NEUllOPTERA.' 
519 
in tlie venation of the wings here indicated by Brauer ; Brepanicus = Tri~ 
choscelia ; Bendroleon (Brauer) = Glenurus (TIag.). 
Myiodactylus, g. n.^ Brauer, Verb, zool.-bot. Ges. in Wien, xvi. p, 989. 
Allied to Nymphes j wings broad, rounded at apex, 6th & 6th longitudinal 
veins simple j tibim unarmed. Sp. M. osinyloides, sp. n., Brauer, 1 . c. p. 991, 
pi. 19. fig. 3 (with details), Moreton Bay. 
Rapisma, g. n., MacLachlan, Ent. Trans. 3rd ser. v. p. 353. Allied to 
Rhone ; head concealed under front of prothorax, anterior wings subcoriaceous, 
baf^e of costal area very broad, veinlets very numerous. Type Ilemerohnis 
viridipennis (Walk.). 
Brauer (lleise der Novara, Neur. p. 34) fully describes the characters of 
his genus Ankylopteryx, and figures the wing (tab. 1. fig. 9) ; he also describes 
the species A. anomaluy 1. c. p. 35, A. immaculata, p. 36, A. doleschalii, p. 37, 
Apochrysa coccinea, p. 30, A. nicoharica, p. 32, Chrysopa V-rubrum, p. 39, C. 
ncesonynpha, ibid., and C. atala, p. 40. 
Hagen (Stett. ent. Zeit. 1866, p. 290) remarks on variations occurring in 
Nemoptera Imitanica (Linn.). 
Hagen (Stett. ent. Zeit. 1866, p. 291) remarks on the variations of Man- 
tispa j)crla, and on the supposed species to which these have given rise j 3L 
pagana (Fab.) (Poda). 
Bilar (Rambur). Hagen (Stett. ent. Zeit. 1866, pp. 291-297) discusses 
the position of this genus, which he considers to belong to the Hemerobiidce 
in the immediate vicinity of Rhone. He characterizes the genus at great 
length, and also describes the three species B. nevademis (Ramb.) and B. 
meridionalis and turcicus (Hag.). Other known species are B. nietnei'i, from 
Ceylon, and B. parthenopcem (Costa), from Sicily. 
Ostnylus maculatus (Fab.) = chrysops (Linn.) according to Hagen, 1. c. p. 297. 
Hemerobius pygmmis (Ramb.). Hagen notices the variations of this spe- 
cies, with which H. parvidus (Ramb.) may be identical (/. c. p. 297). 
Chrysopa. Hagen (1. c. pp. 297-301) notices the species of this genus de- 
scribed by E. Pictet from the Spanish peninsula, and remarks on the cha- 
racters of C. stigmatica (Ramb.), which occurs also in Syria, C. guadarramensis 
(Piet.), C. pollens (Ramb.), C. vulgaris (Schn.), C. microcephala (Brauer), C. 
nigropunctata (Piet.), C. aspersa (Wesm.), C. zelleri (Schn.), C. granadensis 
(Piet.), and C. riparia (Piet.). 
MacLachlan characterizes Hemerobius pellucidus (Dale, Walk.) = fusces- 
cens (Wall.) and H. dipterus (Burm.) as British species (Ent. M. Mag. ii. 
p. 269). II. nitidulus (Dale, Walk.) is also described under the new name 
of Sisyra dalii (1. c. p. 268). II. humuli (Steph.) = var. II. nervosus (Fab.) ; 
and H. lutescens, qffinis, paganus, apicaliSy subfasciatus, irroratus., and margi- 
natus (Steph.) = H. humuli (Linn.), 1. c. p. 270. 
W. W. Saunders describes some eggs, probably of Chrysopa, from New 
South Wales, very peculiarly arranged. Proc. Ent. Soc. 1866, p. vii. 
Sisyra dalii and S. terminalis occur near Reigate. MacLachlan, Ent. M. 
Mag. iii. p. 68. 
SlALIDTE. 
Sialis fuliginosa, its occurrence in Dorsetshire noticed by MacLachlan, Ent. 
M. Mag. iii. p. 95. 
Corydalis hecate, sp. n., MacLachlan, Journ. of Ent. ii. p. 499, pi. 20 ( J $ ), 
Brazil. 
