20 A Monograph of Culicidae. 
Myzomyia longipalpis. Theobald (1903). 
f r 
Mono. Cnlicid. III., 37 (1903). 
British Central Africa. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Myzomyia aconita. Donitz (1902). 
Anopheles aconita. Donitz (1902). 
Beitr., z.d. Anopheles, p. 70 (1902), Donitz ; Mono. Culicid. III., 30 
(1903), Theobald. 
Sumatra, Java.*' 
Myzomyia d’thali. Patton (1905). 
Anopheles ( Myzomyia) d’thali. Patton (1905). 
Journ. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., Nov. 2, 627, 1905. 
“ Palpi (of 9 ) with two white bands ; thorax light brown 
covered with curved scales. Abdomen greenish with darker 
patches in parts. Legs brown with yellowish bands at the 
joints. 
9 . Head light brown with many long light brown upright 
forked scales ; clypeus grey, antennae light brown with light 
and dark hairs. Palpi lightly scaled with two white hands, one 
at the junction of the middle with the upper third, and the 
second at the junction of the middle and lower third. The apex 
is dark. 
Thorax yellowish-brown covered with pale curved hairs and 
scales. The sides of the mesothorax are greenish in some lights ; 
scutellum is brown with a few curved scales. 
Abdomen greenish with darker patches, is covered with light 
brown hairs. 
Legs are brown with faint yellow bands at all the joints. 
Wing, the costa has four black spots, the basal spot being the 
longest; the sub-costal has one black spot near its termination. 
The first long vein has four black spots corresponding to the four 
on costa. The remainder of the wing field is pale ; the wing 
fringe is dark. There are no pale patches. 
* Tsuzuki’s Anopheles formosaensis (Archiv. fur,. Schiffs- und Tropen- 
Hygiene VI., 287 [1902]), from N. Formosa, is said by Donitz (Zeitschrift' 
fur Hygiene XLIII., 233 [1903]) to be pnly a variety of his aconita and he 
names the variety cohaesa. It transmits malaria. 
