146 
Philippine Journal of Science 
1920 
Mesotrichia cuernosensis Cockerell. 
Eighteen females; the anterior wings from 19 to 23.4 milli- 
meters long. The smallest specimens, compared with the largest, 
look very different, but there are many intermediate sizes. Pre- 
viously known from Negros. There are also three males which 
I can only associate with this species, of which the male has not 
been previously known. They are extremely like the male which 
I have referred to M. bakeriana, but are larger (anterior wing, 
about 20 millimeters), with rich orange-tawny hair on thorax 
above, median band on clypeus not reaching transverse band 
(which is narrow in middle), a well-defined tubercle just below 
clypeal margin, and labrum with yellow hair (tubercle absent 
and labrum fringed with copper-red hair in bakeriana). One 
female of this species was collected at Flores, a barrio near Cu- 
lasi, at flowers of Stachytarpheta jamaicensis (Linn.) Vahl. 
f 
Mesotrichia latipes (Drury). 
Seven females and three males. The wings are purple and 
green, the amount of purple varying. This species is widely 
distributed in tropical Asia. It nests in wood and may have 
been introduced in the Philippine Islands by man. 
Mesotrichia major (Maidl). 
Two males. 
Ceratina tropica Crawford. 
Two females. 
Ceratina philippinensis Ashmead. 
Ten females and nine males. 
Ceratina sexmaculata Smith. 
Two males and fourteen females. One female was taken at 
flowers of Melastoma polyanthum Blume on May 26. 
Allodape marginata Smith. 
Three females. One has the clypeal mark as in A. mindanaonis, 
and all have the hair of hind legs reddish. I think they all belong 
to the same species, but males are needed to make certain. 
Crocisa crucifera Cockerell. 
Twenty-one specimens. The abdominal markings vary from 
blue to greenish. 
Anthophora korotonensis Cockerell. (A. stantoni Cockerell.) 
Eleven females and ten males. One male at flowers of Sta- 
chytarpheta jamaicensis (Linn.) Vahl. 
