XXIV.—Further Data and some Corrections on the 
BREVICOLLIS Group of CICINDELA, 
by 
C. N. Barker, F.E.S. 
HAVE lately received (end of January, 1920), from Dr. Horn of 
Berlin, para-types (female labelled Senegal and male presumably 
from same country but unlabelled) of Cicindela neglecta, Dej. On 
comparing these insects with th that I tentatively assigned to 
neglecta, I find they are quite distinct forms. Seemingly this well 
defined race, which throughout its very considerable range remains 
remarkably stable in all its characteristics, has been overlooked or 
possibly, as in my case, wrongly determined from description alone. 
In my remarks, pages 172-173, Vol. I], Annals of the Durban 
Museum, I alluded to the discrepancies between Dejean’s description 
of neglecta and the form I attributed to it, which left me much in 
doubt as to the correctness of my determination. This has proved to 
be well founded, and the insect thus wrongly assigned remains yet to 
be dealt with. I can find no written description that applies to it, 
therefore I propose to name it religwa, a name appropriate to the 
circumstances. The following is a fuller desciption of it than that 
given in my original paper under the designation C’. brevicol/is, race 
neglecta, De}. 
CICINDELA RELIQUA, Sp. nov. 
Length 9{—12 mm. Width 4—5 mm. 
Head and prothorax coppery bronze, with more or less of blue green 
and glowing red reflections about head and furrows of prothorax. 
Elytra bronze black (appearing quite black except in strong light), 
with pale testaceous markings ; pectus and abdomen dark metallic 
blue to blue green ; lateral margins of prothorax beneath, coxe, 
femorze and tibize more or less glowing to metallic purple ; tarsi 
purplish. The sides of the stern and abdomen densely clothed with 
decumbent white hairs ; legs with the usual sparse white hairs and . 
setae. 
Labrum convex, triangulary produced in both sexes, central tooth 
in female prominent, 
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