76 ZOOLOGICAL EESULTS OF THE EtTWENZOEI EXPEDITION. 



Genus Mtgdonia. 

 Mygdonia Stal, Hem. Afr. ii. pp. 2, 16 (1865). 



Mygdonia MONTANA. (Plate II. figs. 16, 16 a.) 



Mygdonia montana Dist. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (8) ii. p. 441 (1908). 

 d ? . Piceous-brown ; corium shortly, palely, sparingly pilose ; extreme apex ot 

 scutellum ochraceous ; membrane dark bronzy ; antennse pale castaneous, first and 

 fourth joints subequal in length, second slightly shorter than first, longer than third ; 

 rostrum reaching intermediate coxse, first joint extending to base of head, second a 

 little longer than third, which just passes anterior coxse ; pronotum coarsely granulose, 

 lateral angles moderately, roundly, a little upwardly produced, their margins coarsely 

 crenulate, anterior lateral margins also crenulate or dentate ; scutellum transversely 

 wrinkled ; corium finely and indistinctly punctate ; posterior femora strongly 

 incrassate in 6 , shortly, centrally, tuberculously produced beneath and shortly spined 

 beneath at apex, in $ only moderately thickened and spined beneath at apex, posterior 

 tibiae in c? moderately dilated but not toothed. 



Long., d 16, $ 20 mm. Exp. pronot. angl., c? 6, ? 7J mm. 



Hal. Mubuku Valley, E. Ruwenzori, 6000-7000 ft. 



Allied to M. antinorii Leth., but the pronotal angles are much less developed 

 and more laterally and less anteriorly produced, their apices also being more rounded 

 and obtuse. 



Genus Anoplocnemis. 

 Anoplocnemis Stal, En. Hem. iii. p. 47 (1873). 



Anoplocnemis curvipes. 



Cimex curvipes Fabr. Spec. Ins. ii. p. 351 (1781). 

 Mokia, Ruwenzori, 3500 ft. — Distributed over the whole of Tropical and Subtropical 

 Africa. 



Anoplocnemis signata. (Plate II. figs. 17, 17 a.) 



Anoplocnemis signata Dist. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (7) vi. p. 373 (1900). 

 Mokia, S.E. Euwenzori, 3500 ft. ; Ruwenzori {G. F. Scott Elliot). 



Anoplocnemis tristator. 



Lygeeus tristator Fabr. Syst. Rliyng. p. 206. 13 (1803). 

 Ruwenzori [Sir H. H. Johnston). — Hitherto regarded as a West-African species. 



