CULEX EKEMITA 261 



in the evening, and probably do not bite. Dr. Grabham says : " Collected with 

 Deinocerites cancer^ Theob., from crab holes along the sea shore. The water in 

 the holes is brackish. Larvae abundant after seasonal rains in May and October." 

 He says that the eggs are laid in rafts. 



Jamaica. 



Kingston, in crab-holes along the shore (M. Grabham) . 



Dr. Grabham's figures and descriptions give the proportions of the air-tube of 

 the larva wrongly. We have been able to correct this matter from specimens 

 which Dr. Grabham has kindly sent us. The species is not allied to others that 

 inhabit crab-holes on other islands and on the mainland, and it would seem that 

 this species had independently acquired the habit on the island of Jamaica. 



CULEX EREMITA, new species. 

 Descbiption 01' Female, Maxe, and Labva of Culex eremita: 



Female. — Proboscis moderate, subcylindrical, uniform, labellse conically 

 tapered ; vestiture black, with bronzy luster, with a diffuse white mark beneath 

 near the middle ; setae minute, curved, black, those on labellse more prominently 

 outstanding. Palpi small, slender, one-sixth as long as proboscis, black-scaled, 

 with many small hairs and a few outstanding setae. Antennae with the joints 

 subequal, rugose, pilose, black, second joint pale at base ; tori subspherical, with 

 a cup-shaped apical excavation, black; hairs of whorls sparse, moderate, black. 

 Clypeus rounded triangular, doubly excavated at base, dark brown, nude. Eyes 

 black. Occiput dark brown, clothed with narrow, curved brown scales, a median 

 line of similar yellowish-white scales ; margin of eyes and a patch on lower part 

 of the side white scaled, with a silky luster, the area on each side of the median 

 line with numerous erect, black forked scales; a row of black bristles along 

 margins of eyes. 



Prothoracic lobes elliptical, remote dorsally, clothed with black setffi. Meso- 

 notum dark brown, with two dorsal impressed concolorous lines showing faintly 

 on anterior half ; vestiture of minute, hair-like golden-brown scales and numer- 

 ous coarse brown bristles arranged in rows. Scutellum trilobate, clothed with 

 narrow, curved pale-yellowish scales, each lobe with a group of black bristles. 

 Postnotum elliptical, prominent, blackish brown, nude. Pleurae and coxae 

 luteous brown, with small patches of white scales and rows of small brown 

 bristles. 



Abdomen subcylindrical, depressed, truncated at tip ; dorsal vestiture of dull- 

 black scales, with narrow basal white bands on all but the first segment ; bands 

 transverse, uniform, expanded laterally into broad triangular spots, which show 

 dorsally on sixth and seventh segments; venter yellowish white, the last two 

 segments with black apical bands ; a row of yellowish hairs at tip of each seg- 

 ment dorsally. 



Wings moderate, hyaline; petiole of second marginal cell about one-third as 

 long as its cell, that of second posterior cell about equal to its cell ; basal cross- 

 vein slightly more than its own length distant from anterior cross- vein ; scales 

 of veins blackish brown, the outstanding ones broadly linear, denser and slightly 

 broadened apically on forks of second and fourth veins and outer half of third 

 vein. Halteres whitish, with dark knobs. 



Legs moderate, the femora whitish below almost to tip ; tibia and tarsi black, 

 with a bronzy luster ; tips of hind femora and of all the tibiae silky white ; tarsi 

 very narrowly ringed with white at bases of all the joints and apically also on 

 hind tarsi, except on last joint. Claw formula, 0.0-0.0-0.0. 



Length : Body about 3.5 mm. ; wing 3.5 mm. 



Male. — Proboscis straight, slender, slightly enlarged apically. Palpi long, ex- 

 ceeding the proboscis by more than the length of last joint ; tip of long joint and 



