360 Mr. A. G. Butler on the 



241. Clina acclinatella = Lithosia ? accllnatella, Wlk. 



Lep. Het. Suppl. 1, p. 232. iZ«Z».— South 

 Africa. 

 . J^'wcreo^ra seems to be an allied genus. 



Spiris, Hubner. 



242. Spiris funerea, Eversmann, Bull. Mosc. 1847, iii. 



p. 77, pi. 5, 5. Hab. — Amur Land. 



243. Spiris striata, Linn^us, Syst. Nat. x. p. 205. Hab. 



— Europe. 

 Var. pallida. Veins of primaries obsolete ; secondaries 

 pale, not dusky at base, with slender discocellular litura 

 ^nd narrow marginal blackish border. Hab. — $, 2 

 Europe. 



244. Spiris cribrum, Linn. Syst. Nat. ii. p. 831. Hab.— 



Europe. 



245. Spiris punctigera, Freyer, Neuere Beitr. p. 140. 



Hab. — Europe. 

 We have five examples of this form, so if it be a variety 

 of the preceding it must be very common. 



246. Spiris Candida, Cyrilli, Ent. Neap. 6, p. 5 (1787). 



Hab. — Europe. 



SiDYMA, Walker. 



247. Sidyma albifinis, Wlk. Lep. Het. 7, p. 1686. Hah.— 



Masuri. 

 This species calls to mind Felder's Ischnognatha semi- 

 opalina. 



Deiopeia, Stephens. 



248. Deiopeia pura, n. sp. Hab. — Brazil, Guatemala, 



and Galapagos Islands. 

 Under this name I wish to distinguish what may pos- 

 sibly be a pale form of D. ornatrix, but which seems to 

 be even commoner than that species ; it differs in the clear 

 pinky- whitish primaries and the much less heavily black- 

 bordered secondaries, the discocellulars of the latter wings 

 being at most very slenderly blackened, and the posterior 

 projection of the black border only extending about half 



