^n•KrlT^■: report on the south Georgia Expedition. 83 
varicgatiis from the Kermadec Ids. One of these, iiiunciiicola, 
described from two females, must l>e \'ery much like my D. 
fuligiiwsiis from Cliaradriiis sqiicitarola (New 3ihill. Ji, pp. 
80-82, pi. Ill, fig. 2, 1896). To the other, ariiiafus, 1 can 
almost assign my present specimen, and perhaps ought to. 
But my specimen is decidedly larger than the type male, the 
cly])eus is squarely truncate instead of flatly convex, the 
meiathorax is distinctly though flatly angulated behind in- 
stead of being rovmded, and the transverse blotches on the 
dorsum of the abdomen cover practically the whole surface. 
A comparison of the types, howe\-er, might readily throw the 
two species together. 
Male, length 2.09 mm.; width .97; head, length .76 mm., width .79 
mm. ; head, thorax and legs dark golden brown with dark brown mark- 
ings, abdomen blackish brown with the small whitish pustulations at 
bases of the man\' hairs showing rather distinctly. 
Head a little wider than long, with a few short prickle hairs on each 
lateral margin in front of the trabecular, and with two longish and two 
or three short hairs on each temporal margin ; the antennal and occipital 
bands are distinctly indicated and plainly separated by a clear line; the 
clypeal signature is distinct with short, acute, dark brown point. 
Prothorax short and broad, with lateral margins only slightly 
diverging and bordered with dark brown ; a single hair in each postero- 
lateral angle. Metathorax broad and not long, with the posterior 
margin obtusely but distinctly angulated (a little sharper than shown in 
figure) at the middle; a series of nine pustulated hairs along the posterior 
margin on each side of the median angle ; a \'-shaped dark brown mark- 
ing on the disc of the dorsum with its two lines not parallel with the 
posterior margin of the segment but meeting at a sharper angle in the 
middle. 
Abdomen short and broad (as broad as long) and almost wholly 
covered by the dark brown transverse Ijlotches ; series of pustulated 
hairs occur along the posterior margins of the segments to the number 
and of the character shown by fig. 2. 
DoCOrilORL'S PI£ 
MCL'fs SI), nov. 
Two specimens, one male and one female, of this extraor- 
dinary white-bodied, black-banded new Docophonis. were 
taken from Corvus (corone ?) (Cape Verde Ids.; R. C. M.. 
12(13 ). It is like nothing else, not even any of the several 
other strongly marked Corvine Docophori. Its milky white 
ground color and sharp l)lackish markings are indeed 
approached b\- the tvpical Cnr\-ine-infesting Docophori, but 
