79 
Anophelines (Position uncertain). 
white fringe spot at the junction of the upper fork of second 
long vein ; first submarginal cell large, a fourth longer and quite 
as wide as the second posterior, its stem half its length ; second 
posterior cell shorter than first submarginal, its stem nearly as 
long as the cell; upper cross-veins equal and meet, posterior 
cross-vein equal to and a little more than its length distant from 
the mid. Halteres with light stem and dark knob. 
Length .—4 mm. 
Habitat .—Camp Gregg, Pangasinan, Philippine Islands. Taken 
in August. 
Described from one very perfect specimen sent by Capt. 
Schreiner, Asst. Surg. U.S. Army. It is noticeably different 
even to the naked eye from most of the Anophelinae, but I am 
not sure that it belongs to Chagasia, as Mr. Theobald makes the 
outstanding scales of the thorax of generic value, and states 
specifically that the abdomen is nude.” 
POSITION VN CELT AIN. 
• Cellia(?) flava. Ludlow (1908).* 
Mosq. Phil. Isis., 10 (1908). 
“ 9 • Head dark, covered mostly with light yellow or white 
forked scales, a few brown ones lateral and ventral, a heavy 
bunch of very long, slender white curved scales projecting 
forward between the eyes, some brown bristles around the eyes ; 
antennae almost white, a minute brown band at the base of each 
row of verticels, verticels and pubescence white ; palpi almost 
white, basal joint testaceous, the distal half covered with yellow 
and white scales, i.e., the apex with a broad band of white 
followed by a broad yellow band, a minute brown basal band 
on the ultimate and penultimate joints, the antepenultimate is 
distally white, then a broad yellow band occupying most of the 
joint, a narrow basal brown band, and the remainder of the palpi 
heavily scaled by brown with some intermixture of yellow scales. 
Proboscis light, base heavily brown scaled, then a mottled portion 
extending to the distal third, which is covered with light yellow 
scales, except a narrow brown band at its extremity, labella 
light orange • clypeus testaceous ; eyes brown. 
Thorax; prothoracic lobes testaceous, covered with light and 
* Miss Ludlow kindly writes me that this is probably a Nyssorhynchus, 
and not a Geilia. 
