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'^- Z Jo ••- Z CO ^~^ z LniliSNI NVINOSHilWS S3IHVyan libraries SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTIC CO — (O ^e\[\Y\^vYy, N«»uoZ^oAav>i' h<^Y^'\Y\i'Ovy Ku5* (Colonial iSusEttm antj ©eolostcal Sur&eg of Neia Sealanb. JAMES HECTOR, C.M.G., M.D., F.R.S., SIBBCIOB. CATALOGUES /' NEW ZEALAND DIPTERA, ORTHOPTERA, HYMENOPTERA; » WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF THE SPECIES. PEEDEEICK WOLLASTON HUTTON, F.G.S., C.M.Z.S., PEOFESSOE OF BIOLOGY AT CANTEEBimY COHEGB, NEW ZEALAND UNIVEESITT. PUBLISHED BY COMMAND. i BY AtJTHOEITY: GEOEGE PEINTEE, WELLINGTON. 1881. CONTENTS. Peefacb ... Geneeic Index Introdttotion DiPTEBA ... Oethopxeea Hymenopteea ... TU ... 1 ... 9 ... 71 ... 95 PREFACE. Questions of the greatest importance to the practical agri- cultiirist are dependent for their solution upon an accurate knowledge of the Insect Pauna of a country. As a first step it is necessary to provide observers with the means of deter- mining the affinities of the insects that are known to occur, so that their habits, and the injurious effects which, in the different stages of development, they frequently produce on vegetation, may be accurately ascertained and recorded. It thus becomes possible to apply the experience gained in other countries for the mitigation of the evils concerning which there is already an abundant literature.* The following work is an amplification of a part of the provisional lists of insects indigenous to New Zealand pub- lished by Professor Hutton in 1873 (Trans. N. Z. Inst., VI., p. 158). Although our knowledge of the subject is still very incomplete, it may be interesting to note the progress which has been made in the determination of species since the above date. The former lists recorded only 742 species in the eight orders of Coleoptera, Diptera, Orthoptera, Hymenoptera, Neuroptera, Heteroptera, Homoptera, and Lepidoptera. The first of these orders has, through the assiduous labours of Captain Broun, been more thoroughly investigated than the others, and the number of species of * See especially the " Guide to the Study of Insects injurious and beneficial to Crops," by Dr. A. S. Packard : Holt and Co., New York, 1876. VI PREFACE. beetles recognized in New Zealand has been increased from 265 to 1,321 ("New Zealand Coleoptera," by Captain Broun). The three following orders, which are treated of in the present work, have increased in number of species from 151 to 227. The remaining orders still require system- atic cataloguing for the New Zealand student, although the scattered literature bearing on them has received extensive additions. The total number of insects described for New Zealand now reaches 2,000 ; but this number will be largely in- creased, especially in the order Lepidoptera. The com- pilation of this work adds another to the already extensive series of gratuitous services which Professor Hutton has rendered to the colony. JAMES HECTOU, Director. Colonial Museum, Wellinrjton, 20tk May, 1881. GENERIC INDEX DiPTEEA ... .. ... Oethopteea ... Hymenopteea . ... DIPTEEA. Page Actiua ... ... 34 Culex substituta. argyropus. opposita. iracundus. Amenia ... ... 55 acer. leonina. albirostris. parva. Anabarynchus luridus. ... 32 Curtoneura stabulans. Cylindria Aricia ... 63 sigma. Demoticus melas. australiensis. Asilus ... 28 Dexia varius. rubricarinata. bulbus. Dilopbus lascus. spectabilis. Bibio ... ... 17 Dipbysa ... nigrostigma. apicalis. ruficoxis. Eristalis ... Bothrophora ... 54 cingulatus. zelebori. Eurigaster Callipbora ... 58 feredayi. dasyopbthalma. marginatus. quadrimaculata. clathratus. aureopunctata. Exaireta ... aureonotata. spiniger. hortona. analis. icela. stratznitztii. antennatis. Helophilus violacea. trilincatus. Caenosia ... ... 64 ineptus. spinipes. hocbstetteri. Cblorogaster ... 48 Henops . . . ruficeps. brunneus. Clitellaria ... 39 Hystricia aberrans. orien talis. Cloniopbora ... 15 zelica. subfasciata. pachyprocta. Ccelopa ... ... 69 Idia littoralis. murina. Comptosia ... 24 Itamus . . . bicolor. inquisitor. fasciata. melanopogon FAGE , 9 71 , 95 Page 9 62 64 47 56 18 34 40 50 35 41 24 45 57 27 Vlll Lampria ... fcnca. LamprogaBter strigipennis. cfcnilea. Limnia ... trausiuarina. Limnobia conveuiens. vicariaus. Mallota . . . antipodus. latifrons. Megistocera vulpina. Melanophora sosilus. Micropalpiis brevigaster. Microtropesia sinuata. Midas maoquarti. Milesia ... bilineata. Miltogramma mestor. Musca ... taitensis. Mycetopliila guttata. Nemoraaa orasus. Odontomyia dorsalis. cliloris. angusta. australiensis. hypochlora. amyris. Opomyza apicalis. Ornithomyia opposita. Pangonia larda. adrel. hirticeps. Pelccorliyncus ornatus. Platyura , . . tridens. Acanthoderua spiniger. horridus. prasinus. INDEX. Page ... 30 Plesia fasciata. ... 68 PoUenia ... lajmica. Psilopus ... ... 65 gemmatus. Psychoda ... 17 conspicillata. Ehyphus neozealandicus. ... 40 Rutilia ... leucostica. pelluceue. ... 16 Saropogon viduus. ... 52 discus. antipodus. ... 48 Sapromyza dichromata. ... 54 sciomyzina. decora. ... 31 Sciara rufescens. ... 43 Sciomyza... nigricornis. ... 51 Simulia ... australiensis. ... 61 Stomoxys renos. ... 11 Stratiomyia fulviceps. ... 49 Syritta ... oceanica. ... 37 Syrpbus ... ortas. ropalus. nova^-zealandiae rectus. Tabanus ... impar. ... 68 sarpa. truncatus. ... 70 oplus. sordidus. ... 21 bratrankii. trans versus. Thereva ... bilineata. ... 23 Tipula ... senex. ... 12 novara?. liolochlora. OETHC >PTERA. Page ... 76 Bacillus ... hookeri. gerhardii. geisovii. hystriculea. Page 44 61 , 33 13 , 10 , 53 . 25 . 66 . 12 . 67 . 18 . 56 . 37 . 42 . 43 19 32 14 Page .. 74 Blatta ... conjuncta. latipennis. Calopteniis marginalia. Ceuthophilus lanceolatus. Decticus ... semivittatus. Deinacrida heteraeantha. rugosa. Forflcesila littorea. Gryllotalpa africana. Gryllus ... fuliginosus. Hadenoecus edwardsii. Hemideina capitolina. megacepliala. thoracica. figurata. INDEX. IX age 71 Hemideina —continued. abbreviata. tibialis. Page 91 Hyperomala ... 89 84 speciosa. Libanasa ... 88 89 pallitarsis. maculifrons. 79 Macropathus filifer. fascifer. altus. ... 85 93 (Edipoda cinerascens. ... 92 78 78 Periplanata fortipes. undulivitta. orientalis. ... 72 87. truncata. Scleropterus ... 79 80 maorieus. Tenodera... ... 74 intermedia. Xiphidium ... 90 maoricum. Amblyopone cepbalotes. Atta antarctica. Crjptus ... decoratorius. Dasycolletes birtipes. metallicus. purpureus. vestitus. Derecyrta deceptus. Diapria ... coccopbaga. Foenus ... crassipes. unguicularis. Formica ... zealandica. Gorytes ... carbonariuB. Halictus... sordidus. familiaris. Ichneumon lotatorius. insidiator. consauguineus. invectus. soUicitorius. conspiratus. ii HTMENOPTERA. Page j ... 112 Ichneumon — continued. perfidiosus. ... 116 j placidus. \ exbilaratus. ... 123 i deceptus. I LamprocoUetes 97 : fulvescens. Leioproctus ... • imitatus. Lissonota 231 flavo-picta. albo-picta. 130 Mesoleptus miilleri. 117 Mesotenus albo-pictus. Monomorium 110 fulvum. Ophion ... 104 luteus. inutilis. 100 peregrinus. ferrugineus. Orectognathus 119 perplexus. antennatus. Paniscus... epbippiatus. Pison raorosus. tuberculatus. Page 96 95 128 122 122 114 124 114 125 103 Pompilus fugax. mouachua. Pouera . . . castanea. Priocnemis conformis. marginatus. maculipennis. diligens. nitidiventris. Proctotnipes intrudens. Prosopis ... vicina. agilis. relegatus. capitosus. Ehagigaster novarifi. Rhogas . . . penetrator. INDEX. Page 106 111 Rhopahim carboiiaria. perforator, albipes. 107 Rhyssa ... antipodum Scolobates varipes. intrudens. 130 Tachy tea . . . nigerrimus. 99 sericops. depressus. Tetramorium striatum, nitidum. 109 Tryphon ... obstructor. 118 Xipliydria flavo-picta. Page 105 128 126 102 113 127 132 INTRODUCTION. These catalogues are chiefly compilationsj and should not have been thought worthy of publication if it were not for the great diffi- culty there is, in the colony, in obtaining descriptions of many of our animals which have been published in expensive books, or in still more expensive periodicals. I have to thank Mr. A. G. Butler, of the British Museum, for sending me copies of descriptions of two genera and three species which were not to be obtained in the colony ; and to Mr. Max Mendershausen, for translating the descriptions of the New Zealand Diptera in the Reise der Novara. My principal difficulty with respect to the Diptera has been in trying to assimilate the nomenclature of the various authors, espe- cially with regard to the veins and cells of the wing. As there is still some ambiguity about these points, I cannot do better than give Dr. Schiner's description of his system,^ which seems to me the most simple, and which I have adopted in this catalogue; and also add a table showing the relations of this system with those of Mac- quart and Loew : — " In a few cases three, but in most cases only two, longitudinal veins spring from the base of the wing, and these by their division give rise to the other longitudinal veins. The third of these veins, when present, is very small. The others are called the upper and loiver primary veins. They are always united by a transverse vein, which is usually perpendicular to the long axis of the wing, but is sometimes oblique and curved, and then not easily distinguishable. The outer margin of the wing is occupied by the costal vein ; the upper primary vein may be called the subcostal. From the subcostal vein springs the second, and from this the third longitudinal, or the radial and cubital veins. When only a single inferior branch is emitted by the subcostal vein, it is to be regarded as the cubital. Between the sub- costal and the costal there is another longitudinal vein, the mediastinal, which however is frequently amalgamated with the subcostal. The further divisions of the radial and cubital veins, when such exist, do not require special names. " The lower primary vein is the postical ; it emits a branch above and below : the upper branch is the discoidal, the lower the anal * Translated by W. S. Dallas, Esq., F.Ii.S., M.E.S., Zoological Eecord, 1864, p. 533. INTRODUCTION. vein. These are the fourth, fifth, and sixth longitudinal veins. The discoidal usually divides much. The postical vein is frequently branched; a superior branch often unites it with the discoidal cell, enclosing the posterior basal cell. This superior branch is the posterior transverse vein. The anal vein runs simply to the margin of the wing, sometimes unites again with the postical, enclosing an anal cell. The third primary vein, when present, is the axillary vein. " The cells are named from the veins enclosing them. The medi- astinal cell is between the mediastinal and costal veins ; the next cell parallel to it, enclosed by the subcostal, is the costal cell; the sub- costal is enclosed between the subcostal and radial veins ; and the cubital cell between the cubital and radial veins, or, when the latter is absent, the subcostal vein. The cell enclosed between the upper and lower primary veins, and closed by the transverse vein, is the anterior basal cell. The discoidal cell is situated on the disc of the wing below the transverse vein ; it is enclosed by the discoidal and postical veins and their branches, or by the former alone. The posterior marginal cells occupy the posterior margin of the wing, and are bounded by the branches of the