574 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM vol. no 



from menetenis, which also has three paratergai plates, in that spiracles 

 are located on segments 3-5, not 3-6 (or 3-8), and the thoracic 

 sternal plate has the sclerotized portion dumbbell-shaped in kumadai 

 rather than entire, and in that the apical setae of paratergai plate 

 III are longer than the plate in kumadai. E. kumadai is closest to 

 E. larisci but is easily separated as follows: E. larisci lacks definite 

 postantennal angles on the head and has no apical setae on para- 

 tergai plates II and IV. E. kumadai has one apical seta on plate 

 II and two on plate IV. In male larisci the endomeres are broadly 

 separated and the pseudopenis ver}^ small, whereas kumadai has 

 the endomeres joined medially (although a fracture line is visible 

 in some specimens), and the pseudopenis is large and as long as the 

 parameres. 



The Thai specimens of kumadai were compared with two male and 

 two female paratypes in the collection of Captain John E. Scanlon. 



Enderleinelliis nialaysianus Ferris 



Enderleinellus malaysianus Ferris, Contributions toward a monograph of the 

 sucking lice, pfc. 1 (1919), p. 12, figs. 3-4, 1920; The sucking lice, p. 110, 

 1951.— Werneck, Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz, vol. 45, pp. 281, 302, 1947. 



Ferris described malaysiamis from material collected off Callosciurus 

 caniceps and Callosciurus prevosti from Malaya, Lower Siam, and 

 Borneo. The holotype is from C. caniceps, St. Lukes Island, Mergui 

 Archipelago, Mala3^sia. 



New record: One female from Callosciurus caniceps, nakhon 

 sawan: Pak Nom Pho, Khao Khat, May 4, 1953, RE-2503. 



This female has spiracles considerably smaller than the holotype 

 and paratypes in the U.S. National Museum, but agrees well in other 

 respects. 



Enderleinellus menetensis Ferris 



Enderleinellus menetensis Ferris, Contributions toward a monograph of the 

 sucking lice, pt. 1 (1919), p. 14, figs. 5-6, 1920; The sucking lice, p. 110, 

 1951.— Werneck, Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz, vol. 45, p. 281, 1947. 



Ferris described E. menetensis from a series of males and females 

 taken from Menetes berdmorei rufescens, Koh Kut Island, Southeast 

 Siam. The holotype is a male. 



New record: One male, one female from Menetes berdmorei, 

 kanchanaburi: Latya, May 17, 1952, F-752. 



These specimens agree well with the original description and figures 

 except that both sexes have more numerous setae on the abdomen 

 dorsally and ventrally, chiefly by reason of having three to five setae 

 in each lateral group rather than one or two. Spiracles are present 

 on abdominal segments 3-8 in the present specimens. The spiracles 

 are ver}^ small and hard to see unless the specimen is in a favorable 



