OF INSULINDE. Ewe 
4, Body, anteunae etc. very stout, antennae as long as or 
shorter than tke wings. Cubital cell divided by a longi- 
tudinal nervule into two, nearly equal, quadrate cells. 
Nothochrysa Mac Lachl. 
Body, antennae etc. more slender, antennae as long as 
or shorter than the wings. Cubital cell divided into two 
unequal parts, the anterior one triangular. 
Chrysopa Leach. 
Genus Ankylopteryx Brauer (1864). 
Brauer, Verh. zool. bot. Ges. Wien, XIV, p. 899 (1864). 
This genus remembers the Hemerobidae by the form of 
the wings. The anterior pair is broad, angulated or rounded 
at the tips. Costalfield at the base very broad. Hindwings 
much narrower than the anterior wings, with very acute 
tips. Nervature about as in Chrysopa. Antennae about as 
long as the wings. Nothing is known about the metamorphosis. 
This genus, that occurs in Africa and India, is represented 
in Insulinde by the following species: 
Ankylopteryx octopunctata (Fabricius). 
(Plate 4, fig. 21). 
Hemerobius octopunctatus Fabricius, Ent. syst. II, p. 85, n°. 16 (1793). 
Cochin-China. 
is candidus Fabricius, Ent. Suppl. p. 202, n°. 5 (1798). Hast Indies. 
Chrysopa candida Schneider, Mon. Chrysop. p. 161 (1851). — Walker, Cat. 
Brit. Mus. Neur. p. 274, n°. 83 (1858). 
Ankylopteryx candida Brauer, Verh. zool. bot. Ges. Wien, XIV, p. 91 (1864). 
Chrysopa punctata Hagen, Syn. Neur. Ceyl. I, p: 483, n°. 74 (1858). Ceylon. 
Ankylopteryx punctatu Brauer, l.e. p. 901 (1864). 
Hemerobius trimaculatus Girard, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (3) VII, p. 163, t. 5, 
f. 1 (1853). Sumatra. 
Ankylopteryx trimaculata Brauer, 1 c. p. 901 (1864). — Albarda, Sum. Exp. 
Ankylopteryx anomala Brauer, le. p. 901 (1864); Novara Exp. Zool. II, 
p. 35 (1866). Nicobars. 
Ankylopteryx sigillaris Gerstaecker, Mitt. naturw. Ver. Neu-Vorpomm. und 
Rügen, XXV, p. 162 (1893). Java. 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XX XI. 
