P. ESBEN-PETERSEN, AFRICAN MYRMELEONIDAE. I. 15 



Centroclisis felina Gerstaecker. — Mitt. naturw. Ver, f . 

 Neu- Vorpomm . und Riigen, p. 118, 1893. 



One female specimen from Rikatia, Lor. Marq. (Junod 

 leg.) in my collection. 



Syiigeues loiigicornis Rambur. — Hist. Nat. Ins. Névr., 

 p. 382, 1842. 



A fine male specimen from Tomatave, Madagascar (Kaxj- 

 DERN leg.) is present in Stockholm Mus. The Indian genus 

 Onclus Na VAS is closely allied to the genus Syngenes Kolbe. 



III. Myrmeleonini. 



Myrmeleon doralice Banks. — Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer., 

 p. 10, 1911; Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, p. 150, 1913. 



Myrmeleodes medius Na vas, Ann. Soc. Brux., p. 44, 1912. 

 Mus. Stockholm: 1 J^, Brit. East Afr. (Lindblom leg.). 

 Coll. Ris: 1 J*, 2 $, Rikatia, Lor. Marq. (Junod leg.). 



Here Navas has made the same mistake as in describing 

 the genus Nosa. Amongst the specimens of doralice examples 

 sometimes occur with apparently two radial sectors in the 

 forewings, and upon such an aberring specimen Navas has 

 founded his genus what even Banks (loc. cit.) has pointed 

 out. In the material before me the two specimens have 

 normal nervation; the third has aberrant nervation in both 

 forewings; the fourth specimen has aberrant nervation in the 

 right forewing and normal nervation in the left forewing. 



IV. Creagrrini. 



Creagris diana Kolbe, Neur. Deutsch-Ost-Afrika, p. 24, 

 1897. 



Creagris inclitus Péringuey, Ann. South Afr. Mus., p. 

 445, 1910. 



Garna inclitus Navas, Broteria, p. 57, 1912. 



Mus. Stockholm: 1 specimen, Caffraria (Wahlberg leg.). 



Navas (loc. cit.) has founded a new genus for this spe- 

 cies. It seems to me that the generic characters, named by 

 him, are so small and insufficient that it is unsatisfactory 



