232 
A Monograph of Culiciclae. 
antennae with brown plume hairs; the segments yellowish-brown 
above, the lower half white, the areas separated by the verticillate 
hairs. Legs as in the female ; but the fore and mid ungues are 
unequal, both uniserrate, the larger with a large tooth, the 
smaller with a very small one close to the base; hind equal and 
simple. 
Wings with rather long fork-cells, the first longer and 
narrower than the second, their bases nearly level; stem of 
Fig. 98. 
Wing of Culiciomyia uniformis. 3 . n. sp. 
the first one-third the length of the cell, stem of the second 
about one-half the length of the cell; posterior cross-vein 
longer than the mid, about its own length distant from it. 
Abdomen like the 9 > except that 
there are white scales on the dorsum 
the last segment; genitalia with 
V1 short stiff spines on one side near 
\\ \ a pex of clasper, placed in a group 
\] \ backwardly projecting; a prominent 
gg spine on one side as in C. freetown- 
aaiciomyux uniformis. n. sp. ensis > bufc the foHate P late is br0ader - 
Male clasper. Length . — 5 mm. 
Habitat. —Obuasi (Dr. Graham). 
Time of capture. —20. vi. 07 ; 30. ix. 07; 15. viii. 07; 15. 20. 
xii. 07. 
Observations .—Described from a series of $ 5 s and 9’ s taken 
in the bush and on bush paths ; one female taken in bedroom. 
This species comes very near Culiciomyia freetownensis , 
Theobald, but can be told by the much longer fork-cells and 
the slightly different male genitalia. It also resembles Culiciomyia 
nigrochaetae, Theobald, but can be told by the male ungues, 
and from Culex cinereus, Theobald, by the six mid scutellar 
bristles. 
