NO. 2103. JAVANESE CRANE-FLIES— ALEXANDER. 185 



of tooth-like lobes. Along the lateral margin, each segment bears 

 on either side two short tooth-like appendages, one being on the 

 anterior half, the other on the posterior half of the segment. 



Lest the student attribute too much significance to this condition 

 of the pupa, quite different from the normal Tipula pupa with its 

 short breathing-horns, I will mention a pupa of an undetermined 

 Tipulme that is before me at this time. The specimen was taken by 

 Dr. J. Chester Bradley at Tallulah Falls, Georgia, June 17, 1910: 

 the stigmal horns measure 19 mm. in length, the tip slightly expanded 

 as in yedcM. I do not know what species tliis represents, Brachy- 

 yremna having been reared and there are very few other species that 

 this could represent. 



TIPULA UMBRINOIDES, new species. 



Antenna! flagellum bicolored; no dark stripe on the thoracic 

 pleura. 



Male. — Length, 17 mm.; wing, IS. 5 mm. This species bears a 

 close superficial resemblance to Ctenacroscelis umhrinus Wiedemann, 

 differing as follows: 



Segments of the antennal flagellum bicolored, the extreme basal 

 portion of each segment dark brown, the remainder of the segment 

 dull yeUow (in umhrinus the flageUum is uniformly dark brown). 

 Pleura darker brown and without a dark stripe so characteristic of 

 umhrinus. Femora without a ctenidium. Wings (see pi. 46, fig. 39) 

 with a brown cloud in cell M near its end ; a second cloud in Cu at 

 about two-fifths the length; venation, cell 1st J/g sharplj^ pointed 

 at its base, radial sector short and straight. Male hypopygium with 

 the 9th tergite dark brown, the tip pale with numerous black chiti- 

 nized spicules at the tip and underneath; the tergite is short (see pi. 

 48, fig. 61), the visible portion a little shorter than wide and the caudal 

 margin merely concave, not bifid. Pleural appendages (see pi. 48, 

 fig. 62), the outer lobe pale light 3'cliow, oval, the tip a little pointed; 

 the inner appendages two, shaped as in the figure; the larger of the 

 two appendages densely provided with long reddish brown hairs which 

 project beyond the genital chamber. Ninth sternite with a dense 

 brush of pale hairs near the tip. 



Habitat. — Java. 



Holotype. — Mount Salak, Java, July 4, 1909, altitude above 3,000 

 feet (Bryant and Palmer) . 



Type.— Ceit. No. 19027, U.S.N.M. 



TIPULA GEDEHANA de Meijere. 



Tipula gedeliana de Meijere, Tijdschr. voor Entom., vol. 56, 1911, pp. 66, 67, 

 pl. 4, fig. 47. 



One male, Tjibodas, Mount Gede, Java, September, 1909, altitude 

 4,000 feet; one male, 8,000 feet; two males and one female, 9,000 

 feet. (Bryant and Palmer.) 



