328 Transactions. 
rather more oblique than usual, meeting discal cell a little beyond the 
middle. Length of body, 24mm.; wing, 20 x 5:5 mm. 
Type in Berlin-Dahlem Museum ; locality unknown. 
A male in Canterbury Museum from Lake Kanieri, 17th February, 
1920, is almost certainly the same species, but has the antennal formula 
2--34-23--2; the spot over base of Rs is rather larger, and there 
are small dark cloudings at each angle of discal cell, which is open on one 
wing. Both specimens agree in having a small brown cloud on inner edge 
of anal angle, which is absent in C. paradisea and C. pulverulenta. 
Cerozodia paradisea n. sp. (Fig. 93.) 
Antennal formula 2+ 3 + 23+ 1. Thorax reddish-brown, with some 
grey dusting, outlining four praescutal stripes; pleurae more distinctly 
grey-dusted. Abdomen reddish-brown, slightly shining, without grey 
dusting; lateral stripe indistinct. Legs uniformly reddish-brown, as in 
C. plumosa; tibial spurs brown with black tips. Wings with a distinct 
ochreous tinge, with brown markings in base of cell R, over base of Rs, an 
elow stigma, similar to those of C. plumosa, but larger; there is in addition 
a long dark spot in middle of cell Cu, joined to a smaller dark spot in 
ce ind-margin of wing somewhat darkened, especially in cell Ax; 
veins are all rather light-coloured, and are not distinctly bordered with 
long as r-m; се alf as long again as stalk; upper of the two veins 
closing the discal cell rather shorter than lower; Cu,, joining discal cell 
a little beyond middle. Length of body, 24 ; wing, 22-5 x 5-7 mm. 
2 А 
SouTrH Istanp: Paradise, 15th March, 1910 (6. H. Howes); type 
male in British Museum. A second male from the same locality, same 
date (Dr. G. B. Longstaff) is in Oxford Museum. 
Another male in British Museum from Nothofagus forest, Lake Wakatipu, 
2,000 ft., 9th January, 1921 (G. V. Hudson, No. 138), is certainly the same 
species, but differs in having more joints in antennae (2 + 3 + 26 + 1 on 
one antenna, 2 + 3-+ 27 -- 1 on the other); Rs is not spurred ; basal 
section of R,+; only twice as long as r-m; cell M, twice as long 
as its stalk; dark cloud in cell Cu longer. Two more males in Cam- 
bridge Museum from Humbolt Range, 4,000 ft. (G. V. Hudson, No. 138), 
Pd with this one; antennal formulae 2+ 3 + 26 + 1 and 
+1. . 
Cerozodia pulverulenta n. sp. (Fig. 94.) 
the lower, Cu,, joining discal cell in or slightly before middle. 
23 mm. ; wing, 20-5 x 5 mm. 
