422 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol. IV, 



In his last volume Mr. Theobald gives a long list of localities 

 from Indian Museum specimens, showing it to be found in India 

 practically all the year round, rarest in February and March, 

 occurring frequently in houses and public conveyances. 



He adds as localities : Trincomalee, Ceylon, 14 — 28-i-07 ; 

 r-ii-07 ; 1-X-07 [all Green] ; Phrapatoon, Siam, 18 — 29-i-07 ; 19 — 29- 

 iii-07 ; viii and ix-06 [all Dr. P. G. Woolley] ; Chittagong, ig-ix-oS ; 

 2i-ix-o8 ; 5-vii ; 8-viii [all Hall]. 



Type in British Museum. 



M. tessellata, Theob. 

 Type in British Museum. 



M. thorntoni, Ludlow. 



Add. Loc. — Philippines (August, i. Theob. ); Mindanao, Pangas- 

 inan, Tayabas, Pampanga, Samar, Rizal (all Phil. Is., Feb. and 

 May to November, t. Ludlow). 



M. turkhudi, Liston. 



Add. Ref.— Blanch., Moust., 183. 



Add. Loc— Aurangabad (Hyderabad State, India). 



N.B. — Type in British Museum. 



Mr. Theobald's description of the rf was drawn up from Giles's 

 type, which at that time was considered to be the cf of culicifacies, 

 Giles, and which was first described as such by both Giles and by 

 Theobald. 



Vide note in introduction on Myzomyia culicifacies. 



NYSSOMYZOMYIA, James. 



Rec. Ind. Mus., iv, loi. 



James and Liston, Anoph. Mosq. India, 2nd Ed., 43, 

 Proposed by the above authors for the three species rossii , 

 Giles, ludlowi, Theob. , and punctulata, " James and List. ," and their 

 suggestion is that it takes the place of the genus Pseudomyzomyia, 

 a genus spoken of by Mr. Theobald, but apparently never 

 described. 



The three species in question are retained here under Myzo- 

 myia (I presume their punctulata is identical with Donitz's 

 species). 



NEOSTETHOPHELES, James, 1910. 

 Rec. Ind. Mus., iv, 98. 



James and Liston, Monog. Anoph. Mosq. India, 2nd Ed., 40. 



I have not adopted this genus, with others erected m the 

 above work, but these authors place two species only in it, aitkeni, 

 James, and culiciformis, James and Liston. 



