1344 CATALOGUE OF 



Body stout. Proboscis extremely short and feeble. Palpi 

 short, stout, porrect, hardly extending as far as the head; third 

 joint conical, very small. Antennae moderately pectinated, bare to- 

 wards the tips, a little shorter than the thorax; branches single, 

 stout. Legs stoul. Wings rather long, not broad, without ocelli. 

 Fore wings slightly falcate, obtuse at ihe tips, slightly convex 

 towards the tip of the costa ; exterior border notched, very oblique ; 

 second inferior vein nearly thrice further from the third than from 

 the first. Hind wings denticulated along the exterior border, ex- 

 tending a little beyond the abdomen. 



1. Cyrtogone Heeilla. 



Alee apice undulatce ; anticce angulatce fuseo-fulvce valde irroratce, 

 medio fulvescente fascia obliqua fusca abbreviata ; posticce 

 macula magna sulphurea, limbo latofusco,fulvo irrorato. 



Saturnia Herilla, Westw. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1849, 57, 27, pi. 

 10, f. 3. 



Antennae but slightly pectinated. 



a. Sierra Leone. Presented by the Eev. D. F. Morgan. 

 b. ? 



2. Cyetogone ? N^NIA. 



Alee anticce apice rotundatce, plumbeo-nigrce apicibus magis fuscis 

 luteoque irroratce, striga tenia irregulari nigra obliqua ante 

 medium alteraque minus distincta at magis obliqua, et ad cos- 

 tam valde angulata, macula media irregulari albida ; posticm 

 nigricanti-fuscce basi punicece macula magna media pallide 

 flava. 



Saturnia Naania, Westw. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1849, 57, 26, pi. 9, 

 f. 3. 



Fern. " Fore wings broad, with the fore margin rather sud- 

 denly angulated beyond the middle, and with the apical margin 

 rounded, the extreme tip forming a small, rounded, slightly detached 

 lobe. Palpi porrected into a short distinct muzzle. Antennae with 

 twenty-two joints, emitting only a pair of rays from the base of 

 each, the apical pair being indicated by a very slight serration, fol- 

 lowed by about twelve joints at the tip, which are destitute of rays." 

 — Westw. 



This species differs from C. Herilla in the^structureof its wings, 

 which are not denticulated, and may constitute a new genus. 



South Africa. 



