NO. 2103. JAVAXEf^E CRANE-FLIES— ALEXANDER. 173 
Genus GONOMYIA Meigen. 
Subgenus GONOMYIA Meigen. 
(ronowiyia Meigen, Syst. Beschr., vol. 1, 1818, p. 146. 
GONOMYIA (GONOMYIA) BRYANTI, new species. 
Cell 1st TIP = closed; wings siibh3^aline. 
Male. — Length, 4.4 mm.; wing, 6 mm. Rostrum, palpi, and 
antennae brownish black. Head gray. 
Pronotum light yellow. Mesonotal praescutum and the lobes of 
the scutum dark brown; median line of the scutum and the scutcllum 
light brown; postnotum dark brown. Pleura dull yellow. Hal teres 
brown, the extreme base paler. Legs with the coxae and trochanters 
brown, remainder of the legs dark brown, unmarked. Wings hyaline 
or nearly so, stigma indistinct, veins brown ; venation ; (see pi. 44, 
fig. 20), Sc ending just beyond the origin of Rs; Rs long, gently 
arcuated; R2+3 long, about two-thirds the length of the sector; 
basal deflection of 7?4+5 punctiform so that i?4+g is in a line with Rs. 
Hypopygial pleurites moderately long, the dorsal appendage short, 
fleshy, pale; ventral appendage elongate, chitinized, provided w4th 
numerous long hairs and caruncles, its tip rather truncated; from 
the ventral inner side of the pleurite near its tip arises a small 
chitinized appendage shaped as in figure 49, (See pi. 47, figs. 48, 49.) 
Abdomen dark brown; hypopygium yellow, its appendages black. 
Habitat. — Java. 
Holotype. — Male, Tjibodas, Mount Gede, Java; altitude, 8,000 feet; 
August 26, 1909 (Bryant and Palmer). 
Paratij2)e. — Sex ? , topotypic. 
Type.— Cat. No. 19021, U.S.N.M. 
Allied to G. affinis Brunetti^ in the venation but larger, the 
thoracic pattern different, legs much darker, etc. 
Genus MONGOMA Westwood. 
Mongoma Westwood, Trans. Entom. See. London, 1881, p. 364. 
MONGOMA CARINICEPS Enderlein. 
Mongoma cariniceps Enderlein, Zool. Jahrb., vol. 32, 1912, pp. 60, 61, fig. L 1. 
A male and a female from Mount Salak, Java, May 15, 1909, 
collected by Bryant and Palmer. The female sex has never been 
described and I make this specimen the allotype. The coloration 
is c{uite as in the male, but the size is smaller (length, 11.5 mm.; 
wing, 10.3 mm.). 
1 Fauna of British India, Diptera Nematocera, 1912, pp. 472, 473, pi. 9, fig. 7. 
