24S [November, 



35. CHRTSOTIMUS Lw. 



1 (2) AnteniijE black 1. moUiculus 'FvW. 



2 (1) Antennoe yellow, wilh the tip brownish 2. concinnus Zett. 



1. C. molliculus Fall. : occasionally abundant. I have records from 



Penzance, Three Bridges, Keigate, Brandon, and Whittles- 

 ford in Cambridgeshire. 



2. C. concinnus Zett. : when I began this paper I had little expecta- 



tion of including this species as one known to me, because 

 as far as I can trace there have been recorded only about 

 five specimens from Scandinavia and one from (I think) 

 Hungary, beyond Walker's record. In July, 1904, however, 

 Mr. C. G. Lamb and Dr. D. Sharp found it in abundance 

 in Aldridge Hill End, in the New Forest. 



36. XANTHOCHLOBUS Lw. 



1 (2) Thorax orange, with a green patch behind 1. ienellus Wied. 



2 (1) Thorax shimmering metallic grey 2. ornatus Hal. 



1. X. tenelJus Wied. : not uncommon in Suffolk and Cambridgeshire, 



and I expect in many other places when searched for. A. 

 Miiller once found this species by hundreds on leaves of 

 shrubs at Shirley, near Croydon, but all of them dead from 

 a fungoid attack. 



2. X. ornatus Hal. : much commoner than X. teneUus, and I have 



seen specimens from Slapton Leigh to Nethy Bridge. Both 

 species have occurred in my own garden. 



31. ANEPSIOMYIA Bezzi. 

 A. Jlaviventris Meig. : fairly common in the New Forest, and I 

 have also taken it at Buxted in Sussex, Weybridge in Surrey, and at 

 Dolgelley, and Mr. F. Jenkinson has taken it at Crowborough, in 

 Sussex. The male is easily distinguished by its peculiar antennae, but 

 beyond that the brilliantly polished, almost black, thorax and the pale 

 belly are striking characters. 



38. MICROMORPBUS Mik. 

 M. alhipes Zett. : the tiniest European Dolichopid, but always 

 recognisable in the net from its unmistakable Dolichopid attitude. 

 Probably not uncommon, but overlooked because of its size ; I have 

 found it often common, and have taken it in the New Forest, Wicken 

 Fen, the Norfolk Broads, in various localities in Sussex, at Cromer, 

 and at Aberlady. 



