AUSTRALIAN CONOPID FLIES—-CAMRAS 7633 
white pollinose. Legs dark reddish, darker on upper margin of 
femora, distal tibiae, and tarsi. Wings hyaline, reddish yellow at 
base. Calypters yellowish white. Halteres yellow, brown at base. 
Abdomen black, faintly white pollinose on distal segments and at 
junctions of first and second and second and third segments. Rufous 
on anterior and posterior margins and sides of second segment, pos- 
terior margin of first segment, and anterior margin of third segment. 
Theca black, longer than wide. 
Typre: Holotype, female, BMNH, Perth, Western Australia, 
January 26-28, 1936, R. E. Turner. 
Remarks: This species has many similarities with the previous 
one, so that I might have considered the color differences due to sex 
and the size difference due to extremes of variation; however, this 
species has only two aristal segments. 
Genus Neoconops Kréber 
Neoconops Kréber, Arch. Naturg., vol. 81, Abt. A, Heft 1, p. 75, 1915. 
Neoconops robustus Kroéber 
Neoconops robustus Kréber, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 11, vol. 5, p. 66, 1940. 
Previously known only from the type female. This male has the 
first three tergites dull reddish black (seemingly grease stained). The 
fourth tergite is more black and partly shining. The fifth and sixth 
tergites are shiny bluish black. The sixth tergite is partly white 
pollinose. The genitalia are partly shiny red. The abdomen is 
cylindrical with no narrowing at the base. Length 7 mm. 
MATERIAL EXAMINED: Mingenew, Western Australia, Oct. 15-22, 
1935, R. E. Turner, 1 male, author’s collection ex BMNH. 
Genus Heteroconops Kréber 
Heteroconops Kroéber, Arch. Naturg., vol. 81, Abt. A, Heft 1, p. 80, 1915. 
Heteroconops antennatus Kréber 
Heterconops antennatus Kréber, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 11, vol. 5, p. 69, 1940. 
This species is otherwise known only from the type male. This 
female differs somewhat and may represent another species. ‘The 
upper front is partly reddish. The third antennal segment is some- 
what shorter and wider than the illustration. The sixth and seventh 
tergites are shiny, the others are dull. The theca is yellowish, darker 
apically, and longer than wide. There are no accessory veins on the 
wings. 
MATERIAL EXAMINED: Mingenew, Western Australia, Oct. 15-22, 
1935, R. E. Turner, 1 female, BMNH. 
