Appendix. 325 
have a more or less regular angular enlargement in the middle in 
each segment; venter pale ochraceous. 
Wings with the veins covered with typical brown Culex 
scales, dark along the upper border ; the first sub-marginal cell 
very little longer and about the same width as the second 
posterior cell, its base nearer the apex of the wing than the base 
Fig. 305. 
Culex angulatus. n. sp. 
Wing of 9 and abdominal ornamentation. 
of the second posterior; the first sub-marginal cell two and a half 
times as long as its stem, which is longer than the stem of the 
second posterior cell; both fork-cells long ; posterior cross-vein 
much longer than the mid cross-vein, about its own length 
distant from it; halteres with a pale ochraceous stem and fuscous 
knob. 
Legs brown, unbanded, long and thin, pale at the base ; 
ungues equal and simple. 
Length .—4 to 4-5 mm. 
Habitat .—ISTaini Tal (4000 feet), Giles. 
Time of capture. —-June. 
Observations .—Described from two 9’s in Lieut.-Colonel Giles’s 
collection, who pointed out on the label the peculiar banding of 
the abdomen. They are clearly distinct, but come near C. fatigans, 
from which they can be told by the venation, relatively longer legs, 
smaller thoracic scales and abdominal ornamentation. 
Culex tipuliformis. n. sp. 
Thorax brown, with narrow golden-brown curved scales, 
paler behind ; pleurae with white scales. Abdomen dark brown 
with basal white median semicircular patches on segments two 
to five, basal bands spreading out laterally on the apical 
