65 



P. riippellii is represented in llie National Collection by: — Three 

 females from Sam burn, Kast Africa Protectorate, October 30th to 

 November 2()th, 1S!)() (C. S. Betton) ; six females caught twenty 

 miles south of Kassala, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, August, 1899 

 {Bimbashi H. H. S. Movant) ; one female from the Blue Nile, Anglo- 

 Egyptian Sudan, 1905 {received from Dr. Andrew Balfour) ; and one 

 female from Northern Nigeria, 1908 {Dr. H. P. Lohh — presented by 

 the London School of Tropical Medicine). 



Pangonia (Diatomineura) suavis,* Locw. 



Ofvers. af Kongl. Vetensk.-Akad. FUrhandL, XIV., 1857, p. 337 

 (1858) : Dipteren-Fauna Siidafrika's, p. 17 (1860). 



Plate IV., fig. 30. 



Of this handsome South African species, which was originally 

 described from Kaffraria, Cape Colony, the Museum as yet possesses 

 only two females, both of which were taken at Potchefstroom, in 

 the Transvaal, in 1895 {H. P. Thomasset). 



Pangonia (Diatomineura) brunnipennis,t Locw. 



Ofvers. af Kongl. Vetensk.-Akad. Forhandl., XIV., 1857, p. 337 

 (1858) : Dipteren-Fauna Siidafrika's, p. 18 (1860). 



Plate IV., fig. 31, 



Like the last, this species also belongs to South Africa, was 

 originally described from Kaffraria, Cape Colony, and is at present 

 represented in the Museum Collection by only two female specimens, 

 which however in this instance were taken at " Port Natal," in 

 1855 and 1857 {Gueinzius). 



* Owing to the first i)ostcriQr cell in the wings of this and the following species 

 (P. brunnipennis, Lw.) being open, the two species strictly belong to the genus 

 Diatomineura, Rond., and since the eyes are bare, to the subgenus Corizoneura, 

 Rond. 



t See previous note. 



