Miss G. Ricardo on the Asililee. 239 
27. Black-grey. Moustache yellow and black. 
Seutellum with white hairs and eight 
black bristles. Ovipositor very short. 
Legs black, tibiee brown .......+...+5 setiventris, 2, Loew. 
Mane white posteriorly. Scutellum with ; 
white hairs and bristles. Genitalia and 
ovipositor short. Legs bronze-green .. albopilosus, 5 2, sp. n. 
Mane yellow and black, very scanty. Scu- ; 
tellum with yellowish hairs and bristles. 
Genitalia large, and long. Legs wholly 
Dlsve lotateeperertare cos isls. ola c.sfsro eat tetera els nigripes, 3 9,.sp. 0. 
The following species are not included in the table owing 
to insufficient descriptions. I have not been able to identify 
any of Macquart’s species except Dysmachus tibialis :— 
Dysmachus comatus, Wied., Dysmachus incisuralis, genicu- 
latus, flavibarbis, forcipatus, albibarbis, rufus, Macquart, al 
from the Cape of Good Hope. 
Dysmachus dubius, Bezzi, from Somaliland, probably does 
not belong to this genus, as he himself doubts, remarking it 
has not the crested mane. 
Loew’s Division I. 
No bristles before the seyments of abdomen. 
it 
Mane extending the whole length of the thorax. 
Dysmachus suillus, Fabr. 
Syst. Antl. p. 168,19 [Dasypogon] (1805); see Kertersz’s Cat. for 
further references. 
Specimens in the Brit. Mus. Coll. are :— 
One male and female from the Cape, and a male and 
female from Cape Town; one female from 8S. Africa 
(Dr. Smith), 44, 6. 
In the Cape Coll. are males and females from Kayena, 
Cape Colony, Oct. 1916 (L. Peringuez) ; from Cape 'Town 
(LZ, Peringuez) ; from Kraafontein, Cape Colony (Lightfoot) ; 
from Grahamstown, from Mussel Bay, and from Ookiep, 
Namaqualand. 
A species easily distinguished by the two tufts of white 
hairs on the scutellum. The genitalia are figured by 
Macquart in Dipt. Exot. i. (2), p. 242, pl. x. fig. 7; v. d. 
Wulp in Tijd. v. Ent. xix. p. 173 (1876), describes them as 
