309 
Appendix . 
Thorax pale fawn coloured in the middle; dark rich brown 
on each side, and a narrow thin dark median line, the middle 
area with frosty grey tomentum and narrow curved hairs; scu- 
tellum pale ; metanotum chestnut-brown. 
Abdomen deep brown with long golden-brown hairs. Wings 
large, the costa black with three creamy spots, the black 
forming two large black spots which extend over the first long 
vein and the upper branch of the second and base of fork-cell, 
there is also a black patch on the lower branch of the sub¬ 
marginal cell, and two on the stem, one basal; a small dark 
patch at the base of the third long vein, all the rest creamy- 
yellow ; a black patch at the apex of each branch of the second 
posterior cell and another at the base of the cell, greater part of 
the stem dark scaled ; three black patches, the median one large, 
on the upper branch of the fifth vein, base of the fork dark, and 
another dark patch towards the base of the vein; sixth vein 
mostly black scaled with a median pale patch; fringe pale where 
the veins join the border of the wing, except at the ends of the 
fifth vein, which have no pale fringe spot, but a pale area between 
the two branches; supernumerary cross-vein nearer the apex of 
the wing than the mid cross-vein, the posterior cross-vein nearly 
three times its length distant from the mid cross-vein. 
Halteres with dense black knob. 
Legs long, with the coxae and trochanters pale, almost white, 
remainder deep brown with traces of basal pale banding especially 
to the metatarsi and tarsi of the hind legs. 
Length .—5 to 5’5 mm., of wings 6 mm. 
£ . Apices of the palpi pale, a narrow pale band towards 
the base; wings paler than in the 9 • 
Length.-— 6 to 7 mm. 
Habitat. —Conoor, Nehilgerri Hills, India. 
Observations .—A very large and handsome species with wings 
somewhat like A. punctipennis and A. crucians , but the two 
black spots on the costal border very prominent. Colonel Giles 
has presented the types to the Museum. The specimens were 
sent to him by Dr. Price, I.M.S., from Conoor, where the species 
appears fairly common, but does not appear to occur on the 
plains, Conoor lying at an elevation of 6,000 feet above the 
sea level. 
Anopheles culicifacies. Giles. 
(Ento. Mo. Mag. p. 197, 1901.) 
Thorax brown, darker brown at the sides, abdomen brown, 
with deep brown apical bands and slightly darker at the sides, 
and pale basal patches on the apical segments ; legs dark brown, 
unhanded; wings with four almost equal sized pale spots on the 