lower primary vein, but the first and most important of them is enclosed between the discoidal and cubital veins, the transverse vein, and the margin of the wing." Loew. Costal vein Axillary vein 1st longitudinal 2nd longitudinal 3rd longitudinal 4th longitudinal 5th longitudinal 6th longitudinal 7th longitudinal Costal cell Subcostal cell Marginal cell Submarginal cell Basal cells Discoidal cell Posterior cells Anal cell Axillarv cell Schiner. Costal vein Mediastinal vein . Subcostal vein Radial vein Cubital vein Discoidal vein Postical A^ein Anal vein Axillary vein Mediastinal cell Costal cell Subcostal cell Cubital cell Basal cells Discoidal cell Posterior marginal Anal cell Axillarv cell Macquart. Marginal nervure. Mediastinal nervure. ^Submarginal nei^vure. Externo-median . Interno-median. Anal nervure. Axillary nervure. Costal cell. Mediastinal cell. Marginal cell. Submarginal cell. Basal cells. Discoidal cell. Posterior cells. Anal cell. Axillarv cell. INTRODUCTION. The relative position of these veins, and the names which are adopted in this work to distinguish them, will be readily understood from the wood cut. Diagram of the wing of a dipterous insect : a, canal vein ; c a, anal cell ; p, postical vein ; d, discoidal vein ; c, cubital vein ; r, radial vein ; s, subcostal vein ; m, mediastinal vein. The dipterous fauna of New Zealand has as yet been so little investigated that it would be useless to give synopses of the families. Only ninety-five species have as yet been described, and of this num- ber I expect that about six, introduced principally on the collections made by the naturalists of the " Novara " expedition, do not really belong to our fauna, but have had incorrect localities attached to them : I must however leave this point to be settled by Auckland naturalists, as all these species are reported from the neighbourhood of Auckland. Many of our commonest flies have not yet been named, such as the Phora, the Agromyza (?) and the Limnophora found so abundant on our windows, and the Cmlopa which swarms on the decaying sea- weed on the shore. The Chironomidce, the Mycetophilidce, the Cecido- myidce, the Inflatce, the Empidce, and the (Estridfe are all repre- sented in New Zealand, while none have yet been described, except one species of Rhyphus. The following names were given by Mr. White to Diptera in the " Voyage of the ' Erebus ' and ' Terror,' '' but no descriptions have been published of them : — Limnobia gracilis. Tipula dux. „ chorica. „ clara. „ segrotans. „ obscuripennis. „ fumipennis. . Simulium ccecutiens. „ repanda. Rhyphus phaleratus. 4 INTRODUCTION. In obtaining the materials for compiling the catalogue of the Orthpptera^ which includes species described prior to 1878^ I have been much assisted by Mr. E. W. Janson, of 35, Little Russell Street, Loudon, who copied out for me those descriptions which could not be obtained in the colony. Since writing to him I have found that the following species of Gryllidee has also been described, but I have not been able to include it in this catalogue : Gryllodes maorius. Saussure, Melanges, Fasc. V., p. 377 (1877). ilPTERA OF NEW ZEALAND. INSECTA DIPTERA. AETIFICIAL KEY TO THE PRINCIPAL GROUPS. [Descriptions of these groups will be found in the " Monograph of the Diptera of North America," by Loew and Osten Sacken : Part I., published by the Smithsonian Institution ; price Ij dollars.] Analysis of the Sections. A. Antennae six- or more jointed ; palpi four- or five-jointed. Nemocera. B. Antennae three-jointed ; palpi one- or two-jointed. Brachycera. Section — Nbmoceea. Analysis of the Families, A. Thorax without any transverse suture. a. Tibiae not spurred. * Wings hairy. Longitudinal veins few. Cecidomyidce. Longitudinal veins many. Psychodidce. ** Wings naked, t No ocelli. 1. Legs long ; antennae with more than 12 joints. Costal vein continued round the margin of the wing. Culicidce. Costal vein ending near the tip of the wing. CMronomidcE. 2. Legs short ; antennae with less than 12 joints. Simulidce. tt Ocelli three. No discal cell. Bihionidce. A discal cell. Rliyphidce. h. Tibiae spurred. Anterior tibiae unarmed. Blepharoceridcu. All the tibiae spurred. MycetophilidcB. B. Thorax with a V-shaped transverse suture. Tlpulidce. Section — Beachtceea. Analysis of the Families. A. Third joint of the antennae annulated. ^. Antennae not clavate. * Tegulae small. 1. Tibiae spurred. Xylophagida. 2. Tibiae not spurred. Longitudinal veins crowded. Stratiomyidce. Longitudinal veins not crowded. Acanthomeridce, ** Tegulae large. Tabanidce. b. Antennae clavate. Midasidce. 6 DIPTERA Braciiyceea — continued. B. Third joiut of the antenna; simple. a. Basal cells large. * Thorax and abdomen inflated. Ci/rtidm or Iiijiatm. ** Thorax and abdomen not inflated. 1. Empodium pulvilliform. Tibia} spurred. LeptidcB. Tibia; not spurred. Sermoneuridce. 2. Empodium styliform ; legs with bristles. Asilidcb. 3. Empodium none. t Discoidal vein with two branches. Theremdce. ft Discoidal vein with one branch. Bombylidce. ttt Discoidal vein unbranched. :|: A spurious vein between cubital and discoidal. Syrphidce. XX No spurious longitudinal vein. ^ Cubital forked. Scenopinidcu. T[*ir Cubital simple. a. Discoidal simple. Antennal bristle thick. Myopida. Antennal bristle thin. Platypezidce. /8. Discoidal forked or absent. Antennal bristle basal. FipuncuUdcE. Antennal bristle apical. Lonchopteridce. 4. Empodium membranaceous and linear. t First joint of antennae very short. Tachydromida;. ft First joiut of antennae moderate. Posterior transverse vein oblique to the posterior border of the wing. HyhotidcE. Posterior transverse vein parallel to the posterior border of the wing. EmpidcB. b. Basal cells short. * Discoidal and basal cells united. DolicJiopodidcs. ** Discoidal and basal cells separate. 1. Antennae in rounded pits. (Estridce. 2. Antennae not in rounded pits. t First posterior cell closed or nearly closed. MiiscidcB. tt First posterior cell widely open. Tegulae developed. Anthomyzidce. Tegulae rudimentary or none. Acalyptrida. Family — Mttscid*:. Analysis of the Sub-families. Bristle of antennae bare or pubescent ; legs short. TacMnincB. Bristle of antennae hairy or pectinated ; legs long. Dexince. Bristle of antenna? plumose or hairy, with the tip bare. Sarcophagince, Bristle of antennae entirely plumose or pectinated. Muscina. OF NEW ZEALAND. 7 Beachtcera — continued. Family — Acalypteid^. Analysis of the Sub-families. A. Neuration of the wings complete. a. All the tibioe spurred. * Costa of wing bristly. Helomyince. ** Costa smooth. Thorax rounded. Cordylurince. Thorax flat. Phycodromince . b. No spurs on tibiae, but a bristle. No furrows for the antennae. Sciomyzince. c. Middle tibiae only spurred, * Posterior basal cells large. 1. Front with bristles on the crown only. Tip of mediastinal vein obliterated by a fold in the wing. Psilinae. Subcostal vein bare. Micropezince. Cubital vein generally hairy. Ortalince. 2. Front bristly. Veins of wing with bristles. Trypetince. Palpi rudimentary. Sepsince. ** Posterior basal cells small. Tibiae with a small bristle near the end. Sapromyzina. Tibias without any bristle. Loncliceina. d. Middle and posterior tibiae spurred. Subcostal vein rather short. Seteroneiirince . B. Neuration incomplete ; the mediastinal vein more or less rudimentary. a. Eyes on lateral projections. Diopsince. b. Eyes normal. * Thorax flat. BoiorincB. ** Thorax rounded. 1. Wings with several veins running into the costa. Phorina>. 2. Wings normal. t Posterior tibiae with a short spur. Opomyzinfe. ft Middle tibiae only spurred. % Mouth without vibrissas Mouth large. Epliydinince . Front without bristles. Oscinincp. XX Mouth with vibrissa?. H Costa with bristles. Geomyzinre. IF^ Costa without bristles. a. Claws and pulvilli very small. BrosopMlince. y8 Claws and pulvilli normal. 1. Posterior transverse vein near the border of the wing. Piophilince. 2. Posterior transverse vein distant from the mai'gin of wing. AgromyzincE. 3. Posterior transverse vein wanting. Posterior basal cells small. Phytomyzinee . Posterior basal cells wanting. Asfeince, INSECTA DIPTERA. Oeder— DIPTERA. Two mesotlioracic wings with radiate veins ; posterior wings rudi- mentary; moutli suctorial, furnished with a proboscis formed by the labrum and labium, and enclosing the bristle-like, or knife-like, max- illae and mandibles. Metamorphosis complete. Larva apodal. SuB-OiiDER— OVIPARA. The female lays eggs, or larvae just emitted from the eggs. Section— OBTECT^. Pupa enclosed in a separate case, as in the Lepidoptera. Division — Nemocera. Antennae six- or more jointed ; palpi four- or five-jointed. Family — Culicidj::. Proboscis long and thread-like ; mandibles and maxillae free j antennae filiform, plumose in the males, hairy in the females. aenus-CULEX. Linn(BUS. Palpi as long as the proboscis in the males, very short in the females. C. ARGYROPUs. Walker, Cat. Dipt, in Brit. Mus.,p. 2 (1848). Female. Body black ; proboscis full half the length of the body; antennae shorter than the proboscis ; sides of the thorax with silvery spots. Legs black, very long; a silvery spot on each thigh, near the tip, which is also silvery, as are those of the shanks and of the joints of the feet. Wings tinged slightly with brown, their fore- borders black ; veins dark brown, thickly fringed with black hairs ; poisers dark brown. Length, 21 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). C. iRACUNDUs. Walker, I.e., jj. 6 (1848). Female. Body black; head and thorax clothed with golden hairs ; abdomen with a yellow band at the fore-border of each segment ; these 2 10 DIPTERA bands arc most narrow in the middle, and tliey are white on the under-side. Legs purplish-brown; thighs dull pale yellow, with brown tips. Wings colourless, veins pale brown ; poisers pale brown, with brown knobs. Length, 2 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). C. ACER. Walker, I.e., p. 8 (1848) . Female. Body dull pale yellow ; proboscis dull yellow ; thorax with three pale-brown stripes. Legs pale yellow, shaded with darker colour at intervals. Wings colourless, veins dull yellow. Length, 2 lines. C. ALBiRosTRis. Macquavt, Dipteres Exotiques, Sup. 4, p. 10 (1850). Female. Proboscis white, at the base and at the extremity black. Palpi black, a little white at the extremity. Face white ; front black, with thin brownish down. Antennae blackish, the first joints pale. Thorax with a reddish-grey down. Abdomen deep black, the posterior margins of the segments white. Legs pale yellowish, a little blackish at the extremities of the thighs ; tibiae brownish ; the pos- terior pair a little whitish in the middle ; tarsi blackish, a white ring at the base of each joint. Wings with the veins normal. Length, 2 lines. Akaroa. Family — Mxcetophilid^. Proboscis short. Antennae long. Head without a muzzle, generally with two or three ocelli. Legs long, the thighs terminated by tivo spines. Larvae living in fungi. Genus-RHYPHUS. Latreille. Second joint of the palpi thick. Antennae subulate, sixteen- jointed, the two first distinct from the others, the remainder almost globular, diminishing in size. Abdomen of seven distinct segments. Legs long in the male. Two basal cells in the wings, a discoidal, and five posterior cells. R. NEozEALANDicus. ScMner , Reise der Novara, Dipt. II., p. 49 (1868). Thorax brownish- black, lighter in the female than in the male, with indistinct stripes ; the protuberances before the scutellum, and the hinder part of the back, rust-red, which enlarges on the side of the belly, elsewhere reddish-brown ; in the female light brown. Head OF NEW ZEALAND. 