o3G TIVVLJDJE. 



black ; gradually widening from the base to the Gth segment, 

 which is the widest, thence sharply narrowing. Ovipositor some- 

 what robust, dark brown, practically bare, the long terminal 

 points shining red-brown. Legs wholly very dark mahogany 

 brown, nearly black. Wimjs brown on anterior half, the colour 

 gradually fading away posteriorly to the grey hind margin ; a 

 small, roughly crescent-shaped, hyaline spot across the 1st basal 

 cell, entering the cell above and below, and situated close to the 

 origin of the 3rd vein. Four posterior cells ; discal cell 5-sided, 

 the veinlets from its outer upper side almost parallel ; anterior 

 cross-vein opposite fork of 2ud vein ; posterior cross- vein at lower 

 corner of discal cell; npper branch of 2nd longitudinal vein 

 forking just before its middle, llalteres black. 



Length 20 millim. 



Described from a type male in the Vienna Museum from Central 

 Tonkin and a single female (type) in the Pusa collection, taken in 

 April 1905 in the Xhasi Hills, Assam, at 1000 to 3000 feet 

 altitude. 



382. Eriocera huml)erti, Os. Sac. 



Eri'jcera hiDnberti, Osten Sackeu, Uerl. Ent. Zeits. xxxi, p. '22\ 



(1887). 



" 5 . Wings brownish, with two broad hyaline bluish-opalescent 

 cross-bands; thorax red; abdomen velvet-black with grey cross- 

 bands. Length 9-10 mm. (without ovipositor). 



"Head and 1st joint of antennte ferruginous red; the rest 

 of the antennse brown. Thorax ferruginous red with a faint 

 darker stripe in the middle; scutellum and metathorax blackish. 

 Halteres black. Abdomen velvet-black ; each segment, beginning 

 with the 2nd, with a bluish grey plumbeous cross-band at the 

 base ; the last segment ferruginous red ; ovipositor reddish brown. 

 Legs (only the right hind leg is left) brownish red : tibiao and 

 tarsi darker. Wings pale brownish at the exti-eme base ; a broad 

 brown cross-band in the middle ; it occupies, on the anterior 

 margin, tlie interval between the origin of the 2nd vein and the 

 tip of the auxiliaiy ; on the [)osterioi-, between the tips of tlie 

 0th and 7th veins ; the last quarter of the wing is pale brown. 

 The two hyaline spaces (or cross-bands) thus remaining between 

 the brown portions of the wing have a beautiful bluish opalescence; 

 four posterior cells. 



''Hah, Cevlon (Pundel Oya Valley, 3S00-39O0 ft. alt., 26. xi. 

 to 27. xii. 1859, Mr. Alois Humbert, from Geneva). 



"A single female in the Museum at Geneva. 



" The tip of the auxiliary \em a little anterior to the proximal 

 end of the 2nd submargiual cell ; the 1st submarginal cell and the 

 1st posterior cell are of equal length ; the great cross-vein at the 

 very base of the discal cell." {Osten SacJcen.) 



This must be a very striking species, but I have not seen it. 



