LISSOCRASREDA; LISSOMMA; HYPOGRAPHA. By L. B. Prout. 
28. Genus: Lissocraspeda Prout. 
Differs from Ophiographa in that the frontal armature consists of a pair of pointed processes, the 
tongue is apparently wanting, the hindtibia in both sexes is 2-spurred and the wing margins are smooth. Two 
Australian species. 
L. eremoea Lower. Expands about 30 mm. Forewing pale ashy grey with the lines black, the ante- eremoea. 
median at one-third, angulated, the postmedian from 5 / 6 costa to % hindmargin, terminal line interrupted at 
the veins, fringe dotted with blackish at the vein-ends. Hindwing whitish with a dusky terminal band, edged 
proximally by 2 wavy lines, all these markings becoming blacker at abdominal margin; fringe dotted as on fore¬ 
wing. Townsville, Queensland. 
L. pygmaea Prout (2f). Possibly a dwarf form of the preceding, with which I cannot now compare pygmaea. 
it. Forewing darker, obscuring the markings, the antemedian line only represented by the costal mark. Hind¬ 
wing almost unmarked except at abdominal margin. We figure the unique type, from Sherlock River. West 
Australia. 
29. Genus: Lissom ibb a Warr. 
Of this genus only the $ is yet known to me and this has the antenna strongly unipectinate, nearly as 
in the GS of the preceding genera. Face without horny armature. Foretibia with strong claw; hindtibia 4-spur- 
red. Wings rather broad, distal margins smooth. Forewing with 1st subcostal vein anastomosing with costal 
and afterwards touching 2nd subcostal. Australian. 
L. minuta Swinh. ( = pallida Warr.) (2 c). Pale and very indistinctly marked but easily recognizable by minuta. 
the shape and structure. Roebourne, West Australia. 
L. himerata Warr. scarcely differs from minuta except in being of a bright deep pink colour (the hind- himerata. 
wing anteriorly whiter) and in having the first line of the forewing much more distally placed. Perhaps the 
wings are still ampler. Eureka, north territory of South Australia, in February, only Warren’s type known. 
30. Genus : Mypog’raplia Gum. 
Face protuberant, usually densely hairy. Palpus, thorax and femora strongly hairy. Antenna in 8 
unipectinate, in $ simple. Abdomen in the first two species terminating in a triple tuft, particularly in the $. 
Hindtibia 4-spurred. Both wings with distal margin weakly or strongly crenulate or dentate; venation similar 
to that of the preceding genera, but in the first two species the costal vein of the hindwing is merely appressecl 
to the subcostal; without anastomosing. The species are exclusively Australian and are mostly scarce and 
little known. 
H. phlegetonaria Guen. (3 b). Distal margins strongly dentate. Both wings of an obscure grey-brown, phlegetona- 
the forewing suffused with light violet-grey in the basal and central areas, at least anteriorly, also in the an¬ 
terior part of the terminal area; antemedian costal mark mixed with red scales, median line straightish, placed 
near the crenulate post median; white marks at base of fringes between the teeth. New South Wales and 
Queensland; according to Meyrick also in Tasmania. 
H. aristarcha Prout (2 d). Rather larger, with somewhat shorter palpus, less yellowish antenna, ante- aristarcha. 
median line of forewing represented by three spots, median and postmedian curved inwards between 1st me¬ 
dian and 2nd submedian veins, fringe less strongly white-marked. Beaconsfield, Victoria, in October, only the 
type known. 
H. incongrua Walk. (2 d) is a very obscure species with moderately dentate margins and almost black incongrua. 
forewing, the lines indistinctly deeper black; postmedian more proximally placed than in phlegetonaria , cre¬ 
nulate, deeply incurved at both folds, antemedian angled outward at submedian fold. Hindwing proximally 
white, distally blackish, white-mixed near apex. Australia, the exact locality unknown. 
H. hiracopis Meyr. differs structurally in having the 2nd subcostal of the hindwing stalked. Distal hiracopis. 
margins strongly dentate. Forewing elongate, the dark ground-colour strongly sprinkled with whitish; costal 
margin and veins marked with darker dashes; lines very fine, deeply dentate, the antemedian strengthened 
at costal margin, otherwise partly obsolete; median shade indistinct, at three-fifths, strongly curved outwards 
in anterior part; a broad but ill-defined dark sub terminal shade. Hindwing white, distally suffused with fuscous, 
veins on distal half darkened. South Australia, the unique type in Mr. Meyrick’s collection. 
