Genus Myzomyra. 39 
Length.—3 mm. 
Habitat.—India (Christophers). 
Observations.— Described from a single 9. It is nearly the 
smallest Myzomyia. The two wings are not uniform, one shows 
traces of an accessory costal spot ; the pale area at the base of 
the first long vein is characteristic, as are also the fork-cells, but 
the latter resemble those in M. hebes (p. 32). The wing markings, 
however, readily separate the two insects. 
MyYZoMYIA CULICIFACIES. Giles. 
Anopheles culicifacies. Giles. 9. 
Anopheles Listoni. Giles. 
Anopheles Indica. Theobald. 
(Mono. Culicid. IT., p. 310.) 
- 2. Head covered with brownish-black, grey, and ochraceous 
brown upright forked scales; the dark ones being posterior, | 
frontal tuft rather small ; antennae brown, with pale bands, the 
basal and second segments testaceous ; hairs brown ; proboscis 
brown, apex testaceous ; palpi brown, with three almost equal 
small yellow bands: one situated at the apex, the other two 
at the junction of the segments ; the apical pale band is slightly 
the largest. 
Thorax dark brown, with narrow, very pale golden-brown 
hair-like scales, dark brown pleurae; scutellum pale brown; 
metanotum chestnut brown. 
Abdomen as described in Vol, LI., p. 310, 
Legs unbanded deep brown; coxae and trochanters pale 
brown ; all the tibiae have an apical pale spot almost yellow 
in hue. 
To the description of the wing previously given add, “a pale 
spot near the base of the second long vein, another at the base 
of the third, and another beneath it on the fourth long vein, 
almost in a line with the spots on the branches of the fifth ; the 
fringe is not unspotted normally, there being two pale areas 
where the lower branch of the fourth and the upper branch of 
the fifth join with the costa.” In some specimens there is an 
additional small pale spot at the base of the costa, and in others 
the base of the first long vein is pale, while sometimes it is 
spotted with black. (Vide Plate III.) 