11 blacky palpi light brown ; antennae light yellow, the four or five last joints black. Legs yellow, femora and tarsi brown. Wings hyaline, with brown spots ; the mediastinal and subcostal cells intense brown, with the exception of a lighter spot behind the base of the last ; basal cell brown in the middle, in the brown a small light spot ; from these the brown colour extends round the posterior portion of the basal cells ; the small cross vein is also thick and edged with brown ; behind the point of the discoidal cell the brown colour extends up- ward, but does not quite reach the brown edging of the wing ; round the point of the wing less intense brown, in the lower part of which a sharply-bounded space is left entirely colourless ; there is also a cloudy or darkish colour on the edge of the wing, especially round the anal and axillary cells ; the postical vein is very thick. Poisers yellow. Length, 3 lines. Genus-MYCETOPHILA. Meigen. Antennae filiform, rather short; the two first joints cyathiform, separated from the others, the others cylindrical. Eyes oval ; two ocelli on their internal borders. Abdomen compressed in the female. Tibiae with two rows of lateral spines. Subcostal cell simple. M. GUTTATA, Sp. nOV. Female. Thorax pale fulvous, with four longitudinal brown streaks ; the two inside streaks, starting from the anterior end, taper backward and end some distance in front of the scutellum; the two outside streaks, commencing about one-fourth its length from the anterior border, are continued to the posterior border. Scutellum pale fulvous, with a brown anterior central patch. Abdomen blackish- brown, the two or three anterior segments fulvous in front and below. Head fulvous, with a brown stain on the occiput. Two ocelli, each surrounded with a dark-brown ring. Antennai and palpi fulvous, the antennae brownish near the tip. Legs fulvous. Wings tinged pale brown, with brown veins. A brown patch at the base, and another in the centre of the first posterior cell. A brown patch in the third, and another in the fourth posterior cell. Base of the second pos- terior much more advanced than that of the fourth posterior cell. Poisers pale yellow. Length, 2 lines. Male. Paler, Abdomen yellow, with the posterior margin of each segment brown. Spots on the wings paler. Wellington, Waikouati, and Dunedin. 2^ 12 DIPTERA Genus-PLATYUEA. Meigen. Prol30scis a little protruding ; fourth joint of the palpi rather longer, and more slender than the others. Anteunse compressed ; the two first joints distinct, the others finely haired. Eyes oval. Ab- domen slender, narrowed at the base, depressed at the extremity. Subcostal cell sometimes open, sometimes closed by the radial vein. P. TRIDENS, Sp. nOV. Female. Thorax yellow, with three broad longitudinal dark-brown bands which blend together anteriorly, the central one much shorter, not extending more than half-way down the thorax ; anterior margin dark brown. Scutellum yellow in the centre, brown on each side. Thorax and scutellum with a few long black bristles. Abdomen dark brown, the posterior half of each segment yellow. Head brown. Ocelli three, placed in line convex to the front. Proboscis and palpi yellow. Antennae rather longer than the head and thorax ; the first and second joints yellow ; the third to the eighth ringed yellow and brown ; remainder brown. Legs yellow ; the tarsi dark brown. Wings with a slight dusky tinge ; veins dark brown ; the three branches of the discoidal vein faint, disconnected. A dark patch on the radial vein, another in the centre of the cubital cell ; cross vein with a broad dusky margin. Subcostal cell closed. Length, 3 lines. Wellington. This species differs from Platyura in the construction of the palpi, which are only three-jointed. The first is thick and with bristles j the second and third are slender, the last pointed. The antennae are eighteen-jointed, the last joint very small; the first two joints are thick and cyathiform, the remainder compressed ; they are tomentose, and nearly as long as the head and thorax. The epistome has a short blunt snout, covered with short hairs. Thorax very convex, one-third the length of the abdomen. Ovipositor very thick at the base. Wings long, with only one basal cell ; four incomplete posterior cells. Genus-SCIAEA. Meigen. Head spherical. Palpi three-jointed, distinct. Antennae filiform ; the two first joints separated from the others, almost cylindrical. Eyes reniform, approximating on the vertex. Abdomen cylindrical in the male, pointed in the female. Thighs groove internally. Basal and subcostal cells narrow. OF NEW ZEALAND. 13 S. RUFESCENS, Sp. UOV. Male. Thorax shining red-brown, with three longitudinal bands of dark-brown hairs ; the two outer ones larger than the central, and approaching each other posteriorly. Sides of the chest with brown hairs. Abdomen brown above, sparingly covered with short white hairs ; red below. Head shining black ; antennae and palpi brown. Four ocelli in a line. Legs yellow-brown, with short black hairs ; two short spines on the end of the tibia. Wings tinged brown ; ciliated all round ; subcostal vein simple, extending beyond the base of the third posterior cell; lower branch of the discoidal vein faint. Poisers brown. Length, 2 lines. Dunedin. Family — Cecidomtid^. Proboscis short. Antennae long. Head without ocelli. Thighs not terminated by spines. Larvae living in galls. Genus-PSYCHODA. Latreille. Body short, thick, hairy. Antennae fourteen- or fifteen-jointed, the first thick, hairy, generally cylindrical, the others pedicellate. Legs short. Wings inclined roof -like, broad, fringed ; eight longi- tudinal veins covered with scales ; the second and fifth bifid. P. CONSPICILLATA, Sp. UOV. Female. Thorax pale brown, with a dark-brown ring on each side, which is broader in front and extends forward nearly to the anterior margin of the thorax : a narrow median longitudinal brown line. Hind thorax and base of wings densely clothed with long white hairs. Scutellum brownish. Abdomen pale brown, with a few scattered white hairs. Head and antennae yellowish. Legs pale yellow. Wings hyaline, acute at the tip ; a few scattered brown hairs on the veins. Eight longitudinal veins, of which the second and fifth are forked ; the fork of the second being exterior to the fork of the fifth. Length, 1 line. Wellington, Family — Tipulid^. Proboscis short. Antennae long, not plumose in the males. Head prolonged into a rostrum. No ocelli. Legs very long and slender. Larvae living in the earth or dead wood. 14 DIPTERA Genus-TIPULA. Linnceus. Muzzle long and narrow. Front plane. The three first joints of the palpi partially fused, the fourth long and flexible. Antennae filiform, almost setaceous, thirteen- jointed, the first elongate cylin- drical ; the second small, cyathiform ; tlte ten following cylindrical, with bristles at their bases ; the thirteenth slender, oblong. Wings ex- panded ; five posterior marginal cells, the second of which is petioled. T. SENEX. White, Voij. Ereb. and Terror, Insects, p. 27, pi. 7, f. 15 (1848) . Head pale cinereous, with basal fourth and a central oval depres- sion testaceous ; prothorax testaceous, with central longitudinal ridge, two lateral cinereous bands ; mesothorax and metathorax cinereous, with central and lateral longitudinal dusky bands. Abdomen fulvous ; indications of dusky bands of metathorax continued into basal seg- ments. Wings hyaline white; costa to mediastinal vein stramineous ; veins testaceous ; costa, a spot at first third of discoidal cell, two obliquely just beyond second third, a fourth near apex, and a nebulous striole at apex of cell brown. Poisers pale testaceous ; legs testaceous ; pectus pinkish-cinereous, with several dusky spots. Expanse, 2 inches. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). T. NovARiE. Schiner, I.e., p. 37 (1868). Brownish-yellow ; thorax with four white longitudinal streaks, two of which approximate in front with dark-brown borders ; those on the outside lie close to the borders, the inside ones' stand at a distance and expose the ground colour in the middle of the thorax as a brown streak, which is divided throughout by a brown double line, and extend over the scutellum and lower part of the back. Behind the transverse suture the white shining longitudinal streaks get nearer, and are also continued over the scutellum and the lower part of the back. In front the markings of the thorax are very sharp ; in two male specimens, now before me, the dark-brown lines are less striking than in the female. Sides of the chest vdth white shining spots. Hind part of the abdomen brownish yellow, the first segment strongly darkened on the sides, and whitish on the upper and hinder margin ; the other segments with delicate whitish striae, and a triangular side spot of the same colour, all of which are conjoined in a broadish side streak ; near the hinder end of the abdomen the ground colour is again deepened ; the whitish side-streaks appear very OP NEW ZEALAND. 15 intense in certain directions^ but in others disappear almost com- pletely. Genitalia of the male thick, rather erect, obliquely trun- cated, the claspers bent against each other in an upward direction, like pincers ; when at rest the pointed ends are crossed, forming a rather short tube. Head dark reddish-yellow; the muzzle very long, ending in three points, of which the central is scarcely longer than the side ones. Front next the eyes glimmering white, the muzzle brown below. Antennae short pale yellow, the joints totally bare ; the first lengthened as usual, the second very short, the others diminishing in length and breadth towards the end. Palpi yellowish- red, the last joint darkened and distinctly ringed. Lower part of the muzzle, proboscis, and palpi tolerably covered with hair. Legs brownish yellow, the points of the femora and articulations of the tarsi brown. Wings hyaline, naked, the whole surface shining strongly ; the mediastinal cell and the lower half of the hinder basal cell with perpendicular small folds, so that they appear shagreened. All the veins bordered with brown, as well as five very distinct brown spots ; the first on the base of the basal cells ; the second a little beyond the hinder basal cell, lying close to the discoidal cell, which from this point sends a short vein downward; the third on the origin of the radial vein; the fourth as a double spot round the stigma; the fifth beyond the stigma. A whitish lunate patch, in which the veins are totally faded, reaches from the fore part of the edge of the wing to the discoidal cell. Basis and fore edge of wings tinged reddish-yellow ; the hind part of the border of the wing with a pale- brownish edge, which is less intense round the veins. Poisers yellow. Length, 8 lines. Auckland. T. HOLOCHLORA. Noivicki, Memoiren der Krakauer k.