NOTES ON THE ETHIOPIAN FRUIT-FLIES — II. 39 



beneath ; tibiae of the middle pair with black apical spurs ; hind tibiae without 

 distinct row. Wings proportionally short and broad, rounded at end, with a small 

 but distinct costal bristle. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th longitudinal veins are straight 

 and distinctly diverging, chiefly the two former ; 3rd vein bare ; discoidal cell very 

 broad at end and there about three times as broad as at base, the hind cross-vein 

 twice as long as its distance from the small cross-vein, which is placed on the last 

 third ; lower angle of the anal cell acute and a little produced ; axillary lobe well 

 developed. The pattern is like that of the Indian cribeUata, but with some 

 peculiarities. The base is whitish hyaline, with 2 parallel dark streaks in the costal 

 cell and a quadrate spot at base of the first basal cell. The stigma has a broad 

 rounded hyaline spot and a narrow basal hyaline streak. Around the border of the 

 wings there is a regular series of equal and rounded spots, grouped thus : 3, 2, 1, 3, 3 ; 

 after this border there is a band with numerous and small hyaline dots ; 2 symmetrical 

 hyaline spots of greater size are in the first posterior cell, just before the apical spot 

 between the ends of the 3rd and 4th vein ; the centre of the wing is black, with 

 several small hyaline spots, and between them 5 of greater size are placed in the form 

 of a circle around the small cross-vein and at very regular distances from it ; there 

 are 2 in the submarginal cell, 1 in the first basal, 1 in the first posterior and 1 in the 

 discoidal cell. All the hyaline spots are distinctly whitish. 



Type $ and an additional specimen of the same sex from Durban, Umbilo, 

 31.x. 1914 (L. Bevis). 



2. Campiglossa cyana, Walker (1849).* 



It is very probable that the present species, described from Sierra Leone as a 

 Noeeta, may belong here, owing to the description of its proboscis. It seems to 

 have a wing pattern very like that of the preceding species, but it differs in having 

 the ovipositor ferruginous in the middle and the femora banded with black. 



XXXIII. Camaeomyia, Hendel (1914). 



Prof. Hendel is his recent work on the South American fruit-flies has erected 

 this genus for the very characteristic Trypeta bullans, Wied. ( = tenera, Loew), 

 which has a singular geographical distribution, being found in South Europe and 

 in South America, and has besides a very remarkable sexual dimorphism. Hendel 

 has described a second species, C. philodema., from Chile, and has recorded as belonging 

 here the North American aequalis, Loew ; I have to add to the genus the North 

 American gemella, Coquillett, and the following Ethopian new species, of which only 

 the female is known, which however has the peculiar wing pattern and the protu- 

 berance of the frons. G. aequalis and gemella have the 3rd antennal joint rounded 

 at the end, while in bullans and the new species here described it has a rather sharp 

 upper point at the tip. 



* [An examination of the type specimen shows that this species is not a Campiglossa 

 hut an Euribia, and it runs down next to E. dissoluta, Lw., and E. tristrigata, Bezzi, in 

 the author's key to that genus. It may he distinguished from these two species, inter 

 alia, by the markings in the 2nd posterior cell ; th s has along its margin three widely 

 separated small round spots, the innermost being larger than the other two, and in the 

 centre there is a small spot of the same size as the outer marginal ones and a minute 

 dot. In the other species the markings are larger, irregular and for the most part con- 

 fluent. — Ed.]. 



