380 EMPID.E. 



bristles. Abdomen black, moderately shining, practically bare ; 

 venter similar. Genitalia rather large, black ; a pair of claspers 

 with large basal joint with long crooked terminal black hook-like 

 appendages. Legs brownish yellow, fore coxae half as long as the 

 femora; anterior femora incrassated, hind femora not thickened, 

 long; tarsi more or less brown; all the legs minutely pubescent. 

 Wings microscopically setulose, pale brown, no stigma ; venation 

 normal, anal cell absent; the anal cross-vein present but incom- 

 plete. 



Length, 2 mm. 



Described" from a single J in the Indian Museum from Simla, 

 20.vii. 1911 (Annandale). 



Genus DRAPETIS, Mg. 



Drapetis, Meigen, Syst. Besch. iii, p. 91 (1822). 



Crossopalpus, Bigot, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, (3) v, p. "563 (1857). 



GENOTYPE, Drapetis exilis, Mg. (Europe). 



Head not so broad as thorax, but broader than high, rather 

 short ; eyes microscopically pubescent, separated in both sexes, 

 sometimes narrowly just above antennae, below which they are 

 contiguous or nearly so, facets of uniform size. Proboscis short, 

 vertical ; palpi one-jointed. Antennae inserted just above the 

 middle, very short,* especially 1st joint ; 2nd joint slightly 

 broader at tip, bristly ; 3rd conical, varying in length but always 

 comparatively short, pointed, with a rather long apical arista, 

 which is said to possess a microscopic basal joint. Thorax 

 approximately square, with rounded corners, generally moderately 

 arched, in some species more so ; dorsum with fine pubescence. 

 Chaetotaxy apparently slightly variable, generally some dorso- 

 central, acrostichal, and notoplenral bristles, with often a postalar 

 and post-humeral bristle; scutellum with two bristles ; metapleura 

 practically or quite bare. Abdomen short and robust, 8-segmented, 

 ending in male in a knob-like genital organ, in female in a point. 

 Legs comparatively short and strong, fore and hind femora rather 

 thickened ; hind tibiae sometimes ending in a projecting tooth. 

 Legs shortly pubescent, with a few bristles ; tibiae spurred or not,t 

 hind pair with a small bump at tip ; empodium very small, seti- 

 form. Wings short, rounded, anal angle well developed ; auxiliary 

 vein inconspicuous, short, ending free ; 1st, 2nd, and 3rd longi- 

 tudinal veins slightly curved forward ; 3rd, 4th, and 5th veins 

 simple ; a trace of an anal vein, but indistinct or unappreciable 

 at base. Discal cell absent ; 2nd basal cell much longer than 1st, 

 truncate ; anal cell absent. 



* Melander describes the antennae of this and s< me kindred genera as 

 two-jointed. The 1st joint is often so small as to be overlooked, or it may 

 conceivably be reduced to a mere facial protuberance. 



t Schiner says that the front tibiae are spurred. 



