Annals of the Transvaal Museum 
177 
I 51. Eurythecodes ommatoclesis sp. nov. 
■ 33 mm. Head and body concolorous with wings, the occiput a little 
darker than vertex and antennal shaft, the palpus paler beneath than above. 
I Palpus short, terminal joint minute, concealed. Antennal pectinations 3 or 4. 
I Fore wing broad, costa strongly arched before apex, apex minutely falcate, 
i: termen slightly sinuate in anterior half; SC^ anastomosing shortly with SC^~^; 
' fawn-colour, shaded with vandyke brown, palest in proximal part, especially 
costally; a few scattered dark specks; first line slender and indistinct, oblique 
outward from one-fourth costa, acutely angled subcostally, then about parallel 
with termen; median line thick and distinct, from mid-costa, very slightly 
curved to before middle of hind margin ; a narrow, slightly dark-ringed white 
cell-mark just proximal to median line; a rather broad but not sharply defined 
dark shade midway between this and termen, bounded on its proximal side 
by a row of blackish vein-dots (the postmedian) ; a whitish apical dot, behind 
which runs an oblique, curved black mark from termen to R^; terminal region 
narrowly pale posteriorly; fringe darker. Hind wing with termen smooth, 
anal angle pronounced; as fore wing, but with no antemedian line or apical 
and subapical marks; median line placed at about one-third, the cell-mark 
beyond it; postmedian dots scarcely beyond middle of wing. 
Underside more speckled, the cell-marks ringed with black, antemedian 
line wanting, median slight, postmedian dots larger and deeper than above, 
apical markings of fore wing present. 
Natal: New Hanover, 26 December 1915. Type in coll. A. J. T. Janse. 
A from Pinetown, 18 December 1908 (G. F. Leigh), subsequently sub- 
mitted by the Transvaal Museum, is rather smaller (29 mm.), pectinations 
longer, termen rather less sinuate, median line still darker, cell-spot of hind 
j wing more broadly edged with black. 
I In all the tropical material in Eurythecodes which I have yet examined, 
' SC^ is either free from or connected by a bar, but occasional anastomosis, 
as in ommatoclesis, will probably be found and in any case the variation is 
not generic. 
52. Omizodes complanata sp. nov. (PI. I, fig. 15). 
$, 47 mm. Close to ocellata Warr., differing as follows. 
Wings rather less broad, smoother, without the irregular dark spots and 
mottlings. Fore wing with the cell rather less long; cell-spot smaller; ante- 
median line of spots gently curved, not — as in ocellata— diCutelj angulated 
outward in cell; fringe paler, distally almost white. Hind wing more uniform, 
being anteriorly less light yellow; cell-mark very feeble, apparently not 
ocellated. Underside more reddish than in ocellata, with similar distinctions 
to those of upperside. 
Pretoria North, 15 December 1916 (C. J. Swierstra). Type in coll. Transvaal 
Museum. 
In some respects somewhat intermediate towards terinata Feld. 
53. Pareclipsis phaeopis sp. nov. (PI. I, fig. 13). 
3', 40 mm. Head and body concolorous with wings. Palpus scarcely 
reaching beyond Irons. Antenna almost simple — somewhat lamellate and 
pubescent; above greyish, beneath ferruginous. 
Fore wing with SC^ free, SC^~^ stalked, SC^ anastomosing with 5 C^; apex 
slightly prominent, termen markedly bent in middle; wood-brown, strongly 
irrorated and clouded with fawn-colour (least so in distal area), the whole 
proximal area and a narrow distal border with plumbeous suffusion; lines 