-k, Akademie der Wissenchafften, Band 2, gedruckten Aufsatzes (1875). Female. Greenish-luteous ; palpi and antennae, except the base, fuscous ; wings hyaline ; costal cell and stigma pale brownish-green. Length of body, 7—7\ lines. Length of wing, 9 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). aenus-CLONIOPHORA. Schiner. Head roundish ; eyes a little protruding ; the epistome lengthened into a short muzzle, which does not end in a point, but is blunt, and bordered with remarkable little hairs at the apex. Palpi four-jointed, second joint shovel-like, third and fourth slim, subequal. Antennae ei^hteen-jointed, the first cylindrical, second short, cyathiform ; third 16 DIPTERA to thirteenth each bearing an inside appendage wliich is very short on the third and the thirteenth ; the last joints finely bristled. Thorax robust. Abdomen more than three times the length of the thorax, slightly flattened, the horn-like ovipositor projecting nearly half the length of the abdomen, thick at the base, then gradually smaller from the middle, running out into two fine flaps a little bent up, the lower piece only reaching to the middle of the upper. Legs rather strong ; the tibiae spurred at the end, the empodium strongly developed. Wings long and proportionately smaller than in Gynoplista. Medias- tinal vein long, the cross vein with the subcostal close up to the point ; the sub-branches of all the veins much larger than in Gyno- plista, consequently the discoidal cell is placed towards the middle of the wing, Poisers with a broad head. C. suBFASciATA. Walker, I.e., p. 74 (Gynoplista) (1848). Body dark ferruginous ; head brown ; antennae black, tawny at base, slightly branched on the inner side, shorter than the thorax. Eyes and palpi black. Thorax with four hoary stripes, which are united in the rear, and there overspread the whole hinder back. Ovipositor long. Feet tawny ; thighs brown, with pale-tawny bands near their tips ; tips of the tibiae and tarsi brown. Wings with a slight tawny tinge, having each two brown bands, which are distinct on the fore-border, but pale, interrupted, and almost obsolete towards the hind-border; veins brown. Poisers yellow, with tawny knobs. Length, 7 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). aenus-MEGISTOCEEA. Wied. Joints of the palpi nearly equal. Antennae setaceous, very long, ten-jointed ; the first cylindrical, thick ; the second cyathiform ; the others cylindrical, getting longer towards the end. Tarsi very long. Wings open ; the cells as in Tipula. M. vuLPiNA, sp. nov. Thorax and scutellum cinereous. On the thorax before the suture four longitudinal well-marked dusky bands ; the two internal extending the whole length; the two external short, extending only from the suture half-way to the anterior margin. Thorax and chest with long yellow hairs. Abdomen fulvous, with silvery scales ; a medium dorsal dusky band on the three anterior segments. Head cinereous, with long yellow hairs. First joint of the antennae cinereous, the rest dusky ; proboscis cinereous ; palpi black, with silvery scales, OF NEW ZEALAND. 17 Legs dusky, the proximal half of the femora ferruginous. Wings hyaline with dusky veins ; stigmatic region dusky. Poisers brown. Length, 4 lines ; of antennte, 9 lines. Dunedin, aenus-LIMNOBIA. ' Latreille. Joints of the palpi nearly equal in length, the three first rather thicker anteriorly, equal in length ; the fourth rather longer, slim and cylindrical. Antennas filiform, generally sixteen-jointed ; the first cylindrical, short ; the second cyathiform, the following globular, the last oblong. Wings closed ; subcostal cell sometimes closed by the radial vein ; generally a cubital cell ; four posteriors. L. CONVENIENS. Walker, I.e., p. 57 (1848), Body and wings pale-tawny ; eyes black • tips of feet brown ; wings colourless ; veins tawny ; the first and second longitudinal simple ; the third has a short cross upright vein, which connects it with the fourth, and the latter just after this junction sends forth a similar vein to the fifth ; the fifth beyond half its length sends forth a branch which is forked. Length, 24 lines ; of wings, 6 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair) . L. viCARiANs. Schiner, I.e.,]). 46 (1868). Rust-red ; the thorax with a dark-brown longish streak which reaches to about the middle, and is nowhere sharply bounded. Head, antennae, and palpi rust-red. Legs pale yellow, the points of the tibiae and thighs a little darker, the middle pair of femora with a darkening in the middle. Wings tinged pale yellow ; a small spot on the base of the radial vein, and a larger one like it on the edge. Length, 22-3 lines. Auckland . Family — Bibionid^. Proboscis short. Antennae shorter than the head and thorax, generally with less than tivelve joints. Legs moderate. Larvaa gene- rally living in cow-dung. (}enus-BIBIO. Latreille. Head in the male almost entirely occupied by the eyes ; in the female small, elongated, and inclined. Proboscis salient, terminal lips indistinct; labrum and labium ciliated towards tlic extremity. 18 DIPTERA Palpi five-jointed, the first very small. Antennse cylindrical, per- foliate, inserted under the eyes, nine-jointed, the two first separated from the others, the remainder very short. Eyes hairy in the male, naked and small in the female. Abdomen of male terminated by two hooks and two tubercles. Legs hairy; anterior thighs short, swollen in the female ; the posterior elongated in the male ; tibiae grooved ; the anterior short, swollen, terminated by a long and a short spine ; the posterior sAvollen in the male ; joints of the tarsi elongated ; three cushions at the extremity. Two basal cells in the wings. B. NiGRosTiGMA. Walker, I.e., p. 121 (1848) . Male. Body black, shining, thinly clothed with black hairs ; antennae black ; eyes dark red ; legs black ; wings clear-brown ; brands, fore-border, and adjoining veins black ; the other veins tawny; poisers dull brown, with piceous knobs. Female. Thorax red, with a black lobe on each side in front ; hips and thighs red. Length 3— 3i lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair) . B. RUFicoxis. Macquart, Dipt. Exot., Supp. iv., p. 17, pi. 1, /. 10 (1850). Female. Proboscis, palpi, and antennae black. Front fulvous. Thorax and scutellum entirely fulvous. Abdomen fulvous. Legs black, the coxae red. Wings fuscous, the transverse vein which closes the posterior basal cell^ closely approaching the base of the second posterior cell. Tasmania (Macquart) ; New Zealand (Novara Exp.) . aenus-DILOPHUS. Macquart. Like Bibio, but the femora spinose, and the prothorax pectinated. D. sPECTABiLis. Noiviki, I.e., p. 10 (1875). Female. Black ; coxae and femora rufous ; mesothorax variegated with red and black ; wings rather smoky, the stigma oblong, black. Length, 4i lines ; wings, 44 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). Genus-SIMULIA. Latreille. Fourth joint of the palpi rather elongated and slender. Antennae cylindrical, eleven-jointed, the two first of which are separated from * Macquart calls this the intemp-raedian cell. OF NEW ZEALAND. 19 the others. Eyes round. No ocelli. First joint of the tarsi as long as all the others together. Wings very broad, basal and subcostal cells very narrow. S. AUSTRALiENsis. Schiuer, I.e., p. 15 (1868). Blackish-brown, thorax dusted lighter ; yellow round the corners of the shoulders. Base of the femora, tibiae, and tarsi yellowish. Wings hyaline ; costal vein intense black, not nearly reaching the point of the wing ; the other veins brownish ; discoidal vein thick as far as the cross vein, then very faint, the forks with a short petiole ; postical and anal veins faint. Length, f line. Auckland. This is the common sandfly of New Zealand. Division — Brachycera. Antennae short, not more than three-jointed, of which, however, the last may be complex. Palpi one- or two-jointed. Family — Tabanid^. Body large. Head depressed. Proboscis long, the terminal lips elongated, containing in the male four, in the female six, lamelliform bristles. Palpi inserted at the base of the maxillary bristles, elevated in the male, lying under the proboscis in the female ; the second joint generally ovoid in the male, conic in the female. Third joint of the antennae with four to eight divisions ; no style. In the male the facets of the lower half are smaller. Middle tarsi terminated by two spines; tarsi with three cushions. Wings generally expanded; five posteriors, generally open at the extremity ; anal cell elongated. Genus-TABANUS. Linn(eus. Proboscis inclined in the male, perpendicular in the female. Third joint of the antennae elongated, dilated above at its base, then sloped above with a spine at its base ; five divisions, of which the four last are small. Front of the male with slight callosities anteriorly. No ocelli. T. iMPAR. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 258 (1854). Male. Black ; antennae fulvous at the base ; sides of the thorax ferruginous; abdomen ferruginous, ornamented with a short dorsal black band and fascia, also a yellow fascia and fulvous three-sided spots. Tibiae fulvous ; tarsi pitch-brown, Wings grey. 20 DIPTERA Female. Brown ; thorax with the sides and three longitudinal bands fulvous ; breast hoary ; abdomen fulvous, apex pitch-brown. Legs fulvous. New Zealand (Colonel Bolton). T. SARPA. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 255 (1854). Brown ; thorax with four hoary bands ; breast white. Abdomen pitch-brown, below hoary ; the segments margined posteriorly with fulvous. Legs fulvous ; femora cinereous ; tarsi black. Wings greyish. T. TRUNCATUs. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 255 (1854). Brown ; antennae black, the bases pitch-brown. Thorax with three cinereous bands, the sides and the breast hoary. Abdomen cinereous, ornamented with sub-interrupted brown bands. Legs fulvous ; anterior femora and tarsi black. Wings grey, subfulvous at the base and costa. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). T. oPLUs. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 255 (1854) . Male. Brown ; antennae and legs fulvous ; breast hoary ; abdomen ferruginous, with an interrupted black band. Tarsi brown. Wings greyish. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). T. soRDiDus. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 256 (1854). Black; head clothed with hoary tomentum and down. Palpi tawny. Thorax with three hoary stripes, clothed with hoary hairs ; a few black hairs on each side, and a ferruginous callus before each wing. Abdomen tawny with a black stripe, which is interrupted on the hind-border of each segment, and is dilated at the base and towards the tip ; hind-borders of the segments testaceous. Posterior tibiae tawny. Wings grey ; veins black, clouded with brown ; first branch of the cubital vein simple, hardly angular near the base; sub-anal joining the anal at some distance from the base. Poisers tawny. Length, 6^ lines. New Zealand (Colonel Bolton). T. BRATRANKii. Noivicki, l.c. , p. 19 (1875). Male and Female. Isabella-brown ; breast blackish ; abdomen, except a middle series of triangular spots, and the posterior and lateral margins of each segment, deep fuscous, frequently tinted a OF NEW ZEALAND. SI sordid red towards the base of the abdomen ; eyes hairy, unicoloured ; first two joints of the antennae red, the third black, narrow ; halteres blackish - brown ; wings brownish -cinereous, the veins and stigma brown ; hairs all over the body almost all pale. Male. Palpi short, last joint ovate ; eyes touching ; thorax and scutellum brown-black ; femora black, tibiae and the extreme apices of the femora red ; tarsi, except the base, black-brown. Female. Palpi elongated, last joint narrow and prolonged ; front between the eyes narrow and equal, with a small callus inferiorly ; legs red ; tarsi, except the base, fuscous. Length, 6?