184 
A Monograph of Culicidae. 
Stegomyia amesii. Ludlow (1903). 
Stegomyia nivea v. amesii. Ludlow (1903). 
Journ. N.Y. Ent. Soc. XI., 139 (1908), Ludlow; Gen. Ins. Culicid., 19 
(1905), Theobald ; Philip. Journ. Sci. I., 9,984 (1906), Banks; Mono. 
Culicid. IV., 191 (1907), Theobald; Mosq. Philip. Isis., 10 (1908), 
Ludlow. 
Philippine Islands. 
Note. —Banks refers to this in his list as Stegomyia nivea 
amesii , Ludlow. 
Stegomyia crassipes. Van der Wulp (1892). 
' Culex crassipes. Van der Wulp (1892). 
Dipt, der Midd. Sumatra, 9 (1892), Van der Wulp; Mono. Culicid. I.l 320 
(1901), Theobald ; Handbk. of Gnats, 381, 2nd ed. (1902), Giles ; Journ. 
Trop. Med. VII., 367 (1904), Giles; Gen. Ins. Culicid., 19 (1905), 
Theobald; Les Moust., 258 (1905), Blanchard ; Phil. Journ. Sci. I., 
9, 984 (1906), Banks. 
Soeroelaugoen, Sumatra; Upper Burma. 
Additional locality. —Pampanga, Camp Stotensberg, Angeles, 
P. I. (E. R. Whitmore) (in Banks). 
Stegomyia lamberti. Ventrillon (1904). 
Bull, de Mus. d’Hist. Nat., No. 8, 550 (1904), Ventrillon. 
Madagascar. I have not had time to tabulate this species. 
Stegomyia (?) leucomeres. Giles (1904). 
Journ. Trop. Med. VII., p. 367, Dec. 1 (1904). 
“ This species closely resembles S. albocephala , but differs from 
that species in the abdominal terga being jet black, without lateral 
spots, while the venter, instead of being black, has brilliant broad 
wdiite basal bands. The wings, tarsi, proboscis, and abdominal terga 
are absolutely unadorned, and the thorax is rather like that of 
S. gubernatoris , having large external spots, and median linear 
ornament in front, and some other white markings behind. 
9 . The occiput is white, with a large central flat scaled black 
patch on the nape, notched somewhat in front in the middle. Pro¬ 
boscis, palpi, and antennae sooty; pleurae mainly white scaled. 
Almost the inner half of the hind femora is pure white above, and 
even more extensively so below, and the bases of the other femora 
and the apices of all of them shqw-white spots. Scutellum with flat 
black scales. The hinder abdominal segments are much compressed 
