•IGO Mr. G. MLatle-Waklo on 



carina, i\\ terminata (type) lias none, though the wliole long 

 series lias some indication of one. The two species are 

 readily disliiignished by the wings ; in N. terminata these 

 are flavo-hyalnie, only the apex fuscous, while in N. fusci- 

 penni's the whole costal area is fuscous. I have never seen 

 an authentic specimen of ]S\fuscipeniiis from British India, 

 though Bingham gives Sikkim. All the specimens in the 

 British Museum are from the type-locality, Sumatra. 



I^^omia (^Iloplonomia) cuneata, Sauss, (1872). 

 This species, described from Madagascar, is a Iloplonomia. 



Nomia Candida, Snuth. 



Nomia Candida, Smith, Trans. Eiit. Soc. Lend. 1875, p. G8. Sierra 



Leone. 

 Nomia braunsiana, Friese, Sjostedt's Kilimanj.-Meru Exped. viii. 



p. 124 (1908). E. Africa. 



In his description Friese says of his species, " near Can- 

 dida, but without golden fascia on first abdominal segment." 

 I have examined Smith's type of N. Candida, and find it has 

 no such fascia, but, like N. braunsiana, there is a little golden 

 pubescence on the sides of the apical margin of tlie segment. 



In the British Museum there are specimens from RiiODESIA, 

 Salisbury [G. A. K. Marshall), determined by Friese as 

 xV. braimsiuna ; Nyasaland, Lake Ghilwa and Mlanje 

 {S. A. Neavc) ; Abyssinia, Harrar, v. 1911 {G. Kristensen). 



Nomia cinerascens, Smith. 



Nomia cinerascens, Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1875, p. 66. (^ . 



Natal. 

 Halictus leviannulatus, Cam, ? MS. Transvaal. 



JVotnia horneana, Cam. 



Nomia horneana, Cam. Journ. Straits Asiatic Soc. xxxvii. p. 1 15 (1902). 



Borneo. 

 Nomia erythropoda, Cam. /. c. xliv. p. 157 (1905). Borneo. 



Nomia (^Crocisaspid'a) zovaria, Widker. 



Nomia zonaria. Walker, List of Hymen, in Ej^pt, p. 43 (1871). c^. 



Arabia. 

 Nomia lamellata, Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1875, p. 05. 5 cf • 



Egypt. 



Cockerell suggests the above synonymy (Ann. & Mag. 

 Nat. Hist. (8) V. p. 504, 1910). I have not seen N. vespoides, 

 Walker [I c). 



