NO. 2204. BEES IN THE ^^ATIONAL MUSEUM. 3—COCKERELL. 181 



segment distinctly more produced. The insect is larger than Smith's 

 measurement would suggest, and he did not notice that the eyes 

 were hairless. I have seen Smith's type. 



COELIOXYS (LIOTHYRAPIS) DUCALIS Smith. 



Mount Salak, Java, 3,000 feet, May 15, 1909 (Bryant & Palmer). 



COELIOXYS HAKONENSIS, new species. 



Female. — Length about 12 mm. Black, rather robust; eyes with 

 rather short hair; inner orbits strongly converging below; mandibles 

 black; face and front covered with light reddish-fulvous hair, dense 

 except on clypeus, lower margin of clypeus with a dense fringe; 

 clypeus rugosopunctate ; cheeks keeled behind; antennae 5 mm. long,, 

 entirely black; occiput with light fulvous hair; mesothorax with 

 very large confluent punctures, and scutellum even more coarsely 

 sculptured, irregularly cancellate; hair of thorax pale fulvous or 

 ochreous, becoming white below; axillar spines large, curved; hind 

 margin of scutellum very obtusely angulate, the apex turned upward ; 

 tegulae bright chestnut red; wings dilute brown, paler basally; legs 

 black, spurs ferruginous; anterior coxae with prominent angles, not 

 amounting to spines; abdomen shining with large punctures, widely 

 separated on disk of second segment, a little closer on third, closer 

 and smaller on fourth and fifth ; sixth dorsal segment rather broad, 

 closely and finely punctured, conspicuously keeled (style of C. pene- 

 tatrlx Smith, but broader apically; last ventral segment extending a 

 moderate distance beyond last dorsal, broad, acutely pointed, not 

 notched at sides; dorsal segments with entire pale fulvous hair- 

 bands ; hind margins of ventral segments rufous. 



Hakone, Japan, Aug. 15 (Sasaki 150). 



Type.— C?it. No. 20714, U.S.N.M. 



Resembles C. fulviceps Friese, from Formosa and China, but 

 readily known by the red tegulae and last ventral segment not notched 

 at sides, but only slightly narrowed at the point where the notch oc- 

 curs in other species. It is also to be compared Avith C. suisharyonis 

 Strand, from Formosa, but the end of the abdomen is quite different. 



COELIOXYS LITORALIS Holmberg. 



Female. — Mendoza, Argentine (C. S. Reed). This runs exactly 

 to Utoralis in the tables of Holmberg and Friese, but Jorgensen does 

 not cite the species from Mendoza. The identification needs con- 

 firmation by actual comparison of specimens. 



GKONOCERAS FELINA (Gerstaecker). 



Female. — Mount Kenia to Fort Hall, British East Africa, 8,500 

 feet (E. A. Mearns). 



