J. R. MALLOCH, A NEW EUROPEAN ANTHOMYIID (dIPTERA). 
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fuscous or brown. The scutellar spine subhorizontal or semierect, 
white, sometimes darkish; postscutellar spine suberect, white. Pectus 
fuscous-black, meso-and metapleurae with some linear white markings. 
Elytra extended beyond apex of abdomen, more so in the female 
than in the male, white with the usual tessellate fuscous markings, 
toward apex much more widened in the female than in the male, at 
their widest place in the male less than 2 times, in the female about 
2 1 /a times broader than basal width of pronotum, rounded at apex 
but more or less notched at the tip of the apical vein, stigma with 
two fuscous spots, radial cross-vein straight, the intero-apical sinuosity 
of the membranal cell deep, obtusely angular. Abdomen in the male 
brown, blackish toward apex, in the female blackish, connexivum on 
the upper side with an oblong pale yellowish basal spot to each 
segment, on the under side with a pale yellow lateral line extended 
from the base of the segments to the white spiracles, male genital 
segments luteous. Fore legs white with fuscous rings, coxae with 
two rings, one narrow near middle, the other broader just before 
apex, femora with four rings, the two median narrower than the 
others, tibiae with two rings in the basal half and one apical ring, the 
first ring narrower than the others, apical half of tarsi also fuscous; 
coxae as long as pronotum, femora as long as head and pronotum 
united, narrow and sublinear. Middle and hind legs white, middle 
femora with 8—10, hind femora with 11-14 black rings, the tibiae 
of both pairs with about 12 black annulations, their apical part testa¬ 
ceous without darker rings. 
Florida (Sanford) and Jamaica (Mandeville), in both localities 
taken by Van Duzee. A well marked species not easily confounded 
with any of the others. 
In recording three specimens of this species from Jamaica (two 
of which I have seen) Van Duzee says that he „cannot distinguish 
them from errabunda Say as t found in the United States", but he has 
apparently made a very cursory examination of them. 
A new European Anthomyiid (Diptera). 
By J. R. M a 11 o c h. 
The species described below was sent to me for identification 
by Dr. E. Bergroth accompanied by a notation that the late P. 
Stein had seen it and stated that it was probably undescribed but 
he was not certain what genus to place it in. The species unquestio¬ 
nably belongs to Pogonomyia. 
Pogonomyia inaequalis sp. n. Male. — Black shining, thorax 
greasy in type but probably very indistinctly if at all vittate; abdo¬ 
men gray pruinescent with a slender black dorsocentral vitta. Orbits 
and parafacials with silvery tomentum. Legs black. Wings slightly 
brownish, veins yellowish basally. Calyptrae yellow. Halteres black. 
