380 
A Monograph of Culiciclae. 
Legs ochreous with dusky scales above ; femora pale below ; 
a naked yellow and black line showing on the femora and tibiae ; 
ungues dark, all equal and uniserrate, rather thick. 
Wings tinged with yellow, some pale scales on the costa and 
sub-costal, remainder dark, except for a few creamy ones on the 
base of the first long vein ; first sub-marginal cell much longer and 
narrower than the second posterior cell, its base slightly nearer 
the base of the wing, its stem about two and a half times the 
length of the cell; stem of the broad second posterior as long 
as the cell; posterior cross-vein about the same length as the 
mid, not its own length distant from it. 
Length .—5 • 5 mm. 
Habitat .—Madras (Madras Town). 
Time of capture. —30. x. 08. 
Observations .—Described from two 9 A very marked 
species easily told by the thoracic ornamentation, ochreous scaled 
abdomen and lined legs. 
Type in the Indian Museum, Calcutta. 
Culex scholasticus. Theobald (1901). 
Mono. Culicid. II., 120 (1901); III., 224 (1903). 
Trinidad ; British Guiana; Calliagua, St. Vincent. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Culex modestus. Ficalbi (1889). 
Bull. Soc. Ent. Ital. XXI. (1889), Ficalbi; Mono. Culicid. II., 
122 (1901), Theobald. 
Marshes near Ravenna, Italy. 
Culex virgultus. Theobald (1901). 
Mono. Culicid. II., 123 (1901). 
Rio de Janeiro. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Culex masculus. Theobald (1901). 
Mono. Culicid. II., 125 (1901). 
Freetown, Sierra Leone. 
Type in the British Museum. 
