106 A Monograph of Culicidae. 



Cellia pharoensis. Theobald (1901). 

 Anopheles pharoensis. Theobald (1901). 



Mono. Culicid. I., p. 169 (1901) and III., p. 109 (1903) ; Handbk. Gnats,. 

 2nd ed., p. 302 (1902); Eevis. Anop., p. 45 (1904), Giles; Journ. Hyg. 

 II., p. 49 and 55 (1902) ; Les Moust., p. 214 (1904), Blanchard. 



Additional localities. — Kafr el Dawar, Egypt (F. Willcocks), 

 in June ; British Central Africa (F. O. Stoehr) ; Wadelai, Nile 

 Provinces ; Sircaos, four marches from Wadelai on the banks of 

 the Nile (Dr. Christy) ; Rosaires on the Blue Nile (Dr. Balfour) ; 

 along Suez Canal, Ismailia(Dr. Boos) ; Madagascar (M. Ventrillon)~ 



Note. — Dr. Christy states in a letter that this Cellia " adopts 

 Anopheline attitude when at rest, and that the tent-roof used to 

 be covered with them in the morning, none seen in the evening.'* 



Cellia albimana. Wiedemann (1821).* 

 Cellia cubensis. Agramonte (1900). 

 Anopheles cubensis. Agramonte (1900). 

 Anopheles albipes. sub-sp. Theobald (1901). 

 Cellia albipes. Theobald (1903). 

 Anopheles tarsimaculatus. Goeldi (1905). 



Dipt. Exot. L, p. 10 (1821), Wiedemann; El progresso Medico, X., p. 460 

 (1900), Agramonte; Mono. Culicid. I., p. 125 (1901), and III., p. 110 

 (1903) ; Mosquitoes of Jamaica, p. 15 (1905) ; Handbk. Mosq., 2nd ed., 

 p. 300 (1902), Giles; Kevis. Anop., p. 46 (1904), Giles; Les Moust.„ 

 p. 204 (1905), Blanchard. ; Os Mosq. n. Para, p. 133 (1905), Goeldi. 



Additional localities. — Potaro Road, British Guiana (W. J. 

 Kaye), in May ; in Jamaica it is very common at the Ferry and 

 Rockfort Swamps, and over the Lignanea Plain. Dr. Grabham 

 also records it from Bath, Bowden, Annotto Bay, Port Antonio, 

 Bluefields. Castleton, and Spaldings. Runaway Bay in April 

 (Lord Walsingham). 



Specimens collected by Lord Walsingham had very prominent, 

 thoracic ocelli and a black spot on part of the scutellum. 



Life-history and habits. — Breeding grounds very variable, such 

 as rivers, large swamps, small swamps, irrigated cane-fields, 

 ditches, trenches, canals, small water-ways and water-holes and 



* Blanchard (p. 202) takes Wiedemann's albimanus to be Robineau 

 Desvoidy's argyrotarsis. I think there is no doubt, however, that Coquillett 

 is right and that albimanus is my albipes. 





