattened 

 in the apical portion, with a conspicuous tooth (distinct from the 

 spines) on the upper edge that seems to escape from between 

 the two appendages; the processes of the inferior appendages are 

 stronger, esjjecially the process of the lower edge, if viewed from 

 beneath. Expanse 14-16 mm. (20 mm. in the $ type). 



Amongst the large number of T. grisea collected by Eaton, 

 I detect only these two supposed cinerea, which occurred in 

 company with. them. 



TiNODES ciNEEEA, Hagen (Ent. Montli. Mag. ii, p. 78, Stett. 

 ent. Zeit. 1865, p. 220 ; M'Lach. Eevision & Synopsis, p. 416, 

 pi. xliv.). 



Madeira ( Wollaston) ; generally distributed and common about 

 small streaais in November {Eaton). 



Eaton brought about thirty examples of both sexes. They 

 vary greatly in size, irrespective of sex (expanse 10^-16 mm.). 



TiNODES CANAEIENSIS, n. sp. 



A close ally of T. cinerea; apparently differing therefrom only 

 in slight modifications of the anal structure in the 6 ■ The supe- 

 rior appendages are not perceptibly dilated toward the base, 

 almost filiform throughout ; the intermediate appendages appear 

 to have a process below the apex, slightly exceeding them in 



