284 A Monograph of Culicidae. 
same ; in the hind legs two tarsi with white bands, the last pure 
white ; ungues small, equal and simple. 
Wings clothed with large, broad, pyriform black and white 
scales, the costa with two small apical, then two large and then 
another small white spot ; the veins mostly covered with black 
scales, but with white areas as follows: 
At the base of the fork-cells, small areas 
on their branches, four on the third 
long vein ; two on the upper, two on the 
lower branch of the fifth, and three on 
the stem, the basal portion being white ; 
four small white areas on the sixth; 
fringe black, with white spots ~where 
the veins join the border; _border- 
scales all black; first sub-marginal 
cell a little longer, but about the same 
width as the second posterior cell, bases 
of the two fork-cells about level, stem 
of the first sub-marginal not quite as 
ong as the cell, stem of the second posterior as long as the cell ; 
posterior cross-vein nearly four times its own length distant 
from the mid ecross-vein ; halteres black. 
Length.—4*5 mm. 
Habitat.—Penang (Dr. Freer). 
Time of capture.—24.10.1901. 
Observations.—Described from a single specimen with only 
four legs, but otherwise perfect except for the denudation of the 
mesothorax. It bears some resemblance to Dénitz’s Culex Kochi, 
which comes in this genus, but is quite distinct. There is no 
species with which it can be confused ; the dark spotted wings 
suggest at first Anopheles Jamesii, eahy or Cycloleppteron inde 
saitcrulante n. sp. 

(Fig. 156. 
Wing scales of genus Finlaya. 
FINLAYA KOCHI. Donitz. 
Culex Kochi. Déonitz. 
(Mono. Culicid. II., p. 317, 1901.) 
This species evidently comes in this genus, but the only 
specimen I have seen is much damaged and the wing scales 
partly denuded. The abdominal scaly tufts are very noticeable. 
It is anyhow not a Culex. 