— 74 lines. Wing, Q—7 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). T. TRANsvERsus. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 256 (1854). Male and Female. Testaceous. Head and thorax with white tomentum beneath. Antennae tawny, small, slightly curved, with black tips ; third forming an obtuse angle, above. Thorax with four brown stripes. Abdomen brown above, excepting a dorsal stripe and the hind-borders of the segments. Tarsi brownish. Wings greyish ; veins tawny ; stigma brown ; transverse veins black, first branch of the cubital vein simple ; sub-anal vein joining the anal close to the border. Length, 3i-4 lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). Genus-PANaONIA. Latreille. Proboscis long, slender, horizontal ; terminal lips indistinct. Face convex. Third joint of the antennae with eight divisions, of which the first is thick, and the last rather longer than the others. First posterior cell generally closed before the extremity. P. LARDA. Walker, Ins. Saund., Dipt. I, p. 16 (1850). Head pale yellow above, hoary and thickly clothed with pale- yellow hairs beneath ; a ferruginous club-shaped mark on the crown. Eyes black, clothed with hoary hairs, parted above by a moderate interval ; the facets very small. Sucker black, a little shorter than the chest; lancets bright ferruginous; compound joint curved upward, tapering from the base to the tip, much longer than the three pre- ceding joints. Chest black ; sides ferruginous, clothed with tawny hairs ; breast hoary, clothed with tawny hairs. Abdomen ferruginous, obconical, a little broader and longer than the chest ; clothed with 22 DIPTERA tawny hairs, which are chiefly on the hind-borders of the segments ; the back adorned by an interrupted black stripe, which is widened on the fore-borders of the segments. Legs ferruginous ; hips and thighs thinly clothed with long pale hairs ; shanks and feet covered with pale down ; four hinder thighs tipped with spines ; claws black. Wings grey, brown at the base, beneath the fore-borders, and along the veins j wing-ribs pitchy ; veins black, pitchy at the base and along the fore-border ; angle of the tip cross-vein obtuse, distinct. Scales grey, with darker borders. Poisers tawny. Length, 62 lines. New Zealand. P. ADREL, Walker, Ins. Saund., Dipt. 1, p. 16 (1850) . Body dark brown. Head pale tawny, and clothed with tawny hairs in front ; hoary and clothed with pale-yellow hairs beneath and behind. Eyes black, thickly clothed with short black hairs, and in front and on each side with pale-yellow hairs ; all the facets very small. Sucker black ; palpi black, clothed with black hairs. Feelers black, first and second joints thickly beset with long black bristles ; third short, slightly convex above and beneath ; compound joint rather long, not very compact, tapering and much curved upward from the base to the tip. Chest clothed with short dark tawny hairs, fringed on each side with longer pale-yellow hairs. Abdomen black, somewhat obconical, very much broader and a little longer than the chest ; a stripe composed of tufts of pale-yellow hairs along the back, and a larger tuft of the like hairs on each side of the tip ; hind- borders of the segments fringed with pale-yellow hairs. Legs black; hips and thighs tinged with grey, clothed with pale-tawny hairs ; shanks beset with very short black bristles ; foot-cushions pale-tawny. Wings grey, mostly dark brown towards the base and beneath the fore-border ; wing ribs pitchy ; veins black ; curve of the tip cross- vein slight ; posterior submarginal areolet closed near the border. Scales grey. Poisers yellow. Length, 6 lines. New Zealand. P. HiETicEPs. Nowicki, I.e., p. 17 (1875). Male and Female. Brownish-black, clouded ; antennae subulate ; palpi narrow ; proboscis short and thick ; legs near the end altogether black ; the two first abdominal segments broadly margined laterally, the following ones coriaceous on the posterior margins, with pale- luteous hairs below, and with pale luteous and black above ; thus, on OF NEW ZEALAND. 23 the anterior margin of the thorax^ and posterior angles and middle of the posterior margins of the second, third, and fourth abdominal segments, all the hairs are pale, on the lateral margins of the abdomen black and pale fasciculi alternate conspicuously. Wings cinereous, smeared with black ; the first posterior cell narrow, the fourth broadly open, the anterior branch of the third longitudinal vein not appendi- culate. Length, 6|-7i lines. Wing, 6-7 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). aenus-PELECORHYNCHUS. Macquart. Head as large as the thorax. Proboscis as long as the head ; lips thick, in form of a hatchet ; palpi short, rounded, depressed. Face hairy, and convex in the male, less so in the female. Antennse as in Pangonia. Eyes naked. Ocelli. Posterior femora without spurs, shortly ciliated outside and inside. First posterior cell open. Australia. P. ORNATUS. Schiner, I.e., p. 98 (1868). Female. Thorax black, with brown tomentum ; two black clavate spots on the tip, close to two slate-blue longitudinal streaks which join behind, just in front of the scutellum ; hairy on the sides ; a bunch of red hairs at the base of the wings, and further behind whitish hairs ; breast yellowish- white with a few black hairs in the middle. Scutellum black, hairy, the point with a bunch of red hairs. Abdomen black ; first segment with a whitish semicircle which ends in a four-cornered spot ; fifth segment with a transverse band ; second to fourth with a seam of reddish hair on the back, the lower surface like the upper, the white transverse markings rather larger. Head with the convex part of the face brownish, with black hairs ; sides with whitish down ; front brown with lateral bands of brown down, and a little white down in front of them. Palpi testaceous, with white hairs. The two first joints of the antennse brown, as also are the four last divisions of the third, the rest red. Legs dark yellowish-red, with pale-yellow hairs. Wings hyaline, with dark-brown rim, and three spots of the same colour ; the first on the base of the basal cell ; tlie second from the middle cross-vein to the postical vein; the third broken up into spots. Length, 6 lines. Auckland. 24 DIPTEBA Family — Bombiliid^. Antennae long, three-jointed, sometimes far apart ; eyes large^ connivent in the^males ; proboscis sometimes as long as the body, with bristle-like piercers ; abdomen often woolly, with six or seven segments. Larvae parasitic on other insects in whose nests they live ; pupae with hook-like bristles. aenus-COMPTOSIA. Macquart. Proboscis rather elongated and generally obliquely elevated between the antennae. Face oblique, rather protruding above. Front linear, the anterior portion triangular. Antennae approximated, the third joint conical, the style as long as the joint. Abdominal segments bordered with little bristles. Wings rather narrow. C. BicoLOR. Macquart, Dipt. Ewot., Supp. 4^, p, 114 (1850). Female. Sides of the face testaceous. Front black, without down, but with little black hairs. Antennae black. Thorax black (rubbed), humeral spots testaceous, another spot of the same colour on each side of the posterior margin ; sides testaceous with black spots. Abdomen bluish-black (rubbed) below, and legs testaceous ; the two last joints of the tarsi black. Wings greyish, the exterior margin brownish ; two cubital cells, the second apper^diculate. Length, 5| lines. East coast of Australia (Macquart) ; New Zealand (" Raise der ^Novara'"). C. FAsciATA. Fabricius, Sy sterna Antiliatorum, p. 118 f Anthrax), (1805). Body black, hairy. Wings black, with a small white band near the apex. Islaiids 01 the Pacific Ocean (Fabr.) ; New Zealand (" Reise der 'Novara'")- Family — Inflate . Head bent down, small, entirely occupied by the eyes ; thorax and six-segmented abdomen large, inflated ; proboscis variable, sometimes longer than the body and turned under the thorax, or absent ; bristles four; palpi rudimentary. (}enus-HENOPS. Illiger, Proboscis not apparent. Antennae inserted on the lower part of the head, very small, two-jointed; the first tuberculiform ; the last OF NEW ZEALAND. 25 oval ; style elongated^ a little enlarged at the extremity. Eyes naked. Abdomen broader than the thorax. A discoidal cell ; sub- costal narrow ; cubital large ; four incomplete posterior cells. H. BKUNNEUSj Sp. HOV. Thorax and scutellum pitch-brown^ with scattered yellow-brown hairs. Abdomen brown^ the posterior margin of each segment yellow above. Head black : eyes meeting. Antenna pitch-brown. Legs brown. Wings hyaline; the costal and subcostal veins brown. Lengthy 3 lines. Lake Wanaka. Family — Asilidj3. Body elongated ; head with appendages ; the united mandibles and ej)ipharynx form a piercer ; maxilla sharp ; labium pointed ; tarsus with two pulvilli; antennae three- jointed. Genus-SAEOPOaON. Loew. Proboscis rather swollen in the middle. The two first joints of the antennse shorty nearly equal; the third elongated, compressed, rather fusiform ; style short, slender, conical, often of two distinct joints. Abdomen cylindrical or depressed, obtuse ; genitalia hidden in the male; anus with a row of points in the female. Anterior femora furnished with a spine at the extremity. Subcostal cell ; and four posteriors open. S. viDUUs. Walker, I.e., p. 354 (DasijpogonJ , (1849). Body black ; head narrower than the thorax, clothed with grey down, beset behind the eyes with a row of black bristles, thinly clothed beneath with grey hairs; crown piceous, beset on each side with black hairs; epistome armed with twelve long black spines; eyes black; fore- part flat ; its facets a little larger than those of the convex part. Lip piceous, clothed at the tip with tawny hairs ; hypostoma and palpi black, clothed with black hairs. Antennae black; first and second joints with long black hairs; second joint a little shorter than the first ; third joiiit spindle-shaped, nearly as long as the first and the second, clothed above with short black hairs ; fourth joint short ; fifth extremely short. Thorax covered with grey down, beset on each side and behind with long black bristles ; disc black, excepting two grey stripes which are widened in front and behind, and are beset with a few short black hairs. Abdomen slightly shining, with an indistinct grey stripe on each side, tapering from the base to the tip, narrower 3 26 DIPTERA tlian tlic thorax and more than twice its lengthy thinly clothed with very short black hairs, and having also a few longer grey hairs at the base and on the underside ; the black hairs are more numerous at the tip ; first and second segments short ; third and following segments long, but successively decreasing in length ; third segment with a cross row of punctures on the furrow near the base. Legs black, thinly clothed with short grey hairs ; shanks and feet beset with black spines ; feet long, clothed beneath with dark tawny brown ; claws black; foot-cushions dark tawny; tips of fore-shanks armed with a curved black tooth, corresponding with a large black tubercle at the base of the