986 REPORT OF THE HARVARD AFRICAN EXPEDITION 
Stygeromyia sanguinaria Austen 
Stygeromyia sanguinaria Austen, 1909, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (8) III, p. 286 ( 9 ; Ruwe, Belgian 
Congo, and Monkey Bay, Lake Nyasa); 1909, ‘Illustr. African Blood-Suck. Flies,’ p. 137. 
. This species is known only from the holotype (), from the Katanga Dis- 
trict of the Belgian Congo, and allotype (¢), from Nyasaland. 
Bdellolarynx Austen 
Bdellolarynx Austen, 1909, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (8) III, p. 290. Monotypic for Bdellolarynz 
sanguinolentus Austen, 1909. 
Haematobia Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830, ‘Essai sur les Myodaires,’ p. 388 (not of Lepeletier and 
Serville). Brauer and v. Bergenstamm, 1889, Denkschr. Ak. Wiss. Wien, Math.-Naturw. 
Cl., LVI, p. 155 (select Stomoxys stimulans Meigen, 1824, as type). Patton, 1925, Philippine 
Jl. Sei., XXVIT, p. 189. Séguy, 1923, ‘Faune de France, Diptéres, Anthomyides,’ p. 348. 
Lyperosiops C. H. T. Townsend, 1912, Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, XIV, p. 47. Type by original 
designation: Stomoxys stimulans Meigen, 1824. 
? Bdellia Enderlein, 1928, Zeitschr. Angew. Entom., XIV, 2, p. 359. Monotypic for Bdellia 
praedatrix Enderlein, 1928.1 
I have tentatively followed Patton (1925) and Malloch (1928) in regard- 
ing Stomoxys stimulans Meigen as not generically separable from Bdellolarynx 
sanguinolentus Austen. If this procedure is correct, the genus Bdellolarynx is 
widely distributed in the Old World. Malloch has also described a species 
from South America. ‘Two African species appear to belong here: 
B. (2?) praedatrix (Enderlein) = Bdellia praedatrix Enderlein, 1928, Zeitschr. Angew. 
Entom., XIV, 2, p. 360, figs. 2-3 (9; Bomana and Bibundi, Cameroon). 
B. squalida (Grinberg) = Haematobia squalida Griinberg, 1913, Entom. Rundschau, XXX, 
pp. 126 and 132(%; Bulia, Tanganyika Territory; misspelled ‘soualida”’ on p. 126). Haematobia 
lutosa Patton, 1925, Philippine Jl. Sci., XX VII, p. 189 (<7, ‘‘Kenya Colony’’; this was evidently 
the type of H. squalida, since Grinberg described no other African species in this genus, and Patton 
credits the name “‘lutosa”’ to that author). 
Haematobia Lepeletier and Serville 
Haematobia Lepeletier and Serville, 1828, ‘Encyclop. Méthod., Insectes,’ X, 2, p. 499. Type by 
designation of Westwood, 1840, ‘Introd. Modern Classif. Insects,’ Il, Synopsis, p. 140: 
Conops irritans Linnaeus, 1758. 
Lyperosia Rondani, 1856, ‘ Dipter. Ital. Prodr.,’ I, p. 93. Monotypic for Conops writans Linnaeus, 
1758. 
Priophora Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863, ‘Hist. Nat. Dipt. Env. Paris,’ I, p. 611. Monotypie for 
Haematobia serrata Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830 = Conops irritans Linnaeus, 1758. 
Glossinella Griinberg, 1906, Zoolog. Anzeiger, XXX, p. 84. Monotypic for Glossinella schillingsi 
Griinberg, 1906. 
Haphospatha Enderlein, 1924, Konowia, III, p. 51; 1928, Zeitschr. Angew. Entom., XIV, 2, 
pp. 357 and 363. Monotypic for Haphospatha hirudo Enderlein, 1924. 
The characters used by Enderlein (1928) to separate Haematobia, Glossinella, 
and Haphospatha are hardly even of subgeneric value. The following seven 
Ethiopian species belong to Haematobia as here understood: 
1. Haematobia hirudo (Enderlein) = Haphospatha hirudo Enderlein, 1924, Konowia, 
III, p. 52 (2; Kuti, Ntem and Banje Riben; all in Cameroon). 
1 Since Enderlein does not tell whether the propleura and hypopleura are bare or hairy, it is impos- 
sible to decide from his description whether Bdellia is a synonym of Bdellolarynx or of Haematobosca. 
