314 TIPULID.E. 



Genus XTI. PEDICIA. 



PEDICIA, Latr. Gen. Crust, iv. 255 (1806); Meig. Klass. ; Mcq. ; 

 Stseg. ; lloss. (V.) ; Zett. D. S. Tipula p., L. ; F. ; ]). G. ; Gmel. 

 Limnobia p., Meig. ; Zett. I. L. ; Schumra. 



Corpus maximum, elongatum, fere laeve, sat validum. Caput parvum, 

 subclavatum. Frons tuberculata. Oculi rotundi, remoti, subpubes- 

 centes. Proboscis lougiuscula. Palpi 4-articulati, cylindrici, sub- 

 pilosi, decumbentes, sat validi ; articuli primus, secundus, et tertius 

 aequales; quartus longior. Antennae 16-articulatse, porrectfe, sim- 

 plices, apice setacea3, capite vix longiores ; articultis primus crassus, 

 cylindricus, longiusculus ; secundus cyathiformis, validus ; tertius et 

 sequentes rotundati, subpilosi. Thorax ellipticus. Ala3 angusta 1 , 

 divaricate. Abdomen segmentis octo, depressum, longissimum. 

 Pedes longi, subpubescentes, inermes, sat graciles ; coxae breves ; 

 tibia? posticaB bicalcaratas. Mas. Abdomen apice obtusum, forcipe 

 brevi lata deutata. Fern. Oviductus stylis duobus corneis acutis. 

 Body very large, rather stout, elongated, almost smooth, cinereous. 

 Head small, rounded or nearly obpyriform. Front with an anterior 

 nearly double tubercle by the antennae. Eyes round, remote, minutely 

 pubescent. Proboscis moderately lengthened. Palpi four-jointed, ex- 

 serted, cylindrical, slightly pilose, rather thick, curved downward ; h'rst, 

 second, and third joints of equal length; fourth rather long, flexible. 

 Antennas sixteen-jointed, porrect, simple, somewhat stout at the base, 

 setaceous at the tips, very little longer than the head ; first joint thick, 

 cylindrical, bare, rather long ; second cyathiform, bare, rather thick ; 

 the rest rounded, somewhat pilose, successively decreasing in size. 

 Thorax elliptical. Wings divaricate, bare, rather narrow; mediastinal 

 vein ending at about three-fourths of the length of the wing ; subcostal 

 ending at a little before five-sixths of the length ; radial and cubital 

 springing from a common petiole, which nearly equals them in length, 

 proceeds from the subcostal at half the length of the wing, and forms 

 an angle very near its base ; radial connected by a veinlet with the sub- 

 costal near the tip of the latter ; cubital forked very near its base ; an 

 oblique veinlet extends from the petiole before mentioned to the third 

 externo-medial, and is thence continued to the subanal ; at half its 

 length to the third externo-medial it emits the first externo-medial ; the 

 latter is forked beyond half its length, and at half the length of its 

 petiole it is joined to the tliird externo-medial by a veinlet, whose angle 

 emits the second externo-medial ; anal vein and axillary vein complete ; 

 discal areolet pentagonal. Halteres bare, somewhat longer than the 

 first segment of the abdomen. Abdomen elongated, somewhat de- 

 pressed, with eight segments. Legs long, slightly pubescent, rather 

 slender, unarmed; coxa? not elongated; posterior tibia 1 with two small 

 spurs. Male. Abdomen at the tip obtuse, with a short broad drnlatrd 

 forceps. Fern. Oviduct with two horny acute styles, forming a vagina. 



