igi3.] M. Be:zzi: Indian Trypaneids {Fruit-Flies). 131 



above and long below, its inferior external angle being very pointed ; anal cell drawn 

 out into a long point, as long as the second basal cell. Wing-pattern consisting of a 

 yellowish or blackish large basal spot extending to the small cross- vein, and of two 

 divergent narrow black streaks on the apical half. 



Type : Musca purmundus, Harris, ^77^- 



Walker's name, which was corrected to Anomoea by lyoew, being preoccupied 

 in the Coleoptera, must be changed to that given by Rondani, the latter accordingly 

 is used here. 



37. Phagocarpus immsi, n. sp. c? . 

 (PI. X, fig. 72). 



A dark yellow species, with the basal spot of the wings broadly yellow. Length 

 of the body 6 mm., of the wings 5|- mm. 



Head entirely yellow, covered with white pollen on the face ; all the bristles 

 black ; a few pale hairs on the occiput below ; antennae dark yellow, the third joint 

 very shortly pubescent ; palpi pale yellow, proboscis darker. 



Thorax on the back dark reddish, covered with dark grey pollen and black pubes- 

 cence, on the pleura and humeri pale reddish and shining ; all the bristles are black. 

 Scutellum flattened, pale reddish, shining, with very long marginal bristles. Squam- 

 ulae brownish, haltères dark yellow. Abdomen dark reddish, shining, with black 

 pubescence , second and third segment blackish , the first three segments with a broad 

 greyish border on the hind margin ; belly yellowish, the middle segments partly 

 blackened ; genitalia yellow, small, not prominent . Legs entirely yellow, with black 

 hairs and bristles ; femora rather thickened. 



Wing veins yellow, darkened only on the blackish portions of the pattern ; they are 

 hyaline, with a peculiar pattern ; stigma entirely black. There is a broad basal patch 

 which leaves the costal cell free, except for a yellowish spot on the humeral cross- 

 vein, and ends below on the fifth vein, filling out the whole of the anal cell ; this large 

 patch is yellow, but outwardly ends in an arcuate black band, which begins below 

 the stigma, reaches the small cross-vein and ends on the fifth vein, which is prolonged 

 in a narrow greyish streak to the hind margin of the wing at the end of the sixth-vein ; 

 there is a small hyaline spot in the first basal cell, below the stigma. From the black 

 band, just over the small cross- vein, extends a narrow black streak which reaches the 

 fore margin, and forms a triangular hyaline indentation beyond the stigma, with the 

 vertex on the third vein. The two apical diverging blackish streaks are as follows : 

 one, the shorter, on the hind cross- vein, reaching the hind margin ; the other, longer 

 and arcuate, begins at the base of the first posterior cell and follows the end of the 

 second vein, and from here along the costa to the apex of the wings, ending a little 

 after the end of the third vein. These two streaks are not fused together at the base 

 and are never united with the black band. 



A single male, collected near Bhowali, Kumaon, 5700 ft., June 22, 1910, by Dr. 

 A.D. Imms, in whose honour the pretty species is named. 



This species is a true Phagocarpus resembling piivmitndus in venation and pattern 



