— 162 — 
ras, Cayagan; Camp Wallace, San Fernando de Union; Camp 
Ward, Cheney, Cavite; Warwick Barracks, Cebu, Fort Wm. 
Mc Kinley, Rixal, Camp Wilhelm, Tayabas (LUDLOW). 
‘ Fapan. — Tokyo (Woob, 3.VIIL.1899). 
Malay Archipelago and East Indies. — Java, Batavia, Soeka- 
boemi, Garvet (MARLATT); Samarang (JACOBSON, I-08); Makes- 
sar, Celebes (WALKER) (1); New Guinea, Dorey (WALKER) (2); 
Friedrich Wilhelmshafen (BIRO). 
Australia. — Port Darwin, Northern Territory; Brisbane 
(SKUSE) (3); Bupengary, Queensland (SKUSE and BANCROFT); 
New South Wales (SKusE); Victoria, from the Malarious uplands 
(FRENCH); South Australian. 
New Zealand. — No records have come from here. 
Europe and Mediterranean Islands. — Portugal [| MEIGEN (4), 
MACOUART]; Spain, Malaga, (AINSWORTH) and SCHIENER); 
Italy, Pisa, Leghorn, Florence, Naples, Calabria, Spezia, Siena, 
Ravenna, Maggio, Sardinia, Sicily [RONDANI (5), FICALBI]; 
Greece, Kobus, Poros (KRÜPER); France, Saint-Louis (DYE). 
Cyprus, Larnaka (BORDAN); Crete; Malta; Gibraltar (BIRT. 22. 
IX.09). 
England? (STEPHENS) (6). 
(1) Described by WALKER as Culex impatibilis, 1860. When I examined the 
remnants of WALKER’s type in the British Museum in 1899, enough remained to 
show that it was undoubtedly this species. 
(2) WALKER described this as Cu/ex sonatipes. (« Proc. Linn. Soc. », V, 229) 
(3) This is SkusE’s Culex Bancroftii (1889). 
(4) Described by MEIGEN from an ill-preserved specimen, the locality only 
being given as Portugal. 
(5) Although there is no trace of this in RoNDANI's collection, we may be cute 
his original identification was correct, as FICALBI has shown it to be common in 
Italy. 
(6) VERRALL records Cu/ex calopus MEIGEN as British in his first List of Bri- 
tish Diptera, but in the second edition I left this species out in the list of Bri- 
tish Culicide I prepared for him, and the name does not occur. It may have 
been found alive, or even we may say must have been during the Swansea 
yellow fever attack and probably this accounts for the record, but cannot 
trace it, and Mr. Austen tells me he knows of no authentic British record. 

