245 
marked, whitish-ochreous line from two-thirds costa obliquely 
outwards, bent in disc, forming a rounded elbow, and ending 
in three-quarters dorsum ; terminal part of dise suffused with 
brownish-ochreous; cilia pale ochreous. Hindwings and cilia 
ochreous. 
Type in Coll, Turner. 
Q., Goodna, near Brisbane; in October. One specimen. 
LICHENAULA CALLISPORA, n. Sp. 
( Callisporos, prettily spotted.) 
Male, female, 12-20 mm. Head white.  Palpi white; 
second joint with a basal, third joint with а basal 
and apical blackish ring. Antenne blackish: in 
female white, annulated with blackish;  ciliations 
in male short (3). Thorax white, with variable blackish 
spots. Abdomen whitish. Legs whitish; anterior and middle 
pairs annulated with blackish. Forewings narrow-elongate, 
costa nearly straight; white, with blackish spots; a row of 
two or three spots close to base; two to four spots on costa; a 
variable number of spots in disc and on dorsum; these may 
be partly confluent with each other and with costal spots; a 
terminal series of spots; cilia white, with a blackish bar at 
apex. Hindwings with termen rounded; whitish grey; cilia 
whitish. 
Type in Coll, Turner. 
V., Birchip. Three specimens, received from Mr. D. 
Goudie. 
PROCOMETIS APLEGIOPA, n. Sp. 
(Aplegios, plain, simple.) 
Male, female, 15-19 mm. Head ochreous. Palpi with 
terminal joint two-thirds second; pale fuscous, internal sur- 
face whitish. Antenne fuscous. Thorax pale ochreous, with 
a large, central, fuscous suffusion. Abdomen ochreous-whit- 
ish or grey. Legs pale fuscous; posterior pair, except tarsi, 
ochreous-whitish. Forewings elongate, costa gently arched, 
apex acute, termen very oblique; pale ochreous, sometimes 
suffused with fuscous, especially towards dorsum; cilia con- 
colorous. Hindwings with termen sigmoid; grey; cilia grey. 
Type in Coll, Turner. 
Q., Stradbroke Island; in January. Three specimens. 
Family, HEPIALIDZE. 
Genus, FRAUS. 
Fraiis, Wik., Brit. Mus. Cat. vii, p. 1564. 
Hectomanes, Meyr., P.L.S.N.S.W., 1889, p. 1125. 
Without denying the probability of Mr. Meyrick's explana- 
tion of the origin of this name, I think it is best to treat it 
as one of Walker's nonsense-names. 
