196 EUDOREA LINEOLA. 



black tubercles, which, being as broad as the streaks, 

 appear to divide them into sections ; and the streaks 

 are further divided by the dark, fine, thread-like 

 dorsal line; there are no perceptible subdorsal lines, 

 but an irregular greyish stripe extends along the 

 spiracular region, and on each segment below this line 

 is a small black spot ; the head and frontal plate, like 

 the tubercles, of intense glossy black ; the small 

 spiracles also black. 



The ventral area and prolegs dingy dark olive-green, 

 and on the outside of each of the latter a black spot ; 

 anterior legs encircled with black. 



They grew very slowly, and it was not until the 

 beginning of June that the last were full-grown. They 

 were then nearly three-quarters of an inch long ; the 

 dorsal area had the ground colour of a paler olive- 

 green, but in other respects was the same as when 

 described in April. Ventral surface and prolegs olive- 

 green ; the fifth and sixth segments had each three 

 transverse black spots, and similar spots, but smaller 

 and more irregular, occurred on others of the seg- 

 ments ; a black spot on the outer side of each proleg ; 

 the anterior legs encircled with black. (George T. 

 Porritt, 11th September, 1884; E.M.M., October, 

 1884, XXI, 101, and March, 1885, XXI, 236.) 



EUDOREA ANGUSTEA. 



Plate CLV, fig. 8. 



At the beginning of September, 1884, Mr. G. H. K. 

 Orosland, of Huddersfield, brought to me for determi- 

 nation a number of specimens of Scoparia angustea 

 Curt. (= coarctalis Zell.), which he had taken during 

 August on the north side of our cemetery wall. As 

 this wall is within five to seven minutes' walk of my 

 own residence, and as, whenever I had wanted to 

 collect 8, angustea, I had found it necessary to take a 

 railway journey of over seven miles, and then some- 



