The Crane-flies of South Africa (Diptera, Tipulidae). 151 



Holotype, , Hottentot-Hollands Mountains, altitude 4000 ft., 

 Caledon, Cape Colony, 1915 (Barnard). 



Allotype, 9 > w ith the type. 



Paratopotypes, 4^9- 



Type in the South African Museum. 



This curious insect is named in honour of its collector. The outline 

 of the body is shown in fig. 1. 



GEN. PODONEURA, Bergroth. 

 1888. Ent. Tidskrift, vol. 9, p. 133. 



PODONEURA ANTHRACOGRAMMA, Bergroth. 



1888. Ent. Tidskrift, vol. 9, pp. 133, 134. 



The type-material is from Cape Town (Peringuey) and bears 

 Bergroth's label No. 7 ; a <$ from Cape Town (Lightfoot) ; a <$ , 

 S. W. District, Cape Colony. The wing of this remarkable insect is 

 shown on Plate X, fig. 14. 



GEN. GrNOPHOMYIA, Osten Sacken. 

 1859. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 223. 



GNOPHOMYIA ELEGANS, Wiedemann. 

 1830. Aussereur. Zweifl. Ins., vol. 2, p. 617 (Limnobia). 



The material at hand includes one of Bergroth's specimens (Caff- 

 raria, Wahlberg, No. 6) and a female from Durban, Natal, April, 

 1915 (Marley). The female offers the following measurements, length 

 about 9'5 mm. ; wing, 9 - 5 mm. This beautiful fly bears a striking 

 resemblance to certain of the Neotropical species of -ErioceraMacquart, 

 and it is not strange that Dr. Schiuer (Eeise Novara) referred it to 

 this genus. The wing is shown on Plate XI, fig. 15. 



GEN. GONOMYIA, Meigen. 



SUB-GEN. GONOMYIA, Meigeu. 

 1818. Syst. Beschr., vol. 1, p. 146. 



GONOMYIA (GONOMYIA) SPURIA, Bergroth. 

 1888. Ent. Tidskrift, vol. 9, pp. 134, 135. 



One female specimen from Lourenco Marquez, Portuguese East 

 Africa (C. W. Howard), in the collection of the United States National 

 Museum. The wing is shown on Plate XI, fig. 16. 



