236 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



(4.) There is no sign of the oval pit at the base of the meta- 

 thorax, which is found in Hypomac7-otera. 



(5.) Tiie labrum has very large punctures and numerous 

 stout bristles below the strong transverse ridge. 



(6.) The mandibles are simple, and the maxillary palpi quite 

 ordinary, 6-jointed. Type G. heardsleyi. 



Greeley ella heardsleyi, n. sp. 

 ? . Length nearly 9 mm. ; black, the pubescence pale ochraceous 

 or dirty yellowish white, nowhere clear white ; head brown, facial 

 quadrangle much broader than long ; mandibles black, labrum broadly 

 rounded, the apex truncate; clypeus shining, very sparsely punctured ; 

 vertex with punctures of two sizes ; flagellum dark brown above, 

 ferruginous beneath ; tliird antennal joint comparatively short ; disc 

 of mesothorax nude, very shiny, with sparse punctures of two sizes ; 

 metathorax truncate, with a narrow dull roughened basal area ; tegulae 

 shining, reddish testaceous, dark in front ; wings clear, faintly dusky 

 in apical field ; stigma and nervures reddish testaceous ; marginal cell 

 obliquely truncate, with an appended nervure ; second submarginal 

 cell narrowed more than half to marginal ; Jirst recurrent nervure 

 meetinfi first transverso-cubital ; second recurrent joining second sub- 

 marginal a little before its end ; femora black, with a reddish apical 

 spot beneath ; tibite and tarsi very dark reddish (anterior tibiae pale in 

 front), with pale orange hair ; all the claws very deeply cleft; abdomen 

 broad, shining, hind margins of segments testaceous ; first segment 

 impunctate, the others with scattered very minute punctures ; apical 

 fimbria pale reddish ochreous ; ventral segments with a small ferru- 

 ginous cloud in the middle. 



Hah. Collected by Professor Beardsley, of the Colorado 

 Normal School, at Greeley, Colorado, June 3rd, 1900. The 

 insect looks not unlike Panurginiis perlcevis, which, however, has 

 a quite different venation. 



NEW CULICID^ FROM THE FEDERATED MALAY 



STATES. 



By Fred. V. Theobald, M.A. 



(Continued from p. 213.) 



Genus Orthopodomyia, nov. gen. 



Head clothed with narrow-curved and forked upright scales ; flat 

 ones are at the sides. Palpi 5-jointed in the female; long, as long as 

 half the proboscis ; in the male 4-jointed, three-fourths tlie length of 

 the proboscis. Thorax with narrow-curved scales on the prothoracic 

 lobes, mesothorax, and scutellum. Wings spotted. 



Allied to Finlaya, but differs in the squamose structure 

 of the head and scutellum. The female palpi are noticeably 



