.'370 Mr. F. V. Theobald. On the Culicidce of India, 



pale bands ; fore legs with the femora and tibiae grey beneath, with a 

 .few brown scales scattered above, metatarsi and first two tarsi with 

 broad apical white bands, last two tarsi and bases of the others dark- 

 brown, ungues equal and simple ; mid legs much the same, but the 

 femora dark towards the apex, with a large white spot near the apex, 

 which is black ; apex of tibiae, metatarsi and first two tarsals white, 

 last two deep brown, ungues equal and simple. In the hind legs the 

 femora and tibiae are much as in the mid, the apex of the metatarsus is 

 white, and the whole of the tarsi except a narrow black band at the 

 base of the first joint ; ungues small, equal arid simple. 



Wings (Plate 5, fig. 2) with the veins mostly clothed with pale 

 creamy scales, with four large black costal spots and two small basal 

 ones, the apical, second and fourth black costal spots extend evenly on 

 to the first long vein, the third has a large median and a small dark 

 spot at each end; there are also small black spots on the veins as 

 follows : one at the base of the first fork-cell, one at the base and 

 another at the apex of the third long vein ; two on each branch, and 

 three on the stem of the second fork-cell ; three on the upper branch 

 and one at the apex of the lower branch of the fifth long vein, and 

 another at its base ; three on the sixth ; the fringe is mostly dark 

 with seven pale patches ; halteres pale ochraceous. 



Length. 4'5 mm. 



Habitat. Lahore, India. 



Observations, described from three specimens sent by Captain James, 

 I. M.S., and Drs. Christophers and Stephens. It is a very well defined 

 and beautiful species, closely related to A. Kochii, Donitz, but quite 

 easily separated from it by the white hind tarsi, the absence of 

 thoracic ocelli, and by the wing ornamentation. 



The $ is not known. 



The type has been deposited in the British Museum (Nat. Hist.) 

 collection. The name was proposed by the collectors. 



Anopheles fuliginosus. (Giles.) 

 A. Jamesii, Liston. 



* Handbook of Gnats,' p. 160 (1900), Giles; 'Mono Culicid.,' 1, 

 p. 132 (1901), Theobald; ' Ind. Med. Gaz.,' Dec., 1901, p. 441 



(= Jamesii), Liston. 



Thorax slaty black, with scattered flat spindle-shaped scales ; legs 

 dark brownish-black, a pale band near the apex of the femora, a 

 white apical band to the metatarsi and first two fore tarsi ; the 

 last three and apex of the first hind tarsi white; the legs never 

 spotted. 



