40 A Monograph of Culicidae. 



This, perhaps, is best taken as a variety of smitliii for I can 

 find no structural differences. 



Anopheles ferruginosus. Wiedemann (1828). 



Auss. Zweifllig Ins., p. 12 (1828), Wied. ; Circ. 40, 2nd Se., U.S.A., Dept. 

 AgrL, p. 4 (1889), Coquillett ; Mono. Culicid. I., p. 43 (1901), Theobald ; 

 Class. Mosq. N. and M. America, p. 7 (1906), Coquillett. 



Coquillett shows this not to be a new species, but simply a 

 change of name for Culex quinquefasciatus, Say. 



The species is represented in the Vienna Museum by four 

 specimens of a Culex. It is probably merely Culex pipiens 

 according to Coquillett (p. 7) but he clearly means C. fatigans. 



Anopheles nigripes. Staeger (1839). 



Naturhist. Tidsskv, II., 252, 3 (1839) ; Dipt. Neer. ii., 3, p. 331 (1877), 

 Van d. Wulp; Dipt. Beitr. i., 4, 2 (1845) Low; Fn. Austr. ii., 625, 

 (1864) Schiner; Bull. Soc. Ent. Ital., p. 226 (1896), Ficalbi; Gnats, 

 p. 175, (1900) Giles; Mono. Culicid. II., p. 201 (1901) Theobald; 

 K. Danske Vid. Selsk. Skrift. III., p. 395, 1, I. f. 32-35 (1886) ; Allant. 

 Kozle, p. 37 (1904) Kertesz. 



Additional localities. — Mississippi State (Professor Glenn 

 Herrick), Fort St. Philip, Louisiana ; Fort Screven, Georgia 

 (Miss Ludlow) ; Hungary (Dr. Kertesz). 



Anopheles lindesayi. Giles (1900). 



Handbk. Gnat, 1st ed.,p. 166 (1900), Giles; Mono. Culicid. I., p. 203 (1901), 



Theobald. 



Additional localities. — Reneghat, Bengal, at an elevation of 

 4000 feet (Capts. James and Liston, I. M.S.) ; Dehra Dhoon 

 (Captain W. Thomson). 



Characters of the larva. — Dr. Christophers states that frontal 

 hairs of the larva are simple and unbranched — no thoracic 

 palmate hairs, and that the antennae have a small branched hair, 

 somewhat as seen in barbirostris. 



It appears to be a hill species entirely. 



Anopheles immaculatus. James (1902). 



Malaria in India, p. 45 (1902), James; Mono. Culicid. III., p. 23 (1903), 



Theobald. 



A correction has to be made here — the specimen described 

 seems to have come from Ennur (not Goa), a small village on the 



