46 ENNOMID^. 



dark and varied with olivaceous : secondaries with the basal half greyish, the costal area 

 testaceous, the externo-anal area ochraceous brown ; a dusky-bordered discal pale line : body 

 greyish, pale in front. Under surface sandy yellow, crossed by a tolerably broad central dusky 

 stripe, followed by a slender pale-edged blackish line. Expanse of wings 2 inches 4 lines. 



Hakodate* {Whitely). 



Allied to L hamiferata. 



ENNOMID^. 



EPIONE, Duponchel. 

 Epione arenosa, n. sp. (Plate XXXV. fig. 1.) 



Primaries chocolate-brown, crossed by a broad stramineous oblique central band, which is 

 separated into three large patches by a A-shaped brown marking, which crosses it ; basicostal 

 area broadly mottled with stramineous ; a little group of stramineous and white spots near the 

 apex : secondaries stramineous, mottled with brown, the apex and two discal parallel lines 

 also brown : under surface paler and brighter than above ; all the wings mottled with ferru- 

 ginous. Expanse of wings 1 inch 5 lines. 



Hakodate" {Whitely). 



Epione leda, n. sp. (Plate XXXV. fig. 5.) 



Wings above fuliginous brown : primaries with a white costal dot above the end of the 

 cell ; a large subapical costal white spot, surrounded by a series of white dots ; two large 

 external white spots on the median interspaces ; below nearly as above. Expanse of wings 

 1 inch 6 lines. 



Yokohama {Jonas). 



Epione strenioides, n. sp. (Plate XXXV. fig. 6.) 



Above black-brown, speckled and spotted with white, the larger spots on the costal and inner 

 borders and external area of primaries, also almost covering the secondaries with the exception 

 of a broad central belt ; the external area of all the wings banded and clouded with olivaceous : 

 under surface paler. Expanse of wings 1 inch 8 lines. 



Yokohama {Jonas). 



This species has the general aspect of Strenia clathrata. 



HYPERYTHRA, Guinie. 

 Hyperythra niphonica, n. sp. (Plate XXXV. fig. 11.) 

 Whity brown, mottled with grey, especially on the external area, which is limited internally 



