156 A Monograph of Culicidae. 
named the genus after this great Brazilian dipterist, who has 
done so much in helping on the study of South American 
Culicidae. 
?. A fresh specimen has been received, and from this the 
photo of the wing is here reproduced: A ¢ has also been sent 
by Dr. Fajardo, which is described below. 
SSF ———— FSS SS — SS —— 
i —_— - e. 5 = A ee a 
er ERR ae oe are = na 
aN He 


Fig. 84. 
Wing of Lutzia Bigotit, 9. Bellardi. - 
6. Palpi banded creamy yellow and black, the apex broadly 
yellow, then a small black band and the base of the joint yellow ; 
the second joint yellow at the base, the next joint deep yellow 
with black scales, the yellow showing as a broad and then a narrow 
pale band, all pale below ; hairs long and dense, black at the black 
areas, yellow at the yellow, the hairs extend down to the second 
basal ring on the long basal joint. Proboscis deep brown, with a 
broad yellow band on the apical half and a yellow apex; 
antennae densely plumose ; plume hairs yellowish at the base, 
brown apically, apex of the antennae brown. Abdomen black, 
with two round grey patches on the apical border of the third 
and fourth segments, a large round median patch on the apex of 
the fifth and sixth, and the last segments grey. 
Legs with apical and basal pale bands and the last tarsal all 
pale ochraceous ; fore and mid ungues unequal, thick, the larger 
uniserrated, the smaller (damaged); hind ungues equal and 
simple, much curved. 
Length.—6 mm. 
The larva, writes Dr. Lutz, has a peculiar position in water, 
the anterior parts of the body being parallel, but somewhat 
curved, while the posterior is hanging down obliquely. 
Additional locality.—Belem, Brazil (Dr. Fajardo). 
