NO. 2103. JAVANESE CRANE-FLIES— ALEXANDER. 179 



segments dull yellow, flagellum with the segments gi-oatly elongated, 

 provided with long outspreading hau*s, flagellum brown. Head 

 smooth, blue-black. 



Praescutmn chestnut brown with three metallic blue-black 

 stripes (in the paratype reddish blue), the surface of the sclerite 

 covered by the stripes smooth, the rest punctate; scutum, scutellum, 

 and postnotmn dark brown, thickly punctured, especially the latter, 

 Pleiu-ae bluish brown, densely and coarsely punctured. HaltereS 

 long, slender, brown. Legs, coxae dull brown; trochanter dull 

 yellow; femora and tibiae dull brownish yellow; tarsi darker bro^wn. 

 Wmgs brownish gray, vems brown; venation: (see pi. 45, fig. 30), 

 vein J?i present, distinct; cross-vein r elongate, usually a little longer 

 than the cross-vein r-m, sometimes shorter; i?2 atrophied at the tip. 



Abdomen dark brownish black, the sternites paler. 



Habitat. — Java. 



Holoiype. — Pangi-anggo, Java; altitude 9,000 feet. (Bryant and 



Palmer.) 



Paratype. — Male, Tjibodas, Mount Gede, Java; altitude 8,000 feet. 

 (Bryant and Palmer.) 



fype.—Csit. No. 19026, U.S.N.M. 



Siabfarnily TIPTJU-Ilvrji^E. 

 Tribe DOLICHOPEZINI. 



Genus NESOPEZA Alexander. 



Nesopeza Alexander, Canadian Entomologist, vol. 46, 1914, p. 157. 



NESOPEZA GRACILIS de Meijere. 



Dolichopeza gracilis de Meijere, Tijdschr. voor Entom., vol. 54, 1911, pp. 60, 61, 



pi. 4, fig. 46. 

 Nesopeza gracilis Alexander, Canadian Entomologist, vol. 46, 1914, p. 157. 



Two males from Tjibodas, Mount Gede, Java, altitude 4,500 feet; 

 two males, 9,000 feet (Br3^ant and Palmer). The material ofi^ers the 

 following measurements: Length, 8.2-9.6 mm.; \^'ing, 9.1-10.2 mm. 



Tribe CTENOPHORINI. 



Genus PSELLIOPHORA Osten Saeken. 



Pselliophora Osten Sacken, Berlin. Entom. Zeitschr., vol. 30, 1886, p. 165. 

 PSELLIOPHORA ARDENS Wiedemann. 



Ctenophora ardens Wiedemann, Dipt, exot., vol. 1, 1821, p. 20. 



One female, Buitenzorg, Java, March, 1909 (Bryant and Palmer). 

 The insect has never been figured and is shown in plate 45, fig. 31. 



