96 TENTHKEDINID^. 



2. Ancyloneura varipes. 

 (Kate VII. fig. 6.) 

 Ancyloneura varipes, Cameron, Trans. Ent. Soc. Land. 1877, p. 92. 

 Exp. al. 6 lin., long. corp. 3 lin. 



Black, shining, covered with a fine whitish down ; legs whitish, 

 femora reddish, hind tibiae and tarsi blackish; wings iridescent 

 hyaline, clouded towards the extremities. 



Hab. Aru Islands. 



a. $ . (Type of species.) Aru Islands. 



47. CLADOMACRA. 

 Cladomacra, Smith, Ann. Nat. Hist. (3) vi. p. 256 (1860). 



Male. Antennae 16-jointed, pilose, at least as long as the whole 

 body, the second joint short, all the others of nearly equal length ; 

 each joint is thickened into a round knob at the extremity, and 

 from the base of the underside projects a very long pilose ramus ; 

 the last joint is thickened in the middle and curved beyond. Head 

 transverse ; eyes prominent, projecting a little in front. Fore wings 

 with one marginal (not appendiculate) and four submarginal cells, 

 the first nearly round, about the same size as the second, which is 

 almost square and marked with the usual black spot; the third 

 and fourth larger and oblong; all the transverse nervules with 

 bullae, and a detached bulla in the first discoidal cell ; basal cell 

 with a black dot near the extremity; lanceolate cell petiolated. 

 Hind wings with one middle cell; intern o-median cell broad, less 

 than half the length of the wing, and expanded beyond the middle ; 

 the nervure bounding it below is marked with a bulla towards 

 the extremity, and throws off a branch in opposite directions on 

 each side, neither of which quite extend to the inner margin ; legs 

 with all their parts very long and slender, simple ; tibiae with two 

 short spines at the extremity. Abdomen short, moderately broad. 



Female unknown. 



Mr. Smith placed this genus in the collection between Cladius 

 and Perreyia ; the bullae are nearly similar to those of P. lepida. 



1. Cladomacra macropus. 

 (Plate YII. fig. 8.) 



Cladomacra macropus, Smith, Ann. Nat. Hist. (3) vi. p. 257 (1860) ; 

 Journ. Linn. Soc, Zool. viii. pi. iv. fig. 1 (1865). 



Exp. al. 7 lin., long. corp. 3 lin. 



Rufo-testaceous ; abdomen and more or less of the hind legs black : 

 this is variable — in one specimen they are wholly black, and the 

 extremities of the intermediate tibiae and tarsi are blackish; in 



