Monographie der Mutilliden Afrikas. 699 
the petiole, second segment with a narrow band of similar texture 
produced in a triangle in the centre, outer side of the third segment 
with a short white patch, continued in the under part in a band, as 
is also the one in the second segment; intermediate and posterior tibiae 
with two single spines outwardly; abdominal carina produced in a 
sharp tooth at the apex. Length 15 mm. 
Tab. Zambesia (Salısbury).“ ’ 
Ob ein mir aus Bulawayo, 20. 7.13 (Arnold) [Coll. Arnold] vor- 
liegendes Weibchen zu dieser Art gehört, kann ich nicht mit Sicherheit 
entscheiden. Ich würde das betr. Individuum als eine bispina mit 
hellem Thorax ansprechen. Gegen ihre Zugehörigkeit zu beroe Per. 
spricht die Gestalt des Thorax, die viel gedrungener ist, als dies aus 
der Abbildung 1. c. hervorgeht. Sollte die Abbildung ungenau sein, 
dann müßte die bispina als Rasse zu der beroe gestellt werden. 
Bingham beschreibt in den Trans. ent. Soc., London 1911, 
p. 545 ein angeblich zu dieser Art gehöriges Männchen aus Natal und 
Rhodesia. Wie aber aus der Bemerkung ‚‚tegulae of the wings small 
and smooth‘ hervorgeht, dürfte es sich hierbei überhaupt nicht um 
eine Stenomutilla, sondern um ein Männchen der Gattung Dasylabroides 
handeln. 
capicola Peringuey in Ann. $. Afr. Mus., 1898, p. 47. 
„Female. — Head, antennae, abdomen, legs, and tarsı black, 
thorax dark ferruginous red; head slightly attenuate laterally, but 
with the sides straight and the posterior angles well defined, broader 
than long, and as broad as the base of the prothorax, posterior margin 
straight, closely and deeply scrobiculate, pilose in front and underneath, 
_ pubescent only in the posterior part; eyes subovate, large, prominent; 
prothorax straight at base, gradually ampliated and rounded from the - 
basal outer angle to about the median part, which is about one- fifth 
broader than the base, narrowed diagonally from there to the moderately 
abrupt apical dehiscence, where it is only one-half as broad as the 
apex, deeply and closely foveate, set with long, black bristles, convex 
and having three lateral submedian tubercles, the posterior one of 
which is a little sharp and situated at about the median part, the other 
two are elongate and hardly prominent; abdomen covered with long, 
black hairs, turning to greyish underneath, first segment moderately 
long, strongly petiolate, spinose laterally at base, scrobiculate and 
with a moderately broad apical silky white band, second segment 
globose and covered with deep, subelongate foveae, the intervals of 
which are raised, sharp, and form longitudinal sub-undulating lines, 
apical margin with a narrow band of white hairs all round, apex of the 
third and fourth segments fringed underneath with a short, greyish 
pubescence; abdominal carina of the first segment aculeate at base; 
intermediate and posterior tibiae with only one median spine on each 
side of the outer groove. Length 7—10,5 mm. 
Hab. Cape Colony (Cape Town, Port Elizabeth). “ 
5. Heft 
