600 
EXOTIC MTCROLEPIDOPTERA. 
leaves, or the rolled-over'edges; larva wanders to pupate, and is 
then green and very sluggish; it spins an elongate cocoon which 
slightly puckers the leaf” (Mrs. M. L. Maxwell). Nearly related 
to thymophanes ; the three well-marked subcostal dots are a special 
characteristic. 
ELACHISTI Di£. 
0GM0GRAPTIS, n. g. 
Head smooth-scaled; ocelli posterior ; tongue absent. Antennae 
filiform, S very minutely ciliated, scape short, with well- 
developed pecten of scales. Labial palpi very short, drooping, 
filiform, pointed. Maxillary palpi very minute, appressed to base 
of labial. Legs rather long, slender, hind tibiae with very long fine 
hairs above, first pair of spurs at |. Forewings elongate-lanceolate ; 
1 b simple, 2 from angle, 3 and 4 absent, transverse vein oblique, 
5 above its middle, 6 and 7 stalked from upper angle, 7 to costa, 
8 absent, 9 from near 7, ID from near 4, 11 from rather before 
middle, 12 to costa before middle. Hindwings |, lanceolate, costal 
angle at 3 , strongly marked, cilia 4; cell open, 2 free, 3 and 4 
obsolete, radius (upper margin of cell) rising free from base, 5 from 
about its middle, 6 and 7 from apex, 7 to costa, 8 short. 
Type scribula Meyr. Differs from Cryphioxena Meyr. by absence 
of vein 3 of hindwings. The insect described from Victoria by me 
as Cryphioxena notosemei is also referable here, and will probably 
be found to have similar larval habits; the genus Cryphioxena is 
now restricted to its South African type. 
Ogmograptis scribula, n. sp.. 
d $ . 10-11 mm. Head pale glossy bronzy-grey. Palpi grey- 
whitish. Thorax light grey. Pore wings grey-whitish, irregularly 
and variably sprinkled dark grey, usually more densely en dorsal 
half; markings dark grey or blackish-grey, sometimes with very 
faint reddish tinge; a sometimes indistinct dark grey dash on fold 
towards base ; discal stigmata forming irregular spots or suboblique 
marks, plical a longer dash along fold between these, an additional 
similar mark obliquely beyond and beneath second discal, sometimes 
obliquely connected with it: cilia whitish, tinged grey beneath 
tornus, median and apical lines of blackish-grey irroration. Hind¬ 
wings rather dark slaty-grey ; cilia light grey. 
Australia, F.C.T., Lee’s Springs, Brindabella Range, bred March 
from larvse mining a wandering gallery in January and February 
in bark of Eucalyptus coriaeea (T. Greaves) ; 4 ex. Pupa in a 
dense elongate longitudinally ribbed rather dark brown cocoon 
(sent); the longitudinal ribbing, though less neat, suggests the 
cocoon of a Eucculatrix, but there is no real relationship. Mr. A. L. 
Tonnoir, Senior Research Officer, Division of Economic Entomology, 