fore-feet. Wings very slightly grey, dark grey at the tips ; wing-ribs piceous ; veins black, piceous at the base. Poisers yellow. Length, 6—7 lines. New Zealand (Colenso). S. DISCUS. Walker, I.e., p. 358 (Dasypogon), (18-f9). Female. Body black. Head covered with tawny down, a little narrower than the thorax, covered on each side of the crown Avith a few black hairs, beset behind the eyes with a row of black bristles, clothed beneath with long pale-yellow hairs ; front and epistome adorned with bright pale -golden down ; clypeus armed with ten long- white bristles ; eyes black, fore-part nearly fiat, distinguished also from the other part by the larger size of its facets ; lip black, clothed at the tip with short tawny hairs ; palpi and hypostoma black, clothed with long pale-yellow hairs. Antennae black, first and second joints with black hairs ; second joint slightly club-shaped, beset with one or two black bristles, a little shorter than the first ; third joint linear, longer than the first and the second ; fourth joint very short ; fifth obsolete. Thorax covered with tawny down, which forms two stripes in the middle, thinly clothed with short black hairs, and beset on each side with some black bristles ; breast covered with pale-tawny down, having a hoary tinge. Abdomen above black, and thinly clothed with very short pale-tawny hairs, red at the tip and along the sides, taAvny and shining beneath, almost linear, nearly as broad as the thorax and more than twice its length ; first and second segments short ; third segment long, Avith a cross row of punctures along the furrow near its base ; the following segments successively decreasing in length. Legs red, almost hairless, beset with black spines, which are much more numerous on the feet than on the shanks or thighs ; thighs paler at the base ; feet black, red at the base ; claws black ; foot-cushions jjale brown ; a black stripe on each fore-thigh ; tip of OF NEW ZEALAND. 27 fore-shanks armed with a black curved tooth, corresponding with some black tubercles at the base of the fore-feet. Wings colourless, grey at the tips ; wing-ribs ferruginous, veins piceous, black towards the tips. Poisers large, yellow. Length, 6 lines. New Zealand (Earl). S. ANTiPODUs. Schiner, I.e., p. 166 (1868). Female. Brownish-red; thorax with golden-yclloAv longitudinal bands, and the same colour on the shoulders and suture. Scutellum, thorax, and sides of breast shining golden yellow ; sides of the breast below the root of the wing with a four-cornered space free from yellow dust. Abdomen shining, tapering towards the end; first seg- ment black on each side of the base ; second, black in front. Geni- talia of female encircled with points. Head blackish; epistome broad, golden yellow, beard yellow ; palpi blackish-brown, with shining black hairs. Antennae blackish-brown ; the two first joints with strong black bristles ; the third long, flat, naked ; the small style bud-like. Head dusted gold-yellow, black in the middle ; legs rust-yellow ; hips shining white, the upper part of the thighs with black stripes ; tarsi, except metatarsi, blackish-brown. Body naked, bristles on legs black. Wings pale brownish-yellow, veins brown ; second posterior cell very small, the fourth open but narrowed towards the end ; anal cell open. Length, 6 lines. Probably the same as the last. aenus-ITAMUS. Loeiv. Black-grey species, of medium or somewhat considerable size, with more or less expanded reddish-yellow coloration of the tibiae. The female ovi23ositor in all the species is of quite extraordinary length. The male genitalia brilliant black, swollen out thick. This genus is formed from the group of As'ilus cyandrus. I. INQUISITOR. Nowicki, I.e., p. 21 (1875). Male and Female. Black ; shoulders, lateral margins, and pos- terior angles of thorax, scutellum, and the greater part of the legs reddish-bay ; femora smeared with black below, all the tarsi blackish- brown ; whiskers, except the lower part, front, anteniuE, thorax, and tarsi black ; nearly all the rest of the body with whitish hairs ; circles behind the setas, all the thorax and legs with black hairs ; abdomen with whitish hairs ; wings hyaline, the apex broadly cinereous. 28 DIPTERA Male. Hypopygium large^ subtumidj reddish-bay. Length, 8 lines; wing, 60 lines. Female. Abdomen from the apex to the sixth segment com- pressed into a borer. Length, 85 lines ; Aving, 61 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). I. MELANOPOGON. Schifter, I.e., p. 190 (1868). Black. Thorax and scntcllnm dusted yellow, general marks blackish; middle streak separated by a fine line, lateral streaks inter- rupted ; scutellum Avith whitish hairs, the bristles black ; sides yellow spotted with black. Abdomen blackish, the sides dusted yellow, and with yellow bristles ; genitalia in the male black, thick, clavate. Lower face yellow ; projecting mystax black ; antennse black ; hairs black. Legs black; femora yellow-grey, the intermediate pair with a black spot ; tibise, excej)t the points, rust-yellow ; the short hairs on the thighs black and yellow. Wings intense brownish-yellow, the apex and greater part of the posterior margin grey. Female. Incisions of the abdomen broader and more distinct ; ovipositor black, drawn out. Halteres yellow. Length, 8—82 lines. Perhaps the same as Asilus varius. aenus-ASILUS. Linnceus. Upper lip obliquely truncated. First joint of the antennas rather long ; the third long, subulate, compressed ; style setaceous, rather long, two-jointed. Abdomen elongated, narrowed posteriorly. Genitalia large in the male; the borer compressed and bivalve in the female. Subcostal cell generally small, sometimes longer than the first ; fourth posterior cell closed. A. vAiiius. Walker, I.e., p. 457 (181.9). Body dark brown. Head tawny, as broad as the thorax, clothed behind and beneath with Avhite hairs, and above Avith black hairs, beset Avith black bristles along the upper hind borders of the eyes ; front clothed Avith golden doAvn; episiome th'ickhj beset with black bristles ; eyes dark red, the fore-part flat, composed of larger facets than is the other part ; lip black, shining, clothed at the tip with short taAvny hairs ; palpi black, beset with black bristles. Antennae black ; first and second joints thickly clothed with black hairs ; second joint club-shaped, much shorter than the first ; third joint Avith a piceous tinge, tapering from the base to the tip, rather longer than the first and second joints ; fourth and following joints forming a OF NEW ZEALAND. 29 bristle, which is a little shorter than the third joint. Thorax adorned with three bright yellowish-white stripes ; middle stripe very slight and indistinct^ side stripes joined by tv/o oblique bands with the sides of the chesty which like the breast are also bright yellowish-white; sides and side stripes beset with long black hairs and bristles ; scutellum and hind thorax jiale tawny. Abdomen thinly clothed with short tawny hairs ; hind borders of the segments pale bright yellow, clothed on each side towards the base with tawny bristles ; first and second segments very short ; third and following segments long but successively decreasing in length ; appendages at the tip very large, black, shining, clothed with tawny and biack hairs, and with some black bristles ; under-side tawny. Legs black, thick, clothed with short ferruginous hairs, and beset with stout black spines ; shanks red with black tips ; claws black ; foot-cushions dull tawny. "Wings colourless, with very slight tawny streaks along the veins ; grey on the tips and on the discs of the areolets along the hind borders ; wing-ribs and veins black. Poisers yellow. Female. Abdomen full twice the length of the thorax ; segments from the seventh to the ninth compressed, black, shining -, tips of the wings paler than those of the male. Length, 6^—8? lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair and Earl). A. BULBUS. Walker, I.e., p. 465 (1849). Body piceous. Head narrower than the thorax, covered with tawny down, clothed behind and beneath with pale-yellow hairs, beset behind the eyes with some black bristles ; sides of the crown thickly covered with black hairs ; cpistome thickl}^ covered with long black bristles ; eyes dark bronze, fore-part flat, its facets somewhat larger than those of the other part ; lip black, clothed at the tip with short tawny hairs ; palpi black, clothed with long pale-yellow hairs ; tongue • ferruginous. Antennae black, first and second joints beset with black hairs ; second joint full half the length of the first ; third joint rather broad, obconical at the base, tapering thence to the tip, beset with a very few short and slender hairs ; style stent, nearly as long as the third joint. Thorax thinly clothed with short black hairs, beset on each side and behind with a fev/ black In-istle.s, adorned with three dark- tawny stripes, middle stripe very slender ; side stripes connected ])y two oblique tav/ny bands with the sides of the chest, which are also tawny; shoulders and breast ferruginous, the latter covered with a grey bloom. Abdomen narrower than the thorax, rather more than twice its length in the male, and about thrice its length in the female, 30 DIPTERA tapering from the base to the tip, compressed and lengthened towards the tip in both sexes, clothed with short black hairs and with a few long whitish hairs (the latter are chiefly towards the base and on the under-side) ; first and second segments short ; third and following segments long. Legs dark ferruginous, clothed with short black hairs, armed with black spines; feet black; foot-cushions piceous. Wings whitish-brown at the tips ; wing-ribs piceous ; veins ])lack, piceous towards the base. Poisers tawny. Length, 60— 10 lines. Var. ^. Thighs black. New Zealand (Colcnso). A. LAScus. Walker, I.e., JJ- 466 (1849). Body slender, brown. Head as broad as the thorax, covered with dark tawny down, beset behind the eyes with a few black bristles, thinly clothed beneath with whitish hairs ; epistome armed ivith long white bristles ; eyes bronze, fore-part nearly flat, its facets larger than those of the other part ; lip black, clothed at the tip with short white hairs ; palpi black, beset Avith long black hairs. Antenuie black ; first and second joints beset with a few black hairs ; second joint slightly club-shaped, tawny in the female, rather more than half the length of the first ; third joint tapering from the base to the tip, as long as the first and the second, tawny at the base in the female ; style stout, rather more than half the length of the third joint. Thorax beset on each side and behind with a few black bristles, adorned with three iucomplete tawny stripes ; sides tawny ; breast hoary. Abdomen piceous, narrower than the thorax and more than twice its length, clothed with tawny hairs, slightly tapering from the base to the tip ; first and second segments very short ; third and following segments long, successively decreasing in length. Genitalia of the male small, tip of the female compressed. Legs dull tawny, clothed with short tawny hairs, armed with long tawny bristles ; thighs and shanks striped with piceous, especially towards the tips ; feet piceous, tawny at the base; claws black; foot-cushions tawny. Wings light tawny, grey at the tips, and along the hind-borders ; wing-ribs piceous, veins black, piceous at the iDase. Poisers tawny. Length, 5—6 lines. New Zealand (Colenso) . Genus-LAMPEIA. Macfjuart. Body slender, naked or covered with down. Head depressed ; neck rather elongated. Face salient below, mystax covering the OF NEW ZEALAND, 31 salient composed o£ long hairs bordered by still longer and thicker bristles. Proboscis elongated^ the extremity obtuse. Palpi slender, a little hairy. Third joint of the antennae straight above^ slightly convex below, and ending in a point. Legs with long hairs ; posterior femora thick, straight below, very convex above; posterior tibiae ter- minated by an obtuse ]3oint, bordered with short bristles. Terminal vein of the fourth posterior cell slightly rounded. Colours brilliant. L. jEnea. Fabricius. L. colo?'ata: Boisduval, Voy. '' Astrolabe J" L. ceneci: Macquart, Dipt. Ex. 1, pt. 2, p. 61, pi. G, fig. 1. Metallic blue. Abdomen marked on each side with white. Whiskers golden. Wings blackish-brown. Length, 7 lines. Java; Solomon Islands and New Ireland (Macquart) ; New Zea- land (Nowicki) . Family — Midasid^. Proboscis generally short. Antennae generally longer than the head, five-jointed ; the third very long, the fourth shorter ; fifth clubbed, excavated at the extremity. aenus-MIDAS. Fabricius. Proboscis short ; terminal lips triangular, compressed. M. MACQUARTi. ScMncr, I.e. M. clavata : Macquart, I.e., Supp. 4, p. 59, 2il- 4, /. 