18 WATERHOUSE 
75. X. orichora, Meyr. Ent. Mo. Mag. 1885, p. 82. 
This is the mountain form of X. lathonxella. X. paludosa, 
Lucas Proc. Roy. Soc. Q’ld. 1891, p. 4, from Tasmania, is probably 
only a small variety. 
Hab. Tasmania, Victoria, X.S. Wales 
X. CORREAS, Oil. P.L.S.X.S.W. 1889, p 621; Viet. Butt, 
p. 55, 1893. 
From a careful examination of about 200 specimens, I can 
only regard var. fulva, Oil., as the male of this species. I have 
never seen a female fulva. 
Hab. Victoria, X.S. Wales. 
X. leprea, Hew. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1864, p. 249, 
pi. 16, f. 6, 7. 
Hab. Tasmania. 
Family LIBYTHEI T)JE. 
Ovum —Ampulliform, ridged, twice as long as broad (Doherty). 
Regularly elliptic, with sharply-rounded prominent longi¬ 
tudinal ribs (Scudder). 
Larva —Cylindrical, slightly pubescent, segments with four 
transverse divisions ; head small, rounded. 
Pupa —Rather stout, ridged, suspended by the tail only. 
Imago —Of moderate size, with angulated and dentated wings. 
Palpi very long, about four times as long as the head. 
Front legs in male very small, the tarsi reduced to a single 
joint, without claws ; front legs of the female almost per¬ 
fectly developed. 
26. Genus LIBYTHEA, Fabricius. 
Ill. Mag. vi. p. 284, 1807 ; Westw. Gen. Diurn. Lep. p. 412, 
1851; Schatz and Rober Exot. Schmett. ii. p. 226, 1892. 
L. nicevillei, Oil. P.L.S.X.S.W. 1891, p. 28; L. myrrha, 
in Aust. Butt, and Miskin’s Catalogue. 
Family LEMONIDiE. 
As only one species of this family has so far been found, 1 
merely give the characters of the sub-family to which it 
belongs. 
Sub-Family XEMEOBIIX.E 
Ovum —More or less rounded, smooth, and slightly reticulated 
or granular. 
