1068 LIST OF DIPTERA. 



Sciomyza cinerella, Fall. Sciom. 14, 8. Meig. Dipt. vi. 16, 16. 

 Macq. Hist. Nat. Dipt. ii. 407, 11. Zett. Ins. Lapp. 739, 10. 

 Dipt.Scand. v. 2118,28. 



a. England. Presented by F. Walker, Esq. 



b. France. 



Sciomyza ventralis, Fall. Sciom. 14, 9. Meig. Dipt. vi. 21, 29. 

 a. England. Presented by F. Walker, Esq. 



Sciomyza Sehonherri, Fall. Sciom. Suppl.W. 13,13. Zett. Ins. 



Lapp. 738, 8. Dipt. Scand. v. 2107, 16. S. raonilis, Meig. 



Dipt. vi. 17, 18. Macq. Hist. Nat. Dipt. ii. 407, 12. Pherbel- 



lia vernalis ? Desv. Essai Myod. 696, 1. 

 a. England. 



Sciomyza nana, Fall. Sciom. 15, 12. Meig. Dipt. vi. 18, 19. 



Macq. Hist. Nat. Dipt. ii. 408, 14. Zett. Dipt. Scand. v. 



2109,18. 

 a. England. Presented by F. Walker, Esq. 



Sciomyza fulvipennis, Walker, Linn. Trans, xvii. 359, 76. 

 a. Port Famine. Presented by the Entomological Club. 



Sciomyza bicolor, Walker, Linn. Trans, xvii. 358, 75. 

 a. Port Famine. Presented by the Entomological Club. 



Sciomyza nigripalpus, Barnston's MSS. Fulva, abdominis apice 

 jlavo, palpis nigris, antennis pedibusque fulvis, tarsis obscuriori- 

 bus, alis subfulvis. 



Body tawny, beset with black hairs and bristles : head paler 

 beneath; sides of the face without bristles ; epistoma not prominent: 

 eyes red, convex ; all the facets very small : sucker dark tawny, 

 clothed with tawny hairs ; palpi black,beset with black bristles : feel- 

 ers bright tawny, as long as the face ; third joint flat above, very 

 slightly convex beneath, rounded at the tip, much more than twice 

 the length of the second joint : abdomen slightly tapering from the 

 base to the tip, yellow above towards the tip, narrower, but hardly 

 longer than the chest : legs tawny, clothed with very short black 

 hairs, beset with a few black bristles ; feet darker ; claws black ; 

 foot-cushions pale tawny : wings slightly tawny ; wing-ribs and 

 veins tawny ; lower cross-vein straight, slightly oblique, parted by 

 more than twice its length from the middle cross-vein, by about 

 thrice its length from the tip of the wing, and by nearly half its 



