176 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



Trilocha hrnnnea, sp. n. 



Head, thorax, and abdomen dark chocolate-brown, crown of head 

 paler. Fore wings dark chocolate-brown, costal and inner marginal 

 areas paler brown ; ante- and postmedial lines reddish brown, double, 

 only distinct on the inner marginal area ; a bar of the ground colour 

 at end of cell. Hind wings pale reddish brown, inner margin pale 

 brown marked with darker. Under side : fore wings chocolate- 

 brown, veins ochreous tinged ; hind wings ochreous brown, clouded 

 with chocolate-brown on the margins ; a black dot at end of cell, and 

 two wavy brown transverse lines beyond, the first indistinct except 

 on inner margin. 



Expanse, 37 millim. 



Collection number, 1792. 



One male specimen from Eantaizan (7500 ft.), May, 1909. 



The fore wings are considerably rubbed, so that the mark- 

 ings are more or less obliterated. 



There is an example of this species, from India, in the 

 British Museum Collection. 



BEES FROM THE HIMALAYA MOUNTAINS. 



By T. D. a. Cockehell. 



In this Journal, Sept. 1910, I gave an account of some bees 

 collected high up in the Himalayas by the British Tibet 

 Expedition. I am indebted to Mr. G. Meade-Waldo for an 

 opportunity to examine other bees from this Expedition, which 

 are now recorded. 



Bomhiis bizonatus, Smith. 



?. Khamba Jong, Sikkim, 15-16,000 ft., July 15th to 

 30th, 1903. 



Bomhus rvaltoni, Cockerell. 



Mr. A. Skorikow writes me expressing the opinion that 

 B. ivaltoni is identical with his B. mendax subsp. chinensis, the 

 latter having about ten months' priority. If so, waltoni never- 

 theless stands, as there is a different chinensis, Dalla Torre, 

 1890. The description of chinensis, Skor. is wholly in Eussian, 

 but my friend Mr. E. Kaydin has been good enough to translate 

 it for me. It certainly applies well to ivaltoni, except that in 

 ■ivaltoni the red hair on the abdomen begins on the apical part of 

 the second segment, whereas in chinensis the third segment has a 

 sprinkling of reddish hair, and the full red only begins on the 

 fourth. This difference may be only varietal. 



Nomada gyangensis, n. sp. 

 ^ . Length 111 mm., expanse 23 ; black, yellow, and red ; head and 

 thorax black, with abundant dull pale yellowish hair, that on under 

 side white ; mesothorax and upper part of head dull, coarsely rugoso- 



