234 A Monograph of Culicidae. 
cell; posterior cross-vein a little longer than the mid, rather 
more than twice its own length distant from it. 
Length. —4 mm. 
Habitat. —Trincomalee, Ceylon (Green). 
Time of capture. —x. 07. 
Observations .—Described from one perfect $. A very 
marked dark Ouliciomyia with noticeable abdominal handing. 
Like C. ceylonica, Theobald, hut at once told by the abdominal 
basal bands and different fork-cells. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Ouliciomyia ceylonica. Theobald (1907). 
Mono. Culicid. IV., 236 (1907). 
Ceylon. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Ouliciomyia annulata. Theobald (1907). 
Mono. Culicid. IV., 280 (1907). 
Sarawak (Kuching). 
Type in the British Museum. 
Ouliciomyia pulla. Theobald (1905). 
Culex pullus. Theobald (1905). 
Ann. Mus. Nat. Hung. III., 87 (1905); Mono. Culicid. IV., 232 (1907), 
Theobald. 
Muina, New Guinea. 
Type in the National Museum, Budapest. 
Ouliciomyia dalzieli. nov. sp. 
Head grey and brown in the middle, with a large black spot 
on each side, then a white spot, then black. Proboscis and 
palpi black. Thorax rich brown with two pale creamy spots in 
front, two nearer together in the middle and some scattered 
golden scales in the middle, two pairs of lateral pale spots 
following on from the first; scutellum pale scaled. Abdomen 
black with basal white bands. Legs black, unbanded. 
9 • Head dark grey, with a median triangular patch of 
very small bronzy narrow-cupved scales not extending back to 
the nape, on each side large irregular grey narrow-curved scales, 
