1018 REPORT OF THE HARVARD AFRICAN EXPEDITION 
The fork of vein 2nd A larger and more sprawly, the longer branch approximately twice 
ae and provided with macrotrichia; m-cu more than its length before the fork 
i Se ee ek eee eee Te er ne tree ee eee hey 
2. Legs variegated, black, all femora with the apex and a subterminal ring yellow. (Fig. 10, 7). 
anthracogramma Bergroth. 
Legs uniformly blackened. (Fig. 10, 6). bequaertiana, sp. 1. 
The wing-pattern (Fig. 10, 6, 7, 8) of all three species is very similar. The 
character of a spur within cell /st M2, together with the shape of the fork of 
vein 2nd A is probably a variable character or else there remain still other species 
close to anthracogramma to be defined. 
Podoneura bequaertiana, new species 
Text Fig. No. 10, 6 
Characters as in P. anthracogramma; legs entirely black. 
Male. — Length about 5 mm.; wing 6 mm. 
Described from an alcoholic specimen. 
Rostrum pale; palpi dark brown. Antennae with the scape light yellow, the flagellum brown- 
ish black; flagellar segments oval, the outer segments more elongate. Head dark, the orbits more 
pruinose. 
Mesonotal praescutum and scutum chiefly dark, probably pruinose in fresh specimens; 
scutellum chiefly obscure yellow, darkened medially at base; postnotum dark. Pleura chiefly 
pale, variegated longitudinally with dark brown, this including extensive areas on the sternopleu- 
rite and meron; a narrower, more dorsal, dark stripe. Halteres pale, the base of the knobs dark 
brown, the tips conspicuously pale. Legs with the fore coxae and trochanters dark brown; re- 
maining coxae and trochanters brownish yellow; remainder of legs uniformly brownish black, 
the femora unvariegated. Wings (Fig. 10, 6) relatively narrow, the ground-color creamy, with a 
conspicuous but restricted grayish brown pattern, appearing as seams at origin of Rs; Sc; Re, 
connecting posteriorly with a seam along the cord; outer end of cell 1st M2; m-cu; rounded mar- 
ginal clouds at ends of veins R, +2, R3, M3 and all remaining veins, including the forked second 
anal vein; apical clouds on R,, Rs, and M,+. much less distinct; veins pale, darker in the in- 
fuscated areas. Venation: Sc; ending opposite r-m; Rs long and straight; a conspicuous spur at 
union of m and M3, jutting basad into cell 7st M2, much as in Hoplolabis; m-cu far before the fork 
of M; fork of vein 2nd A about as in anthracogramma Bergroth. 
Abdominal tergites dark brown, the sternites a little paler. Male hypopygium with the outer 
dististyle long and slender, gradually narrowed to an acute point, at near two-thirds the length 
on outer margin with a small acute lateral branch. Inner dististyle shorter, appearing as a broadly 
flattened blade, its apex obtuse. Gonapophyses blackened, appearing as simple horns, narrowed 
to slender curved points. 
Hab. Bructan Coneo (Kivu). 
Holotype, alcoholic ~, Lukumi Camp, northern slope of Mt. Karisimbi, 
altitude 11,370 feet, in subalpine zone, Erica formation, March 19, 1927 (J. 
Bequaert). 
I take great pleasure in dedicating this fine new Podoneura to Dr. Bequaert, 
to whom I am greatly indebted for many favors in the past. 
Teucholabis rubrithorax Alexander 
Text Fig. No. 10, 10 
1920. Teucholabis rubrithorax Alexander; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (9) 6: 25-26. 
The unique type was from Aburi, Gold Coast, collected by W. H. Patterson. 
In the present series, a male, Du River, Liberia, July 26, 1926 (J. Bequaert). 
