573 
Genus Evetmapodites. 
the second, its stem a little more than one-third the length of 
the cell, its base nearer the base of the wing than that of the 
second ; stem of the second about as long as the cell; posterior 
cross-vein slightly more than its own length distant from the 
mid cross-vein. 
Length .—5*5 to 4 mm. 
£ . Head, thorax, abdomen, like the 9 • Palpi black, thin, 
no hair tufts, not as long as the proboscis, the last two segments 
of nearly equal length. Fore and mid ungues very unequal and 
simple, hind equal and simple. 
Wings similar to 9 > but the posterior cross-vein is not quite 
its own length distant from the mid. Genitalia small, claspers 
curved with long hairs and small scales on one side, and with a 
small lateral dark thick terminal spine. 
Length.— 5 to 4 mm. 
Habitat .—Wilberforce, Free Town (E. E. Austen); Sierra 
Leone (Captain Gratton). 
Time of capture .—3, 14, 24. ix. 99. 
Observations. —Mr. Austen bred this species from larvae in 
roadside puddles and in an old bottle. This species is very near 
Graham’s chrysogaster, but differs in the silvery-scaled head, 
different £ ungues and genitalia, and also near his melanopus, 
but the male clasper has a terminal spine, and the 9 antennae 
have yellow scales on the basal and second segment. I cannot 
trace any signs of scales or chaetae on the metanotum of the £ 
and 9’s I have examined. Newstead (Anns. Trop. Med. and 
Parasitology, I., 1. 13. 1907) says they are quite evident in both 
quinquevittata and austenii in the 9’s. I noted in one 9 a false 
squamose appearance only. 
Genus GOELDIA. Theobald (1903). 
Mono. Culicid. III., 330 (1903). 
A single species only so far described. 
Goeldia fluviatilis. Theobald (1903). 
Mono. Culicid. III., 331 (1903). 
British Guiana; Brazil. 
Type in the British Museum. 
