i8 7 
Abdomen with the tip truncate, brownish black, clothed with numerous fine 
pale hairs; a row of lateral segmental posterior tufts of black spatulate 
outstanding scales; beneath with tufts of black scales and with scattered white 
ones. 
Wings hyaline, the petiole of the second marginal cell as long as its cell ; basal 
cross-vein distant about its own length from the anterior cross-vein ; scales of the 
veins ovate, white on the costa and first vein, pale yellow on the others, with black 
scales and spots as follows :— 
Three costal spots, the first small, involving two veins, the others large, 
involving three veins, the membrane beneath infuscated ; no apical spot; costa and 
first vein with two or three little black spots between each of the large ones, the 
outer spot involving the base of the fork of the second vein ; each fork with two 
little spots beyond ; third vein with two spots at the base and two at the tip; fourth 
vein with a spot at the base, a large one involving the base of the fork, three on 
the upper branch and two on the lower; fifth vein with some black scales at the 
base, five spots on the upper fork, two on the lower; sixth vein with some irregular 
black scales toward the base, a spot in the middle and one at the tip. 
Legs long and slender, black, speckled with white. Femora with about eight 
spots; tibiae with about fourteen, being about as many black scales as white ones; 
hind tarsi with ten spots on the first joint, second, third and fourth joints white 
at the base and tip, with a ring beyond the middle; fifth joint all white. Front 
tarsi with narrow white rings at bases and apices of the joints, the last entirely 
pale; mid tarsi not distinctly ringed. Claw simple. Length about 5 mm.; of the 
wing, 4 mm. 
Anopheles (?) punctimacnlata 
As in A. slrigi macula, D. and IC., but the last vein with a row of black dots. 
Only one specimen of this species is known. It was taken at Colon (W. M. 
Black, collector). 
Anopheles (?) cruzii 
This species was examined only in the larval state, through the kindness of 
Mr. A. H. Jennings. No adult specimens were obtained and none ever received 
from or taken from quarters. This is significant on account of the peculiar 
tree-living habits of this species, and the probably groundless fear that it might 
be a malaria carrier. 
Anopheles (?) eiseni 
Near A. maculipennis, but with a patch of whitish scales on the first vein 
before its middle and another at its apex, also the apical fourth of the in ti lae 
is yellowish-white. Halteres black, the stem whitish; coxae and a vitta on lower 
part of pleura, yellow, femora yellowish-brown, apical fourth of lund tibiae 
yellowish-white; antennae of male whitish, the first joint, last two, and fascia on 
each of the others, brown ; scales of palpi black, those of apex and two bands in e 
female, three in the male, white; scales of occiput black, those in the midd eso 
u pper part white; mesonotum greyish pruinose, marked towards eac 1 si e ' V1 
velvet black vitta; scales of abdomen black, the hairs yellowish, scales of fern 
and tibiae mixed black and whitish, those on the apical whitish por ion 
tibiae white, those on the tarsi black ; tarsal claws on female simple; wings y a , 
the veins and scales brown, a dense patch of black ones at base o s ^° 11 . , ’ . 
larger one on the cross-veins and a smaller one at bases of fir= su - g 
