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are brilliant blue, and there is a frontal protuberance like that of 
Hunchomyia , but the metathorax appears nude. 
The female palpi are very small, and the extremely long proboscis, 
is paler at the tip. The wing has the fork-cells rather longer than is 
usual in the genus. 
A rather small species. 
Habitat .—The Philippine Islands. “ Caught in the woods.” 
Note. —C. S. Banks says : “ This species is identical with 
Hunchomyia philippinensis, Giles, and belongs to neither of these 
genera, though I cannot now place it.” 10. ix. 08. Note in 
British Museum on type. 
Carter has examined the type, and says it is certainly not a 
Uranotaenia, and is the same as Hunchomyia philippinensis. 
Genus PSEUDOURANOTAENIA. Theobald (1905). 
Journ. Geo. Biol. I., 88 (1905); Mono. Culicid. IV., 566 (1907), Theobald. 
Two new species have been added to this genus by Miss. 
Ludlow, so that it contains at present three species. Unfortu¬ 
nately I have been unable to see either of Miss Ludlow’s species. 
Pseudouranotaenia ROWLANDii. Theobald (1905). 
Journ. Eco. Biol. I., 34 (1905); Mono. Culicid. IV., 567 (1907). 
Stanley Town, New Amsterdam, British Guiana. 
Type in the British Museum. 
Pseudouranotaenia parangensis. Ludlow (1908). 
Mosq. Philip. Isis., 10 (1908), Ludlow (nom nud). 
“ Head brown, covered with flat scales, dark brown except 
a broad band of white scales around the eyes, meeting at the 
vertex, a few black bristles projecting forward; antennae brown, 
verticels and pubescence brown, basal joint testaceous; palpi 
minute, brown ; proboscis brown, apex swollen ; clypeus brown 
eyes brown. 
Thorax : prothoracic lobes heavily clothed with white flat 
scales ; mesonotum brown, partly denuded, but with brown 
curved scales scattered over it and more completely covering it 
laterally, a line of outstanding white or bluish-white scales. 
c 
