J5S 
A Monograph of. Culieidae, 
says ; “ This was the only one I took. It was a perfect speci¬ 
men when an accident overtook it. I captured it in the act of 
biting my arm, at dusk, at the foot of the gebels at Gebelein. 
It appears to be near 8. scutellaris, but is separated by the two 
white spots on the mesothorax and the white scales before the 
scutellum, connected with the spots by traces of white lines. 
The head agrees with the description of S. scutellaris 
It is certainly a very marked species and can at once be told 
by the thoracic adornment. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Stegomyia fasciata. Fabricius (1805). 
Culex fasciata. Fabricius (1805). 
Gulex calopus . Meigen (1818). 
Stegomyia calopus. Blanchard (1818). 
Stegomyia fasciata. Fabricius Theobald (1901). 
Culex taeniatus. Wiedemann (1898). 
Culex elegans. Ficalbi (1896). 
Culex rossii. Giles (1899). 
Culex exagitans. Walker (1856). 
Culex honoupi . Brulle (1832). 
Culex zonatipes. Walker (1861). 
Culex formosus . Walker (1848). 
Culex frater. Rob. Desvoidy (1887). 
Culex excitans . Walker (1848). 
Culex viridifrons. Walker (1848). 
Culex inexorahilis. Walker (1848). 
Culex bancrofti. Skuse (1886). 
Culex mosquito . Arribalzaga (1891). 
Culex annulitarsis. Macquart (1848). 
Culex impatibilis. Walker (1860). 
Syst. Antliorum, 36, 13 (1805), Fabricius; Mono. Culicid. I., 289 (1901); 
III., 141 (1908); IV., 176 (1907), Theobald; Rec. Ind. Mus. II., pt. iii., 
No. 30, 291 (1908), Theobald. 
The large number of localities from which this species has 
been recorded cannot be mentioned here; it occurs in Africa, 
Asia, Australia, 1ST. and 8. America and S. Europe, on most 
oceanic islands and in all thp W. Indies and the E, Indies, in 
China and Japan. 
