548 ME. w. r. KinBr ok the 



c? . Long. Corp. 47 millim. ; app. anal. 3 millim. ; exp. al. 82 

 millim.; long. pter. 3g millim. 



$. Long. Corp. 45 millim.; exp. al. 90 millim.; long. pter. 

 5 millim. 



Uniform testaceous-yellow in both sexes, with all the abdomi- 

 nal sutures and carinse black ; all the wings strongly tinged with 

 yellow, and with the pterostigma pale yellow ; fore wings with 

 the triangle crossed by two nervures, and the subtriangular space 

 by one or two, or none ; a brown band runs from the anal angle 

 over the extremity of the subbasal sectors, not quite reaching 

 the lower part of the hind margin. It is narrowest nearest to 

 the anal angle, and its upperside is more or less irregular. The 

 anal appendages are rather short and tipped with black ; the 

 appendages of the second segment in the male are conspicuous, 



Henaratgoda, Feb. 7, 1892 ( $ ). Mahagany, March 6, 1892 ( 6 ). 



Nalanda {Fruhstorfer). 



Col. Terbury brought home one specimen of each sex. I have 

 added a brief description o£ the insect, as the few particulars 

 given by Dr. Karsch are barely sufficient for its identification. 

 It is said to occur at Penang and in Celebes, as well as in 

 Ceylon. 



*t4. Teamea sttlata. 



Libellula stylata, Ramb. Ins. Nevr. p. 37 (1842). 

 Trincomali, Sept. 13, 1890 ; Nov. 1 & 11, 1891. 

 Originally described from Bombay. 



*t5. Teamea Buemeisteri. 



Tramea Burmeisteri, Kirb. Trans. Zool. Soc. Lond. xii. p. 316 (1889). 



Libellula chinensis, JBurm. Handb. Ent. ii. p. 852 (1839), nee De Geer. 



Trincomali, Nov. 16, 1890. Mahagany, Nov. 1 & 10, 1891. 



Not an uncommon species in India and Ceylon. The specimens 

 from Ceylon are generally rather darker than the others. 



I may note here that Dr. Karsch, in one of his recent papers, 

 accuses me of omittiag Trithemis erytTircea, Brauer, from Mau- 

 ritius, from my Catalogue of Neuroptera Odonata. I find no 

 such species in the writings of that author ; but I find two 

 species, Tramea africana and Tramea erytJircsa, which were 

 omitted by Dr. Brauer himself in a general list which he pub- 

 lished subsequently. Both these will be found under Tramea 

 on p. 4 of my Catalogue, and 1 presume that the latter is what 

 Karsch calls " Trithemis " erythroea. 



