216 BRITISH MOTHS 



Species 8. — Glyphipteryx subccprella — (Stephens ; Wood, fig. 1377 ; and our Plate CXIII., Fig. 8) 

 — Expands 5i lines; fore wings pale coppery-brown, glossy, immaculate; hind wings brownish-ashy, with 

 paler fringe ; body, &c., deep coppery-brown. Near London. 



Species 9. — Glyphipteryx auroguttella '' — (Stephens; Wood, fig. 1378, and our Plate CXIII., Fig. 9) 

 — Expands 3^ to 4 lines ; fore wings golden-brown with four minute yellow dots ; one near the base, and 

 another near the middle of the inner margin, a third near the middle, and the fourth near the extremity of the 

 costa ; hind wings brownish. Taken in Darenth wood, Kent, in June, by Mr. Stephens. 



^ Synonyme. — Tinea miscelia, Haworth ? 



Species. — Glyphipteryx? Variella — (Stephens; Wood, fig. 1379, and our Plate CXIII., Fig. 10) — 

 Expands 4i lines ; body and fore wings sooty-black, varied with irregular ashy or yellowish spots placed 

 longitudinally on the disc ; hind wings and fringe dark-brown. Near Lyndhurst in June. 



Species 11. — Glyphipteryx terminella — (Dale MS.; and our Plate CXIII., Fig. II) — Expands 4 

 lines ; fore wings rich dark chesnut, with a golden gloss, a silvery, strongly angulated mark running from the 

 base of the inner margin of the wing to about one-third of the length of the costal margin, two silvery dots 

 placed obliquely in the middle of the wing and a rather broad, very oblique, silvery dash (dilated on the costa) 

 extending to the tip of the wings ; hind wings brown ; antennse pale at the tips. Taken by Mr. Dale, in 

 Dorsetshire, and described from Mr. Bentley's Cabinet. 



PANCALIA, Stephens. 

 These insects have the fore wings linear-lanceolate and adorned with embossed metallic spots on a fulvous 

 disc, as in the last genus, with very long fringe ; but the palpi are very slender, bent upwards, and considerably 

 divaricating, with the second and third joints of equal length, but the third much slenderer, and acute at the 

 tip ; the head is clothed with broad, depressed scales. The larvae are subcutaneous. 



Species 1. — Pancalia Leuwenhoeckella — (Linnaeus, &c. ; Wood, fig. 1380, and our Plate CXIII., Fig. 

 12) — Expands 4i to 5 lines; fore wings obscure, testaceous, with a fascia towards the base, another in the 

 middle, a transverse spot near the anal angle, and an oblique line near the apex, all black, changeable to sQver ; 

 hind wings brown ; tips of antennae white. Taken near Bristol ; in Cumberland ; Darenth Wood ; New 

 Forest, &c., at the beginning of June. 



Species 2. — Pancalia Latrelllell a— (Curtis ; Wood, fig. 1381, and our Plate CXIII., Fig. 13) — 

 Expands 5 to 5i lines ; brown ; fore wings ochreous orange, with seven embossed silver spots on each ; 

 antennsB entirely fuscous. Taken in Cumberland, and near London, and in Norbury Park, but very rare at 

 the end of June. 



Species 3. — PA^XALIA Woodiella— (Curtis, Brit. Ent., pi. 304 ; Wood, fig. 1382, and our Plate CXIII., 

 Fig. 14) — Expands 8 hues? fore wings bright orange; a short basal streak, narrowed in the middle, and an 

 acuminated dash on the costa beyond the middle, both of silvery black ; the base of the inner margin, a black 

 squamose patch in the middle of it, and a rather broad, sinuated, apical margin, all of purple black ; bind wings 

 dark orange, freckled with black. Taken on Kersall Moor, Manchester, in June, by Mr. E. Wood. 



