1920.] E. Bkunetti : Oriental & S. Asialic Nemocera. 159 



Culex chrislophersi, Theob., Monos;. Culic. IV, 453, o" 9 (1907). 

 Culcx osakcnns, Theob., Monog. Culic. IV, 439, cf only (1907). 

 Culex j-fasciaiits, Dyar and Knab {} ncc Say), Pioc. Ent. Soc. 



Wash. XI, 34 (1909). 

 Culex gotighii, Theob., U.vS. Afr. Dep. Aj^ric, ist Rep. Vet. Res. 



268, cr only (1911). 



subspecies luteoannulatus Theob., ;\Ionog. Culic. II, 139 (1901). 



? Culex ptins;cns, Wied., Auss. Zweifl. I, 9 (1828). 



7 Culex macle.iyi, Skuse, Pr. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales, p. 1745 



(1896). 



The most widely distributed species in the Orient. Records of 

 its occurrence during every mouth can be found amongst Indian 

 localities. Ceylon (Kurmregalla, BaduUa, Balangoda, Keleni 

 Valley), i. iii. xi [Grfc;/] ; Nepal; Moulmein; ilanipur ; at sea be- 

 tween Calcutta and Rangoon, 22 — 23-ii-o8 [Annnndale]; Ran- 

 goon, 24-xii-04 to 3-i-05, and 9-ii-o6 [Brunciti] ; Bindings [IFz-ay] ] 

 Perak [Wris^hl]; Penang, 3 — 8 viii-06 [RrunetH]; Singapore, 4- 

 xi-99 and vii [Haititsch, Biro] ; 2i-vi-o6 [Brunetii] ; Malay Penin- 

 sula, widcl V distributed and common near houses [Leicester] ; Phra- 

 patoon, Siam, 10 — i8i ; 19-iii; 3o-xii-07 ; viii and xi-o6 [Dr. 

 Wool'ey]; Batavia, 27-vi ; g-\-n-o6 [B run etti]; Soerabaya, 16 — 

 25-vii-96 [Brunelti] ; Papua (Friedrich Wilhelmshafen and Ste- 

 phansort). [Biro] ; Sarawak ; Hong Kong, 8-i-oo ; vii [Font] ; Foo- 

 chow [Reniiic] ; Shaohyling [Cor)i/ord] ; Shanghai, 16 — 25-vii-o6 : 

 swarming in ditch; Hankow, 22 — 26-iv-o6 ; Manila, 10 — i6-iii-o6 

 [all three Brunelti]; Seistan; E. Persia [Annan'lale and Kemp]. 

 It also occurs in Japan, East Africa, Natal, Zanzibar, Mombasa, 

 the Soudan, Egypt, British Central Africa, vSenegambia, Mauri- 

 tius, the Seychelles, Australia, Fiji and the Southern part of N. 

 America, Central and S. America, and the West Indies. Types 



of fatigans, aesluans and pungens in Wiedemann coll. ; of mac- 

 leayi in Sydney Museum; of panalcdros in British Museum. 

 No type s])(cimen set up of skusei; a typical specimen in British 

 Museum. 



sitiens Wied. Auss Zweifl. I, 542, 9 (1828). 



Kdws., Bull. Ent. Res. IV, 232. 

 Culex impellens, Walk, (nee Theob.), Proc. Unn. So. Lond. IV, 



91, 9 (i860). 

 C. annitliros'.ris, Skuse, Proc. Linn. So. X.S. Wales (2) III, 1737 



(1889). 

 C. microannulatus, Theob., Monog. Culic. I, 353, cr 9 ; pi. xviii, 



69, 9 , full ins. col. ; fig. 118 h, head, d, fore ungues cf (1901) : 



Blanch., Moust., 292, o^ 9 : Lcices., Culic. Malaya, 140, <f 9 : 



Brun., Rec. Ind. Mus. I, 349 ; IV, 472. 

 C. gnopliodes, Theob., Monog. Culic. Ill, 163, 9 (1903). 



Lcices., Culic. .Malaya, 145 (Tlieob., descr. cojjied). 

 C. somaliensis, Nev.-Lemaire, -Arch. Parasit. X, 254 (1906). 

 C. ronaldi, Charm., Ann. Trop. Med. II, 259 (1908). 



