THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 211 



trochanters yellow ; femora dark brown, with a narrow light yellow ring before 

 the broad (2 mm.) tips ; tibiae dark brown with a narrow light ring immedi- 

 ately beyond the base, this a little broader than the pale femoral ring ; tarsi pale 

 brown. Wings light gray, the costal margin strongly yellow ; wings heavily 

 spotted with dark brown and gray; a series of dark brown spots along the costa, 

 there being about ten before the larger one at the tip of Sc; three additional 

 large spots situated at the ends of veins R, , R,^ , and Rg ; a large pale brown 

 area at the origin of Rs and as seams along the cord and outer end of cell 1st 

 M 2 ; all cells of the wings with rather abundant gray dots, a little larger and 

 heavier at the ends of the longitudinal veins ; veins brown, costa, subcosta and 

 radius more yellowish. Venation : Sc long, Sc , extending some distance be- 

 yond the fork of R.^+a » Sc ^ nearly three times as long as Sc ^ alone ; indistinct 

 supernumerary crossveins in the last three brown spots in the costal cell ; Rs 

 long, almost square at origin ; R2+3 short, shorter than the basal deflection of 

 Cu, ; r at the tip of R, and beyond midlength of R2 ; inner ends of cells R3 , 

 R 5 and 1st M^ in oblique alignment; cell 1st M2long and narrow, the outer 

 end widened ; petiole of cell M short, about equal to the basal deflection of 

 Cu , , the latter inserted just before midlength of cell 1st M., ; costal fringe 

 conspicuous. 



Abdominal tergites brown, darker brown laterally ; sternites a little paler, 

 especially on the caudal half of the segment. 



Habitat. — North Queensland. 



Holotype, S , Babinda, August 7, 1920 (J. F. Illingworth). 



Paratopotypc, ^ , October, 1920, (J. F. Illingworth). 



This handsome crane-fly is dedicated to its collector, my friend, Dr. James 

 F. Illingworth. It is possible that it is_ more correctly referable to Epiphragma 

 but the supernumerary crossveins in the costal cell are very faint and three in 

 number. 



ANNOTATED CHECK LIST OF THE MACROLEPIDOPTERA OF 



ALBERTA— ADDITIONS, 1920 



BY KENNKTH BOWMAN, 

 lEdmonton, Alberta. 



I record below the additions to my "Check List of the Macrolepidoptera 

 of Alberta, published by the Alberta Natural History Society (Red Deer, 1919), 

 which were made during the season of 1920. 



The numbers before the names are those of Messrs. Barnes and McDun- 

 nough's "Check List of the Lepidoptera of Boreal America, 1917." The num- 

 bers after the names indicate the month in which the insects were taken. The 

 capital letters are abbreviations of localities, as follows : B, Banff ; Bm, Blair- 

 more ; C, Calgary ; Cd, Cadomin ; E, Edmonton ; L, Laggan ; N, Nor- 

 degg; P, Pocohontas. 



The insects were identified by Messrs. Barnes & Lindsay, Mr. L- W. 

 Swett and Dr. J. McDunnough, as shown by the initials in brackets following 

 each insect. I wish to express my great indebtedness to them for their kindness 

 in identifying these insects. 



