SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH PHRYGANID^. 



69 



dark-brown, strongly marked; the membrane with 

 a greasy lustre, slightly clothed with short clay-co- 

 loured hairs; in the anal angle there is a clay-co- 

 loured spot, which is often indistinct ; posterior wings 

 ash-coloured, hyaline, with the veins weaker; legs 

 clay-coloured, the thighs densely clothed with grey 

 hairs (especially in the $ ) ; tarsal joints of the pos- 

 terior feet darker at the apex. 



Length 4^ — 5 lin. ; exp. 9 — 10 lin. 



Hub. Battersea Fields, Hammersmith, Putney, along 

 the Thames ; Killarney, Reeks Mountains, at the end 

 of May and beginning of July ; abundant. 



58. L. cinereus, Curt. Phil. Mag. 214; Steph. 111. 199, 

 17 ; L. notatus, Hag. 



Head reddish-brown, densely clothed with light clay- 

 coloured hairs ; palpi with greyish-brown hairs ; an- 

 tennae very long, yellowish-white, annulated with 

 brownish up to the apex ; thorax reddish-brown, 

 densely clothed with light clay-coloured hairs ; ab- 

 domen above brown, with broad whitish bands on 

 the sides, beneath reddish ; anterior wings long, with 

 the apex much dilated, very obliquely truncated, pale 

 brown, sparingly clothed with reddish hairs; the 

 reins brown, distinct, but not prominent ; anterior 

 margin and a spot in the anal angle light yellow ; a 

 small spot in the middle of the hinder margin, and 

 two in the wing, are usually scarcely visible (espe- 

 cially in dead specimens) ; posterior wings hyaline, 

 pale yellowish-grey ; legs clay-coloured, joints of the 

 four anterior tarsi with their apices brownish. 



Length 5—6 lin. ; exp. 9 — 11 lin. 



Hab. London and New Forest, in July. 



