138 Journal New York Entomological Society. [Voi. xi. 



which the new genus is based I have retained the old nomenclature, 

 putting the new name in parentheses in the species of which he has 

 written me. 



Anopheletes. 



Anopheles philippinensis Ludlow. 



A. sinensis U^iedemann. 



A. " var. annularis van der Wulp. 



A. pseudobarbirostris LmUow. 



A. (Myzomyia) rossii Giles. 



A. (Myzomyia) ludlowii Theobald. 



A. kochii Domtz. 



A. fu nest us Giles. 



A. liidlowii was referred to in my article "Two Philippine Mos- 

 quitoes" (Jour. N. Y. Ento. Soc, Sept., 1902) as A. rossii G\\&^ 

 having "curiously mottled legs not described for the type" and later 

 specimens were sent to Mr. Theobald who found the variations con- 

 siderable enough to be specific. It is, so far as the collections to date 

 show, the most widely distributed of the Anopheles in the Islands, 

 being sent in from many parts of Luzon, and some of the southern 



islands. 



S pegomyi^. 



Stegomyia fasciata Fabricius. 



S. " var. mosquito Desvoidy. 



S. " var. luciensis Theobald. 



S. scutellaris Walker. 



S. " var. equivalent to luciensis, i. e., a black tip 



on the last hind tarsal joint. 



S. scutellaris subspecies samarensis Ludlow. 



The specimens of sculell^eris taken on Samar, differ from the type 

 as follows : 



I. Has two white lateral bands on the head. 



II. The silvery median line on the thorax extends the whole length of the meso- 

 notum, tapering from the cephalic end to just in front of the scutellum, and there is a 

 narrow white line on each side extending cephalad from the scutellum about one third 

 of the length of the mesonotum, and dividing its width almost exactly into quarters. 



III. Femora of hind legs are white at the base with a white line reaching almost 

 to the knee : on fore and mid legs this line is not so distinct nor is it so long : the 

 metatarsi of the hind legs have a basal white band, and those of the fore and mid 

 legs a basal white spot. 



IV. The first submarginal cell is longer than its stem, and about the same width 

 as second posterior. 



