ENTOMOLOGY 969 
(Kasongo; Kongolo; Lukuga River; and Niemba), which are very similar to 
H. brunnescens, but differ in the smaller size (8 mm.), the more blackish color- 
ation, and the narrower and more regularly elliptical basal division of the third 
antennal segment. I am inclined to regard them as specifically distinct. They 
appear to be closely allied to H. ingluviosa Austen. 
A. brunnescens has been recorded from the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, Uganda, 
Kenya Colony, and the Katanga District of the Belgian Congo. 
Haematopota sanguinaria Austen 
Haematopota sanguinaria Austen, 1908, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (8) I, p. 417 (2; Lunga River, 
Kasempa District, Northwest Rhodesia). 
Chrysozona sanguinaria J. Bequaert, 1913, Rev. Zool. Afric., II, 3, p. 466, fig. 14 (2). 
BELGIAN Coneo. — Upper Lualaba Valley, 4,000 ft. (S. A. Neave). Panda 
River, October 1920 (Mich. Bequaert). Lufuduzi (Katanga District), Septem- 
ber 1924; Kasese (Katanga), July 1924; Elisabethville, September 1923 (C. 
Seydel). 
This species is rather common in Northern Rhodesia. I have also found it 
in the Katanga District (Sankisia) of the Belgian Congo. 
Haematopota tumidicornis Austen 
Haematopota tumidicornis Austen, 1912, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (8) LX, p. 366 (9; Athi Plains 
Game Reserve, 5,000 ft., Kenya Colony). 
BELGIAN Coneo. — Kundelungu Plateau, at about 1,600 m., one female, 
December 19, 1912. 
This species is known only from Kenya Colony and the Katanga District of 
the Belgian Congo. 
H. tumidicornis forms the transition between Haematopota, proper, and 
Parhaematopota. 'The basal division of the third antennal segment, although 
still fully twice as long as wide, is more expanded than in most species of Haema- 
topota. 
Haematopota furva Austen 
Haematopota furva Austen, 1912, Bull. Ent. Res., III, p. 334, Pl. XI, fig. 7 ( ¢ #; Daro or Durro 
Forest, Uganda); 1926, Ark. f. Zool., XVIII B, No. 6, p. 2 (¢). 
BELGIAN Coneo. — Butagu Valley, Mt. Ruwenzori, at 1,900 m.; Lamia 
Valley, Mt. Ruwenzori, at 1,000 to 2000 m.; Masisi, at 1,800 m.; Boswenda 
(south of Ruchuru), at 1,900 m. Arebi; Gombari (J. Rodhain). 
This species is peculiar to the forests of the northeastern Belgian Congo, 
Uganda, and the western part of Kenya Colony. It was by no means uncommon 
in the mountain forest of the western slopes of Ruwenzori during April and 
June 1914. One of the specimens from the Butagu Valley was sent to Major 
E. E. Austen, who kindly compared it with the type at the British Museum. 
H. furva is not known from East Africa proper. Austen’s record of 1926 
refers to the Ituri District of the Belgian Congo, not to Tanganyika Territory. 
