1014 REPORT OF THE HARVARD AFRICAN EXPEDITION 
Wing-pattern conspicuously variegated, with a distinct but restricted dark pattern; 
stigma preceded and followed by whitish subhyaline areas; Rs; shorter than 
R2+3+4; Rs shorter, only about one-half longer than R» +3 + 4. 
(French Congo) globiceps Alexander. 
Eriocera tumidiscapa Alexander 
1920. Eriocera tumidiscapa Alexander; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (9) 6: 363-364. 
The types were from Sierra Leone and Nyasaland. In the present series, the 
following Liberian specimens occurred: #, Du River, July 28, 1926; ¢, Lenga 
Town, August 16, 1926 (J. Bequaert). 
ERIOPTERINI 
Conosia irrorata (Wiedemann) 
1828. Limnobia irrorata Wiedemann; Aussereur. zweifl. Ins., 1: 574. 
A small male from Monrovia, Liberia, July 1926. Other material from Lisala, 
Belgian Congo, 2° 10’ N., 21° 30’ E., in lowland rain forest, December 1926 
(J. Bequaert). 
Clydonodozus puncticosta Alexander 
1920. Clydonodozus puncticosta Alexander; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (9) 6: 341-343. 
The type, a female, was from Kambali, Sierra Leone, March 22, 1912, col- 
lected by J. J. Simpson. A second female was in the present collection, from 
Firestone Plantation No. 3, right bank of the Du River, Liberia, July 26, 1926 
(J. Bequaert). 
Clydonodozus schoutedeni, new species 
General coloration of thorax fulvous, the praescutum with a capillary brown median line on 
anterior portion; head brownish black; legs yellow, the femoral and tibial tips narrowly darkened; 
wings yellowish, with a restricted dark pattern, most evident as a seam along the cord and a 
marginal suffusion in the radial field; abdominal sternites with an interrupted series of brown 
dagger-shaped dashes. 
Male. — Length about 13 mm.; wing 12 mm. 
Described from an alcoholic specimen. 
Head brownish black, the palpi and antennae dark brown. 
Mesonotum fulvous, the praescutum conspicuously compressed in front, with a capillary dark 
brown median line that becomes obsolete far before the suture. Pleura chiefly obscure fulvous 
yellow, the margins of the sclerites somewhat darker. Halteres yellow, the base of the stem a little 
more dusky. Legs with the outer faces of the coxae slightly darkened; trochanters obscure yellow; 
femora yellow, the tips narrowly dark brown; tibiae brownish yellow, the tips very narrowly and 
indistinctly darkened; tarsal segments obscure yellow, the tips of the individual segments dis- 
tinctly darkened. Wings (male) broad, widest opposite the end of cell 2nd A as common in this 
sex of the genus; general coloration yellow, the prearcular and costal regions more saturated; 
outer margin of the radial field narrowly darkened; stigma small and diffuse, darkened, connected 
with a narrow vague seam along the cord; an indistinct cloud at origin of Rs; less evident clouds 
at outer end of cell 1st M2 and the fork of M, +»; veins chiefly yellow, darker in the clouded areas. 
Venation: Sc: lying proximad of the fork of Rs; Rs relatively long, angulated at origin; cell 1st M, 
of moderate size, its proximal end pointed; m-cw lying proximad of the level of r-m; cell M, 
subequal to its petiole; vein 2nd A sinuous at outer end. 
Abdominal! tergites yellow; sternites concolorous, with a series of median dark brown areas, 
these broadly interrupted at posterior margins of the segments, strongly constricted at cephalic 
end of each area; these dagger-shaped marks are clearly defined on sternites three to seven, in- 
clusive; a more or less distinct subterminal dark ring; hypopygium yellow. 
