females collected by Dr. K. Miyajima, in Tokio, 19O9 ; unfortunately 

 these types preserved in the Britisli Museum are not complete speci- 

 mens, but much damaged and rather denuded. The original description 

 does not, therefore, agree with the fresh materials in minor points, 

 especially on the pubescence of the thorax, scutellum, and abdomen, 

 and the above description serves as a much more complete one. 



This fly is not a very uncommon as of Japanese species I have 

 records from Tokio, Iyo, Nagasaki, and Oita, from June 4th to July 

 ioth, but my records do not extend north of Honshu. I caught two 

 females which were biting the belly of a horse, hitched to the fence 

 of a farmer's house near the city of Nagoya, on the first of July, but 

 I have no other knowledge of its habits. 



26. Tabanns trigonus, Coquillett'. (PI. VIII, fig. 2; 

 VI XI, figs. 9 & 10). 



(Ushl-Abu). 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mils., XXI, p. 309, T898. 



Ricardo, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (7), XVI, p. 202, 1905 ; Rec. 



Ind. Mus. IV, p. 245, 191 1. 

 Matsumura, Thous. Ins. Japan, II. p. j$, pi. XXII, fig. 5, 1905, 



^H^Wi&^lt, fflfa, ]»• 7i- pi- X, fig. 12, 1914. 

 Kertesz, Cat. Dipt.. Ill, p. 27S, 1908. 



fig. 2, 1914. 



A very large fly, with the abdomen blackish or in the male 

 reddish brown, being in bulk only slightly inferior to 7". tkrysurus, 

 which is the bulkiest Japanese fly: 



Female. Head slightly narrower than or as wide as the thorax , 

 moderately arched behind. Frontal stripe greyish yellow, narrow and 

 slightly contracted below, wholly seven times as long as its narrowest 

 part or about five times as long as its broadest part ; frontal callus 



