172 BEES OF GREAT BRITAIN, 



utrinque albis, ventre lana cinerascenti tecto. Corpore marif 

 fusco^ ano in medio fovea impresso. 



Apis leucomelana, Kirby, Mon. Ap. Angl. ii. 260. 52 <j> . 

 Osraia leucomelana, Smith, Zool. ii. 741. 1 $ $ . 



Nyland. Ap. Boreal, p. 243. 5 9. ; Supp. Ap. Boreal p. 105 <? , 



Female. Length 3|-4i Hues. Black; the head as wide as the 

 thorax, both very closely punctured ; the flagellum rufo-piceous 

 beneath ; the margin of the clypeus subemarginate. Thorax : 

 the disk shining, a little cinereous pubescence at the sides 2 

 the wings fusco-hyaline, their apical margins having a fuscous 

 cloud ; the legs have a glittering white pubescence, that on the 

 tarsi beneath fulvous, the calcaria and apical joints of the tarsi 

 pale ferruginous. Abdomen very glossy, oblong-ovate, the two 

 basal segments have their margins a little depressed -, the mar- 

 gins of the three basal segments have on each side a narrow 

 fringe of white pubescence, the fourth a continuous fringe -, be- 

 neath clothed with cinereous pubescence. B.M. 



Male. Length 3-4 lines. Brownish -black, strongly punctured ; 

 the face clothed with pale fulvous pubescence, the flagellum 

 fulvo-piceous beneath. Thorax thinly clothed with pale fulvous 

 pubescence, the wings subhyaline ; the calcaria and apical joint 

 of the tarsi pale ferruginous. Abdomen ovate, incurved, shining 

 and closely punctured, the margins of the segments narrowly 

 fringed with pale pubescence, frequently obliterated on the two 

 first and interrupted on the third ; the sixth segment, on each 

 side, has its extreme lateral margin produced into an angular 

 tooth ; the seventh segment is acute at the apex, and has a large 

 deep triangular fossulet in the middle ; the margin of the second 

 segment beneath is produced into a large projecting half-circular 

 flattened plate, and the following segments are ciliated with 

 bright fulvous hairs. B.M. 



This little bee was one of great rarity in collections some 

 years ago, when a locality was discovered for it at Hawley in 

 Hampshire. I observed it entering the dead branches of the 

 bramble, in the month of June ; in the autumn I procured some 

 of the sticks, and bred numbers of both sexes 5 subsequently 

 it has been found in plenty near Bristol. Three or four spe- 

 cimens have been taken at Charlton in Kent, but it is very 

 local. 



