842 REPORT OF THE HARVARD AFRICAN EXPEDITION 
Taeniorhynchus (Coquillettidia) fuscopennatus Theobald 
Taeniorhynchus fuscopennatus Theobald, 1903, ‘Monogr. Culic.,’ III, p. 265, figs. 141-143, Pls. 
XIII and XIV ( ¢ &; Entebbe, Uganda). Edwards, 1911, Bull. Ent. Res., H, p. 253; 1912, 
loc. cits, TL, p=26. 
Culex drymoecius Speiser, 1909, ‘Wiss. Ergebn. Schwed. Zool. Exp. Kilimandjaro,’ I, 10, 4, p. 42 
(9; Kibonoto, Kilimanjaro, 2,000 m.; and Mombo, Usambara; all in Tanganyika Territory). 
Chrysoconops bakeri Theobald, 1911, ‘Novae Culicidae,’ I, p. 19, figs. 9-11 (9; Kampala, 
Uganda). 
BELGIAN Congo. — Nya Ngezi, in the valley of the Ruzizi River, at an alti- 
tude of about 1,300 m. (4,290 ft.), February 3, 1927. 
Uaanpa. — Kisolo, at about 5,000 ft. altitude, several females in the rest- 
house, biting man in the evening, April 3, 1927. Kabale, 6,400 ft., April 9, 1927. 
Entebbe, April 14, 1927. Kampala, April 13, 1927. 
T. fuscopennatus appears to be restricted to East Africa. Seydel (1929, 
Rev. Zool. Bot. Afric., XVIII, p. 31) calls attention to the fact that this is one 
of the very few mosquitoes found above 2,000 m. in the Kivu region. He 
records it from the northwestern shore of Lake Tanganyika (Mwaba and Mu- 
singiro), from Kisenyi, and from Tshibinda (10 kilom. west of Lake Kivu, at the 
altitude of 2,100 m.). 
Taeniorhynchus (Mansonioides) uniformis (Theobald) 
Panoplites uniformis Theobald, 1901, ‘Monogr. Culic.,’ II, p. 180, Pl. XXX, fig. 118 ( 2; Quilon, 
Travancore, 8. India, and Taiping, Perak). 
Mansonioides uniformis Edwards, 1913, Bull. Ent. Res., IV, 1, p. 51, fig. 1. 
Panoplites africanus var. reversus Theobald, 1901, ‘Monogr. Culic.,’ Il, p. 189 ( 9; Zomba, 
Nyasaland). 
Panoplites australiensis Giles, 1902, ‘Handbook of Gnats or Mosquitoes,’ 2d Ed., p. 355 ( @; Bur- 
pengary, Queensland). 
BruGian Conco: Congo River, on board ship at Yumbi, December 15, 1926. 
Kinshasa (taken by Dr. Duren). Uvira, January 26, 1927. Luvungi, January 
30, 1927. 
The larva, although not yet described, has probably habits similar to those 
of the closely related T. africanus (see below).! In Abyssinia this species has 
been found up to 6,000 ft. altitude. 
T. uniformis is distributed throughout Tropical Africa, from Sierra Leone to 
the Bahr-el-Ghazal, Abyssinia, Kenya Colony, Mozambique, and Angola. It 
has been found outside Africa, throughout the Oriental Region as far as New 
Guinea, northern Australia, Queensland, and the Solomon Islands. 
Taeniorhynchus (Mansonioides) africanus Theobald 
Panoplites africanus Theobald, 1901, ‘Monogr. Culic.,’ IT, p. 187 ( 2; Fort Johnston and Chiromo, 
Nyasaland; Lagos and Old Calabar, 8. Nigeria). 
Mansonioides africanus Edwards, 1912, Bull. Ent. Res., II, p. 378, fig. 3 (larva); 1913, loc. cit., IV, 
1, p. 52, fig. 2. Ingram and Macfie, 1917, loc. cit., VIII, p. 137, fig. 1, Pl. I, figs. 2-3 (larva). 
1 Dr. Duren has recently (1929, Rev. Zool. Bot. Afric., XVII, 2, pp. [26] —[27]) published a note 
on the larvae of Mansonioides found attached to the rootlets of Pistia stratzotes, at Boma, Belgian Congo. 
Unfortunately he does not state which species was bred from them. 
