162 A Monograph of Culicidae. 
the antepenultimate joint black. Legs, abdomen, and thorax 
asin ? ; fore ungues unequal. 
Length.—4°:5 mm. 
Habitat.—Kuala Lumpor (Dr. Durham). 
Time of capture.—July. 
Notes.—I had not previously seen a male, but one has been 
sent by Dr. Durham, which is here described. The 9? has simple 
ungues. The larva, Dr. Durham says, rests with its body at 
nearly right angles to the siphon. 
CuLEX ANNULUS. Theobald. 
(Mono. Culicid. I., p. 358, 1901.) 
Additional locality.—Dindings, Straits Settlements, in October, 
November, and December. 
CULEX HIRSUTIPALPIS. Theobald. 
(Mono. Culicid. I., p. 378, 1901.) 
Note.—Specimens received from Mashonaland (per Mr. 
Marshall), taken in March, show the ¢’s to have the yellow 
apical abdominal spots not always clearly defined. 
CULEX ALBIROSTRIS. Macquart. 
(Dipt. Exot., sup. iv., p. 10; Mono. Culicid. I., p. 382, 1901, Theobald.) 
Additional locality—Port Darwin, South Australia. 
Note.—Specimens of a broadly pale banded proboscis species 
have been received, evidently the New Zealand albirostris. 
CULEX ANNULIROSTRIS. Skuse. 
(Mono. Culicid. I., p. 365, 1901.) 
A number of ¢’s and ?’s bred from larvae taken in sea- 
water of sp. gr. 1030 and 1040 by Dr. Bancroft. They are also 
found in fresh water. Some variation may be noticed in the 
width of the pale band on the rostrum. One 9 differs from any 
I have previously seen, in having the basal white abdominal 
bands of the third to sixth segments with triangular expansions 
in the middle. Another has triangular projections on the first 
to fourth segments. | 
All the specimens were bred in January. 