5 (1850) . Proboscis a little elongated. Palpi black. Face shining-black, the moustache yellowish. Front black. Antennae black ; the first joint rather elongated and thick. Thorax black, slightly shining, with two bands of yellow down ; shoulders prominent, fulvous ; a fulvous spot on each side on the posterior border ; sides shining-black ; scu- tellum fulvous, a small black spot in the middle. Abdomen com- pressed, shining-black ; second to the fifth segments with a lateral fulvous spot, broad on the anterior border, ending in a point before reaching the posterior border; belly with lateral elongated spots. Coxae black ; femora fore and middle black, with a little yellow at the base and at the tip ; the hind pair with the anterior portion slender and yellow, the posterior portion with two rows of spines below ; anterior and middle tibiae black outside, yelloAV inside ; the posterior pair black with yellow at the base ; tarsi black, the first joint of the anterior pair yellow, and the first and second joints of the middle and hinder pairs yellow ; first joint of the posterior pair with spines below. 32 DIPTERA Wings yellowish^ the exterior border brown ; marginal and tbe two submarginal cells closed ; tlie second submarginal with a long peti- ole ; five posterior cells. Lengthy 6 lines. East coast of Australia (Macquart) ; New Zealand {" Reise der 'Novara' "). Pamily — Therevidje. Tarsus with two pnlvilli ; proboscis short ; pnpa spiny ; style of the antennae apical. Genus-THEEEVA. LatreiUe. Palpi cylindrical, terminated by a rounded swelling. First joint of the antennae elongated, cylindrical ; the third conical, a little swollen in the middle; style short, tAvo-jointed. T. BiLiNEATA. FabHcius, Syst. Ent. {1775), p. 757 (Bibio). Head black ; antenme approximated. Thorax liairj^, black, with two white longitudinal lines. Abdomen subconical, elongated, black. Wings white, the exterior margin black. Legs black, the bases of the tibiae ferruginous. New Zealand (Sir J. Banks). Genns-ANABARYNCHUS. Macquart. Head hemispherial. Proboscis salient, elevated above the face and reaching the base of the antennae; terminal lips thick. Palpi hidden. Face short, nearly naked. Front of female elongated, narrow, no callosities. Antennae inserted towards the lower part of the head, inclined, not quite so long as the head ; first joint rather elongated, cylindrical ; second short, cyathiform ; third less elongated than the first, thick, terminated by a point ; style short. Eyes naked. Abdomen conical. Legs slender, thighs without bristles ; the pos- terior furnished with a single one near the extremity. Wing- veins as in Thereva. A. LURiDUs. Sckiner, I.e., p. 148 (1868). Male. Erown, dusted with yellow. Thorax with darkish longi- tudinal streaks ; the middle one line-like, and outside it another rather broad streak, interrupted on the suture, and a small brown streak which does not reach the suture ; sides of the chest greyish ; OF NEW ZEALAND. 33 sides of the thorax with black bristles ; sides of the chest with slender silk-like white hairs. Abdomen shining-white, with white incisions and white sides ; hairs thin and white, on the end of the abdomen black. Head brown, epistome and front dusted with broAvnish-yellow; front lighter, with short black hairs. Antennae blackish-brown ; first joint with black hairs ; the third with a distinct constricted style. Proboscis and palpi light-brown, the end of the former reaching close up to the antennae. Legs dirty-yellow, hips dusted with whitish-grey; thighs strongly darkened and with fine Avhitc tomentum outside. Wings tinged with dirty-yellow; the veins brown. Length, 5 lines. Auckland. Family — Dolichopodidje. Legs long ; pulvilli three ; proboscis short. Genus-PSILOPUS. Meigen. Face broad in both sexes. Palpi with one bristle. Third joint of the antennpe generally round, the style inserted near its extremity. Eyes generally hairy in the male. Abdomen long and slender ; appen- dices filiform. Legs very long and slender, anterior thighs with bristles above. Four posterior cells, the second incomplete. P. GEMMATUs. Walker, l.c, J). 6i7 (1849). Body bright bluish-green, beset with black bristles. Head covered in front with white down ; eyes bright-red ; mouth tawny ; antennae black, style nearly as long as the thorax. Breast and sides of the chest covered with whitish bloom. Abdomen golden green, bluish- green at the base. Legs pale yellow, clothed with very short black bristles; feet darker, pitchy towards their tips. Wings slightly grey; wing-ribs and poisers tawny ; veins black ; curve of the tip cross-vein unusually slight. Length, 2 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). Section— COARCTATiE. The pupae are formed within the larval integument, which hardens into a pupa-shell. Family — STUATiOMTiDiB. Antennae three-jointed, the third joint generally five- or six-ringed and often terminated by a style ; proboscis Avith a terminal fleshy lip. 34< DIPTERA Division A. Abdomen narrow, with seven distinct segments. Genus-DIPHYSA. Macquart. Palpi very sliort; antennae ten-jointed, longer than the head, flagellum sub-linear, style none. Scutellum with four spines. D. APicALis. Walker, I.e., j). 1151 (1849) . Voy. " Ereh:' and " Terror,'' bisects, pi. 7,/. 17. Head black, hoary in front ; eyes pitchy-black ; facets of the fore- part rather larger than those elsewhere; palpi and sucker tawny; second joint of the palpi spindle-shaped, not broader than the first ; antennae black, filiform, dark red towards the base, nearly as long as the thorax. Thorax and breast dark purple. Thorax with golden down which forms three stripes. Scutellum tawny, armed with four teeth. Abdomen tawny, a little narroAver than the chest and nearly twice its length, slightly decreasing in breadth from the base to the tip, which is purple. Legs tawny ; hind legs long, their thighs club- shaped, fore feet pitchy. Wings colourless on the disc, tawny along the fore border, grey along the hind border and the tip ; adorned with a blackish band, which does not reach the hind border ; wing-ribs and veins tawny, veins pitchy on the blackish band. Poisers pale yellow. Length, ?>\ lines. New Zealand (Sir J. Hooker). aeniTS-ACTINA. Meigen. Palpi long. Antennae sub-fusiform ; style none ; flagellum sub- conical. Scutellum armed with spines. A. suBSTiTUTA. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 12 {Beris), (1854.). Dull green, or aeneous-green. Antennae black. Paljji testaceous. Scutellum with four tawny spines. Al)domen purplish-cupreous. Legs tawny ; femora and tibiae with brown bands. Wings greyish ; stigma and veins black. Length, 2 lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). This species has three externo-medial veins, and the first branch of the cubital vein is very short, proceeds almost directly to the border, and thus forms an unusually large angle with the second branch. In OF NEW ZEALAND. 35 this character it differs more than Actina from most of the species of Beris. A. opposiTA. Walker, I.e., Supp.,]}. 13 (1854). Antennae tawny, black towards the tips. Palpi pale yellow. Thorax bright bluish-green, with whitish down ; scutellum with testaceous spines. Abdomen testaceous; segments black along the hind borders, and with a triangular black spot on each side ; tip black. Legs testaceous ; tips of the hind femora brown ; hind tibiae brown, with a tawny middle band. Wings limpid ; stigma testaceous. Length, 3 lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). aenus-EXAIRETA. Schiner. Head semi-circular, front broad in both sexes, and small. Antennae sunk in tl;e head ; first and second joints rather long, the second shorter ; the third very long, with ten rings, of which the first is the largest ; the end rings so close that they are difficult to dis- tinguish ; a few bristles on the point, but no style. Proboscis pro- truding, lips erect. Palpi small, three-jointed (?) ; penultimate joint thickened at the end ; the last short, cylindrical, with a blunt point. Face flat ; front with two long streaks ; protuberance with three distant, rather elevated, punctures. Thorax slightly curved. Sciitellum large, elevated posteriorly, margin with four long spines. Abdomen more than twice the length of the thorax, flat, with seven segments. Genitalia small ; male with two small style-like flaps ; female with a small, terminal, elevated lamella. Legs slender; posterior femora lengthened, strong, clavate ; metatarsi longer than the other members together ; posterior tibiae thick and plump. Pulvilli three, large. Wings naked ; mediastinal and subcostal veins only separated in front ; cubital vein ends in the rim of the wing, shortly forked ; discoidal cell seven-cornered ; in front there are four veins ending on the rim of the wing, therefore there are five posterior cells. Poiscrs large, with a broad head. E. spiNiGER. Weidemann, Ausser-euroj)dische ziveifiugelige Insecten, II., p. 618 (Xylophagus) , (1880). B. servilki : Maequart, Bipt. Exot., l.,p. 172, y. 21,/. 