Collections of Mosquitoes received at British Museum. 363 
No. 
Place and Name of Collector 
or Sender. 
Specimens, &c. 
Registered 
Number. 
Received. 
69 
Collected by Lt.-Col. 
R. Macrae, I.M.S., 
assisted by Assistant- 
Surgeon Jogeesur Mu- 
kerjee. Forwarded by 
Col. T. H. Hendley, 
C.I.E., I.M.S., Sur¬ 
geon-General of Civil 
Hospitals, Bengal 
196 mosquitoes, Culex 
and Anopheles, 
nearly all in frag¬ 
ments, eaten by 
Psoci 
820/1900 
30 Apr. 1900 
70 
Italy— 
Prof. Grassi 
7 mosquitoes, typical 
named specimens 
of 4 species 
11 May 1900 
71 
Queensland, Burpengary, 
via, Brisbane — 
Dr. Thos. L. Bancroft 
65 Culex, 15 Ano¬ 
pheles, 160 other 
Diptera, in fair con¬ 
dition 
22 May 1900 
No letter 
72 
Washington— 
L. 0. Howard, Depart¬ 
ment of Agriculture 
24 named Culicidae 
1002/1900 
26 May 1900 
73 
Punjab, Hushiapur— 
Dr. D. N. P. Datta, 
Civil Surgeon 
15 Culex, and 6 small 
Homoptera, in fair 
condition 
1054/1900 
Letter, June 
4 ; insects, 
June 11 
74 
! Belize, Brit. Honduras— 
Colonial Secretary, per 
W. I. McKinney, Act¬ 
ing Colonial Secretary, 
Colonial Secretary’s 
| Office 
32 Culex, 10 Taba- 
nidae 
918/1900 
12 June 1900 
75 
| Adelaide— 
Director of S. Australia 
Museum. Forwarded 
by Lord Tennyson, 
Governor of S. Aus¬ 
tralia, through the 
Colonial Office 
43 Culex, and 31 
Midges, in good 
condition 
1 
1153/1900 
18 June 1900 
76 
Mombasa, The Fort—• 
Lieut. I. D. McKay 
33 Mosquitoes, with 
other insects. Poor 
condition 
11127/1900 
20 June 1900 
77 
Mombasa, The Fort— 
Lieut. I. D. McKay 
20 Culex, with moths, 
&c., much mite- 
eaten, some in frag¬ 
ments 
19 July 1900 
78 
Senegambia, &c.— 
Dr. Rees, Lond. School 
of Tropical Medicine 
8 Culex from Sene¬ 
gambia, 4 Culex 
from the Albert 
1 Dock 
21 July 1900 
