1945] Panorpidce from China 75 
is the same size and has the wing markings and color of the 
male S type, which I examined in the Museum National in Paris. 
The type locality of cavaleriei is Kweiyang, Kweichow Prov- 
ince, some 600 miles from East Kwantung, but Navas has also 
recorded the species from Tonkin, Indo-China, and “Tibet.” 
The subgenital plate of the specimen from Yim Na San is shown 
in figure 4, and the internal skeleton in figure 7. The latter is 
somewhat like that of parva , but has blade-like and twisted 
arms. The wing membrane and markings of cavaleriei are 
similar to those of the Formosan N. opthalmica Navas, but the 
internal skeletal plate of the female of opthalmica , which is well 
represented in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, is very 
different from that shown in figure 7. 
Neopanorpa pulchra, n. sp. 
Text-figure 6; Plate 11, fig. 12. 
Body light brown, slightly darker above. Fore wing: length, 
14 mm.; width, 3 mm. Membrane hyaline, markings gray- 
brown. Apical band wide and entire, contiguous with ptero- 
stigmal band along costal margin ; pterostigmal band wide, with 
a short fork posteriorly; basal band entire. Subgenital plate 
like that of parva but with a more shallow distal notch. In- 
ternal skeleton broader than long with widely divergent arms 
and no axis. S unknown. 
Holotype ( $ ) : Museum of Comparative Zoology, no. 2 7328. 
Ta Han, Hainan Island, Kiangsi Province, June 23, 1935 (L. 
Gressitt). 
There is a second specimen in the collection which almost 
certainly belongs to this species, but since the end of the ab- 
domen has been broken off, I have not designated it a paratype. 
It was collected at Hong San, southeast Kiangsi Province, July 
15, 1936 (L. Gressitt). 
This species has the general wing pattern of parva but the 
wing is more slender and has more extensive markings. The 
internal skeleton differs in having widely divergent arms. 
Neopanorpa pilosa, n. sp. 
Text-figures 1, 2 
Body light brown, the vertex, thoracic nota and first four 
abdominal tergites dark brown. Male with the median process 
of the third abdominal tergite well developed, reaching almost 
