Genus Cellia. 
71 
Season .—April to October. 
Relation to malaria.-—-ISTo evidence.” 
Cellia punctulata. Donitz (1901). 
Anopheles punctulatus. Donitz (1901). 
Anopheles tessellation (nom. mid.). Theobald. 
Myzomyia punctulata. Donitz—-Giles (1904). 
Emsorlmnclim punetulatus. Donitz— Blanchard 
*(1905). 
Insecten-Borse, XVIII., 372 (1901), Donitz; Mono. Onlicid. I., 175 (1901); 
IV., 109 (1907), Theobald. 
Sumatra and Borneo; Taipang, Malay States ; New Guinea. 
Additional localities .—Seariba, 1. iv. 08, three y J s, 13. hi. 08, 
one $ \ Cape Nelson, five 2 ?s i Sndest, two 9 5 s ; Kwata, one 
^ ; Tamata, Mam bare River, -20. viii. 07, one in British New 
Guinea (Dr. R. Fleming Jones). 
Cellia eochii. Donitz (1 901). 
Anopheles hocMi . Donitz (1901). 
Insecten-Borse, XVIII., 37, 2 (1901), Donitz; Mono. Onlicid. I., 174 (1901); 
III., 110 (1903); IV., 110 (1907), Theobald. 
Sumatra and Java; Taipang, Perak; Kuala Lumpur, 
Federated Malay States ■; Singapore. 
Cellia jacobx. Hill and Haydon (1907).*' 
Ann. Natal Mns. L, 144 (1907). 
“ A large black and white mosquito with spotted legs. Palpi 
thickly covered with bushy black scales, a few white interspersed ; 
irregular white bands at apex and last joint;-a very narrow band 
about the middle, and a few white scales in an incomplete ring 
between that and the base. A tuft of white hairs on clypeus, over¬ 
hanging origin of palpi. 
Thorax of sepia, with clothing of narrow-curved white scales forming 
three distinct longitudinal bands ; three white bands on lateral aspect 
of thorax; abdomen black, thickly covered with narrow-curved yellow 
scales and long golden hairs ; a thick lateral tuft of black scales on 
second to seventh segments. 
* The description agrees closely with C. squamosa, but tbe larva seem¬ 
ingly differs in regards to the frontal hairs.—F. V. T. 
