516 LORD WALSINGHAM ON THE [Nov. 17, 



marrow-spoon, elongate, scarcely spatulate, with almost parallel 

 margins, rounded at the ends ; uncus double. 



Legs pale fawn ; hind tarsi faintly spotted. 



Exp. al. 30 J millirn. 



Bab. West Indies — Cuba. 



Type, S Mus. Stgr. 



I have adopted the specific name from a label placed by Zeller on 

 Dr. Staudinger's specimen. 



Felderia, Wlsm. 



Felderia dimidiella, sp. n. (Plate XLI. fig. 15.) 



Antennae pale fawn-ochreous. 



Palpi umber-hrown at the base, pale fawn-ochreous beyond. 



Head and thorax pale fawn-brown. 



Fore wings pale fawn, sprinkled, speckled, and shaded with 

 brownish scales ; a series of dark umber-brown spots — the first small, 

 a little below the costal margin near the base ; the second larger, on 

 the fold before the middle ; the third also large, on the fold beyond 

 the middle; the fourth at the end of the discal cell, a slight indi- 

 cation of a fifth spot lying parallel with the middle of the apical 

 margin ; cilia very pale fawn. 



Mind wings dingy whitish fawn ; cilia scarcely paler. 



Abdomen dingy whitish fawn. 



Legs whitish fawn ; tarsi unspotted. 



Exp. al. 20 millirn. 



Hab. West Indies — Cuba. 



Type, 6 Mus. Stgr. 



The pectinations of the antennae are much shorter than in Felderia 

 doeri, Wlsm., the type of the genus. This specimen is labelled in 

 Zeller's handwriting " Acrolophus vitelhis nicht beschr." It cannot 

 be vitellus, Poey, as the antenna3 of that species are described as 

 simple. 



Bazira, Wkr. 



Bazira, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxx. p. 1009 (1864). 

 =z§Eddara, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxviii. pp. 517-8 (1863). 



Bazira xylinella, Wkr. 



Eddara xylinella, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxviii. p. 518(1863). 



Bazira xylinella, Wkr. Cat. Lp. Ins. B. M. xxx. p. 1009 (1864). 



West Indies — Jamaica (Wkr.). 



The type of this species is erroneously recorded by Walker as a 

 male ; it is a female. In the absence ol the male, it is impossible to 

 say whether this genus can be regarded as distinct. The palpi are 

 short and porrect ; the fore wings have 12 veins, all separate, and 

 the hind wings 8 veins, all separate. I am inclined to think it is 

 allied to Pseudanuphora arcanella, Clem. 

 [26] 



