20 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM Vol. 78 



IN TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, NEW SEE., VOL. 5, 1860 



Sarcophaga intermutans, p. 308. 



One female, Mexico, showing no striking characters. 

 /Sarcophaga perneta, p. 308. 



One male, Mexico. Belongs to the Oxysarcodecoia group, and 

 seems unlike any which have been described in recent years. Head 

 with golden pollen; one vertical; ocellars hairlike, small, divergent; 

 two reclinate frontal pairs, seven others to middle of second antennal 

 joint. Antennae and palpi black; cheek over one-fourth the eye 

 height; parafacial with minute hairs. Mesonotum with three heavy 

 black stripes, pollen at sides and on mesopleura yellow; abdomen 

 with distinct, uj)turned, slender apicals; acrostichals slightly devel- 

 oped before suture, behind damaged; dorsocentral 3, 4; presutural 

 2; sternopleural 3. Abdomen strongly tessellated, golden on third 

 and fourth segments, the latter mostly red in ground color; fifth 

 sternite imperceptible. Genital segments yellow with golden pollen, 

 first with row of bristles apically. Genitalia as in Figure 6. For- 

 ceps slender, yellow to hump, remainder black, narrow in rear view ; 

 the globose terminal part of the penis is black. First vein bare, 

 third with about eight setules, no costal spine. Legs black, middle 

 tibia with one bristle on outer front side. 



The nearest species known to me is culminata Aldrich, which has 

 a tuft on the back of the penis, etc. 



Sarcophaga innota^ p. 308. 



One female, Mexico, which shows no striking characters. 



Sarcophaga conclausa^ p. 309. 



One female, Mexico, which shows no striking characters. 



Sarcophaga despensa^ p. 309. 



One female, Mexico, not in good condition and showing no strik- 

 ing characters. 



Sarcophaga offrenata^ p. 309. 



One male, Mexico, agreeing exactly with the description and 

 figures of Sarcophaga adamsi Hall, ^- which I think without doubt 

 a synonym. 



Sarcophaga fortipes, p. 310. 



Male, Haiti. Not found in British Museum. The description 

 indicates something in the vicinity of chrysostoma Wiedemann. 



SPECIES OF MACQUART 



The collection of Macquart was destroyed, and the only types 

 still existing, as far as I am aware, are those which he stated to be 



22 Annals Ent. Soc. Amer., vol. 21, 1928, p. 345. 



