PLAIN WINGED CULICES WITH WHITE TIPPED FEET 423 



63. C. indcliritarsis, Eondaiii. Closely resembles the two above 



species. Tarsal claws of ? , eo[ual and toothed. Palpi of 

 male banded, but its last joint not all white. 



64. C. 2yulcliri2)alpis, Rondani. Closely resembles the three above 



species, but has the last joint of <? palpi all white. (The 

 form of tarsal claws of ? , is unknown.) 



58. CULEX LONGIPALPIS, Van dei Wulp 

 (Bijdragen der Midden Sumatra Exped. iv, p. 9). 



Tarsi dark, with basal white bands, an additional band on the 

 middle of first joint, and the last two joints of all the legs whitish, 

 the whife clearest on the hind legs. Thorax red-brown, un- 

 adorned. Abdomen nearly black with pale basal (?) bands ("lighter 

 incisure "). Proboscis yellowish in the middle but dark at base 

 and apex. Palpi of $ , as long as the head, and " two-jointed." 



? . — Generally fuscous. Antennae, dark brown, indistmctly lighter 

 banded. Legs with coxae brownish-yellow, the femora and tibiae clothed 

 with white and black scales so as to give a spotted appearance. Halteres 

 yellow. Anus ferruginous. Length. — 4'5 mm. 

 Habitat. — Alahn Pandjang and Sceroelangoen. 



59. CULEX LEUCACANTHUS, Loew. 



[Bescha. Europilischer Dipt. Dritter Bd. Halle (1873)] ; " F. R." p. 265. 



Tarsi dark except the last joints, which are all white, and with 

 pale bands on three of the fore and mid, and on four of the hind 

 articulations. Thorax brazen yellow, with two ill-defined darker 

 longitudinal streaks ; abdominal segments black, with basal white 

 bands. Palpi of the c? , whitish ; an abundance of whitish hairs 

 on the body, and the internal wing-fringe of the wing charac- 

 teristically brilliant white. 



J . — Head of a pale brassy tint, with nearly black hairs ; palpi 

 whitish. Pleurae speckled snow-white. Legs nearly white at the base 

 with a white knee-spot on the tibio-femoral articulation. Length.— Yery 

 minute, If lines. 



Habitat. — Kasan. 



Note. — This is evidently a very distmct species, but nothing resem- 

 bling it has come to hand. 



60. CULEX ALBITARSIS, Theob. (Monog. II, p. 25). 



Tarsi pallid in seme lights, with the last two joints of the 

 hind legs and the apex of the next white ; and showing also a 



