Mr. Rowland E. Turner’s Notes on the Seoliidac 399 
minal segments 2-4, the tegulaeand a line on the anterior tibiae pale 
yellow. Length 5 mm. 
Hab. Mombassa (Hildehranclt). 
Type in Berlin Museum, 
Very near arahiea, but differs in the more elongate 
radial cell, in the greater length of the third cubital cell, 
the smaller size and the lesser breadth of the tibiae. 
Anthohosea Jiavojneta, sp. nov. (Plate L, fig. 4.) 
^. Clypeus sparsely punctured, much broader than long, subtrun¬ 
cate at the apex. Head and thorax minutely and closely punctured ; 
the head covered sparsely with short, upright, cinereous pubescence. 
Antennae stout, a little shorter than the thorax and median segment 
combined, the third joint of the flagellum as long as the first and 
second combined. Scutellum subtriangular, rather narrowly trun¬ 
cate at the apex ; the mesonotum with two shallow longitudinal 
furrows on each side. Median segment as long as the mesonotum, 
rounded, very finely rugulose. Abdomen finely shagreened, elon¬ 
gate, tapering to the extremities, the hypopygium small, rounded 
and ciliated. Posterior tibiae rather strongly serrate, all the tarsal 
ungues bifid. Third abscissa of the radius longer than the first and 
second combined; first recurrent nervure received a little beyond 
the middle of the second cubital cell, second a little before the middle 
of the third cubital cell. First transverse cubital nervure straight at 
the base, sharply bent before the middle. 
Black ; the clypeus, except a small, elongate, black spot on the 
centre, the inner margin of the eyes narrowly, not reaching the 
summit, a small spot behind the summit, a broad band on the pos¬ 
terior margin of the pronotum, the tegulae, a large spot on the 
middle of the scutellum, another on the postscutellum, the apex of 
the anterior femora and the anterior and intermediate tibiae and 
tarsi above pale yellow ; tibiae and tarsi ferruginous brown. Wings 
hyaline, nervures black. Length 11 mm. 
Hab. Zanzibar. 
Type iu the Zoological Museum at Berlin. 
The posterior tibiae are more strongly serrate than in 
most species of the genus, but this character is not 
generic, there being much difference in the development 
of the serration in the different species. Cameron’s 
genus Odontothynnus comes near this species, but differs 
in the bidentate clypeus and the simple ungues of the 
posterior tarsi. I have not seen specimens, but Cameron 
