34 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



more probable by the fact that Mr. Goodwin — after whom I have 

 the pleasure of naming the most striking of the two forms under 

 notice — has taken at least two individuals darker than any that 

 he could submit to me; these, however, being females, were kept 

 for ova (which alas! proved infertile), and consequently were 

 useless for the cabinet. I also learn from him that the insect is 

 not common in the locality that produces these remarkable 

 aberrations, and that only about 10 per cent. — or possibly 

 15 per cent. — of the specimens met with there are, to a greater 

 or less extent, darker than the type. 



These dusky A. testaceata furnish additional proof of the 

 unexpected wealth of Kent in melanic forms of Lepidoptera, 

 to which I called attention in Ent. Mo. Mag. ser. 2, xvi. 90 

 (1905). 



Norden, Corf'e Castle : January 19th, 1907. 



A NEW MOSQUITO FKOM INDIA. 

 By S. Kothwell. 



Neocellia intermedia, n. sp. 



Head deep brown clothed with grey scales in front, and a grey 

 projecting tuft. Palpi brown, with two broad apical, and two narrow 

 basal white bands. Thorax slaty-grey in the middle, deep brown on 

 each side, with pale scales. Abdomen brown, with pale creamy and 

 ochreous scales and golden hairs. Legs brown, speckled and banded 

 with cream colour, tarsal banding very minute on the brown hind legs. 

 Wings with four large costal spots, the two apical ones spread evenly 

 on to the first long vein ; the second has two small spots under it on 

 the first long vein, the second has two small spots under it on the 

 first vein and the third one. 



? . Head densely clothed with upright white forked scales in 

 front, black ones behind, a few white curved ones in front with a 

 long irregular tuft of hair-like ones projecting forwards ; antennas 

 deep brown, with numerous small white scales and hairs on the 

 basal segments ; palpi brown, with two broad bands towards the 

 apex, and two narrow ones on the basal half, the two broad ones 

 separated by a narrow black ring ; proboscis black, pale at the apex. 

 Thorax slaty-grey in the middle, deep brown at the sides, clothed with 

 broad curved, rather flattened creamy scales, pale golden chaetse over 

 the roots of wing; scutellum slaty-grey, paler at the sides, with 

 similar scales to the mesothorax and brown border bristles ; meta- 

 notum deep brown ; pleurae brown, with grey sheen and some flat 

 creamy scales. Abdomen brown, with narrow, curved, creamy scales 

 becoming densest on the apical segment, and with pale hairs. Legs 

 brown ; the femora and tibias with yellow spots ; the fore metatarsi 

 with three yellow spots, one apical ; the first and second tarsals with 