1 (1838). Head hemispherical, depressed in both sexes. Palpi blackish, the last joint forming an angle with the first, salient, perpendicular to the 36 DIPTERA face^ broad ; obtusely pointed in the male, slender in the female. Face with white down and hairs. Front black, anteriorly with white hairs ; the rest naked. Antennse testaceous-yellow ; base of the first joint, and the last divisions of the third joint black. Eyes naked. Thorax black, with thin white or yellowish down. Scutellum with four long spines, yelloAv, blackish at the base. Abdomen blackish-blue, with violet reflections ; incisions with thin Avliite down. Borer of the female with two small hairy points, black, and two other shorter and broader pieces, under these points ; genitalia of the male small. Thiglis black, the base white ; the posterior pair rather swollen towards the extremity ; tibiaj and tarsi of the first and middle pairs pale yellow; the middle blackish below; posterior tibiae thick, black, the base white ; posterior tarsi with the first joint white, not swollen in the male ; the others black. Poisers whitish. Wings with the posterior half brownish, clearer towards the tip ; stigma brown, a small hyaline patch on the exterior border near the base of the submarginal cell ; five posterior cells. New South Wales (Weidemann) ; New Zealand (" Rcise der 'Novara'"). E. ANALis. NovAcki, l.c.,p,\\ (1875). Female. Thorax purplish-seneous, humeral callus and scutellum rufous ; abdomen rufous, the apical third purplish-aeneous ; legs rufous, the anterior tarsi brownish-black ; Avings ochraceous, a sharplj'^ defined brown mark through the discoidal cell, getting blackish-brown towards the stigma, Avliich also is brownish ; the mark is distinctly paler between the stigma and the second submarginal cell. Length, 31—4! lines ; wing, 2f— 3^ lines. New Zealand (EdAvards). E. sTRAZNiTZKii. Noivicki , I.e., p. 14 (1875). Male and Female. Red ; thorax ornamented with black lines and spots, wdth aineous reflections ; abdomen from the apex to the posterior limb of the fifth segment aeneous-purple ; Avings pale luteous, in the immature almost hyaline ; through the middle of the apex a brownish mark, paler in the first submarginal cell, and continued behind the fifth vein far into the anal cell ; stigma blackish-brow^n, the apex of the marginal cell lutescent. Length, 4-4^ lines ; wing, Si— 3o lines. New Zealand (Edwards). OF NEW ZEALAND. 37 Division B. Abdomen broad, with five distinct segments. Genus-STRATIOMYIA. Geoffroy. Proboscis very short, compressed. Third joint of the palpi rather swollen ; a transverse groove on the lower part of the face. First joint of the antennae much longer than the second ; the third long, almost fusiform, with five divisions ; no style. Tibise rather swollen in the middle. S. FULVicEPS. Walker, I.e., Supp., p. 56 (1854). Female. Black; head tawny. Proboscis and antennae black. Thorax clothed with gilded hairs, tawny along each side. Pectus tawny. Scutellum testaceous. Abdomen tawny along each side, testaceous beneath. Legs tawny. Wings limpid, tinged with brown towards the base ; veins brownish. Halteres testaceous. Length, 4 lines. Genus-ODONTOMYIA. Latreille. Proboscis slender ; third joint of the palpi slightly swollen. Epistome often salient, a transverse groove near the buccal cavity. First joint of the antennae short ; the third almost fusiform, of five divisions, without style. Generally four posterior cells. O. DORSALis. Walker, I.e., p. 536 fStratiomysJ , (1849); not S.dorsalis, Fabr. Head piceous, and clothed with short tawny hairs above, green in front and beneath; eyes piceous; mouth black; antennae piceous. Thorax black ; breast tawn3\ Scutellum apple-green, unarmed. Abdomen black, broader but not longer than the thorax; sides green, of a deeper hue than that of the scutellum. Legs tawny. Wings Avhitish ; wing-ribs tawny ; veins yellow. Poisers tawny, with green knobs. Length, 3 lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). O. CHLORis. Walker, I.e., Siqjp., p. 57 (StratiomysJ , (1854). Female. Black. Head tawny ; vertex and antennae black. Thorax with a green stripe on each side. Pectus mostly taAvny. Scutellum 38 DIPTERA tawuy. Wings limpid^ very slightly brownish at the base ; veins taAvny. Poisers green. Lengthy 1 lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). O. AXGUSTA. Walke)', I.e., Sujjp., p. 57 fStratiomysJ , (1854). Female. Body black, narrow, clothed beneath with white tomcntum. Head tawny, vertex and disc of the face black. Thorax along each side, and pectus, tawny. Legs nearly black ; fore tibiae tawny. Wings greyish, brown towards the base ; veins black. Length, Sf lines. Auckland (Colonel Bolton). O. AUSTRALiENsis. Schmcr, I.e., ji. 59 (1868). Female. Black. Thorax scaly, copper-red, sides of the breast yellow (when alive perhaps green) ; middle part of the breast black, but covered all over with whitish scales. Scutellum bordered with yellow. Lower aspect of abdomen with a broad yellow (green ?) lateral stripe, which is narrow on the second and third segments, and does not reach to the fifth segment ; last segment yellow ; belly apple- green. Head black ; front broad, with two transverse-oblique im- pressions with a furrow between them ; below the antennae there is a double transverse spot divided in the middle by a furrow ; lower face reddish-yellow. Antennae yellow; the third joint with a short pointed style. Legs reddish-yellow ; hinder tarsi blackish-brown. Wings hyaline, with rust-coloured veins. Length, 4 lines. O. iiYPOCHLORA. Noivicki, I.e., p. 15. Male and Female. Black ; the two first joints of the antennae black, the third fuscous ; face, scutellum (except a basal spot) , sides of the abdomen, and all the ventral surface green ; a great many spots, and the legs, luteous ; wings hyaline, stigma and veins deep fuscous, submarginal cell single, bases of the three next cells slightly smoky ; of the veins arising from the discoidal cell, the first behind the base is very thin, the third rudimentary or absent. Male. Green margin of the abdomen broad and unequal, dilated in the posterior portion of each segment. Length, 4 lines ; wing, 82 lines. Female. Middle of forehead green below, all black above ; green margin of the abdomen narrow and sub-equal. Length, 4i lines ; wing, 4 lines. New Zealand (Edwards). OF NEW ZEALAND. 39 O. AMYRis. Walker ^ I.e., p. 535. Body black ; liead tawny beneath, full as broad as tlie chest, metallic green on each side behind the eyes ; eyes bright red ; mouth black ; feelers piceous, tawny beneath ; first and second joints tawny, bristle black ; chest clothed with short tawny hairs ; breast tawny ; scutclieon yelloAy, armed with two short yellow teeth ; abdomen black, rather longer than broad, wider and a little longer than the chest, sides and under-side yellow ; legs tawny ; wings colourless ; wing-ribs, fore-borders, veins, and poisers tawny. Length, 32 lines; wing, 6 lines. New Holland (Walker) ; New Zealand (Nowicki) . Genus-CLITELLARIA. Meigen. Antennae nine-jointed ; first and second joints equal ; flagellum obclavate ; style distinct, two-jointed. Scutellum two-spined. C. ABERRANS. ScMner, I.e., p. 55 (1868). Black ; the whole body with a peculiar scale-like shining covering, which however does not alter the colour, and only appears on the abdomen as yellowish-white speckled. Thorax with short white hairs. Spines of the scutellum short and blunt. Head black; lower face above the border of the mouth with a white oblique band of hairs, which is continued in a fine streak on the lower rim of the eye ; the naked eyes of the male lie close together, and include nearly the whole of the head. Antennae long, principally in the third joint, as the two first joints are short ; the third indistinctly eight-ringed ; without style. Legs black; the front tarsi yellow at the base, the last pair yellow ; the second and third joints of the two last pairs totally black. Poisers yellow. Wings hyaline, the edge deep brown ; cubital vein straight, consequently the small cross vein of the dis- coidal is absent. Discoid al cell short and broad, almost trapezoidal, all four veins taking their rise out of the same, two and two near their basis. Anal cell very broad ; the postical vein forming a bow, ending in the anal vein. Length, 2^ lines. Auckland. Family — STEPHiDiE. Anteunse three-jointed, the last single, and generally with a dorsal style ; proboscis with four bristles ; three posterior marginal cells, the first closed ; a false longitudinal vein dividing the discoidal and first posterior cells. 40 i)lPTERA Genus-ERISTALIS. Latreille. Body thick. Face prominent. Antennae generally inserted under a projection on tlie front ; the third joint almost orbicular; style sometimes naked, sometimes hairy. Eyes hairy. Subcostal cell of the wing generally closed ; cubital pediform. E. ciNGULATUs. FabHcius, Syst. Ent. (1775), p. 767. Syst. Anti- Uatorum, p. 242. Head ferruginous, with two vertical black stripes ; style of antennse tomentose. Thorax black, covered with ferruginous tomen- tum. Abdomen black ; a white band, interrupted in the middle at the base of the first segment ; the second and third with four, and the fourth with two, white spots. Legs black, soles of the feet fer- ruginous ; femora thickened behind ; tibiae incurved. New Zealand (Sir J. Banks). The shape of the legs puts this species into the next genus. aenus-MALLOTA. Meigen. Body thick, generally hairy. Face prominent. Front broad in both sexes. Antennae inserted under a projection of the front; third joint broader than long. Posterior tibiae incurved. "Wings open, cubital vein sinuous. M. ANTiPODUs. Schiller, I.e., p. 359 (Helophilvs), (1868). Female. Black. Thorax with four whitish-grey longitudinal streaks, the outer close on the margin ; between the inner a small grey line. Scutellum yellow-red. Abdomen black, the second seg- ment with broad gold-yellow lateral patches ; the third with pale yellow small patches ; the remainder of the segments metallic on the hinder half. Head black ; lower face yellow ; projection yellow ; cheeks black ; front shining-black, closely yellow-dusted behind ; crown deep black. Antennae black, the third joint broader than long, rounded. Legs shining-black, hinder parts of thighs thickened; points of fore and middle thighs, &c., lively reddish-yellow. Wings tinged with very pale brownish-yellow. Length, 5^ lines. M. LATiFRONs. ScMner, I.e., p. 359 fHelophilusJ, (1868) . Thorax black, with five grey longitudinal streaks ; the outer one broad, and joined on the suture to the inner one ; sides of breast grey, OF NEW ZEALAND. 41 with short and close blackish hair. Scutellum rust-red, blackish on the base. Abdomen metallic-green ; blue or violet at the base with a semicircular greyish spot ; each segment is pale blackish in the centre and on the margin, so that the shining metallic parts are distinct. Head black, lower face rather greyish-dusted, prominence shining blackish-brown. Front of male rather broad, yellow above the antennse, and on the sides black dusted with white ; front of female broad. Antennae rust-red, their bases blackish ; the third joint round and large ; style black. Proboscis brown. Legs black ; the point of the middle thighs, base of the tibiae, &c., rust-yellow ; thighs with yellow hair on the lower side ; the tarsi with red tomentum. Wings tinged brownish, scales dirty rust-yellow. Length, 41—6 lines. aenus-HELOPHILUS. Meigen. Face prominent. Antennae inserted, and a projection on the front ; third joint almost orbicular. Eyes separated in both sexes. Abdomen depressed. Thighs thickened ; shanks incurved, generally prolonged by a point. Cubital cell pediform.^ H. TRiLiNEATUs. Fabricius, Syst. Ent. (1775), 7;. 7QQ. Voy. "Ereb." and "Terror," Insects, pi. 7,/. 19. Head yellow ; margins of the lips, antennae, and vertex black; style of antennae tomentose. Thorax tomentose, pale, with three broad black lines. Abdomen black, with an interrupted ferruginous band at the base. Legs ferruginous ; the four anterior femora black at the base ; the hinder pair all black, one-toothed ; posterior tibiae incurved, ferruginous, the base black. New Zealand (Sir J. Banks, Dr. Sinclair, Earl). H. iNEPTUs. Walker, I.e., p. 608 (1849). Head yellow, black on the crown and about the base of the antennae ; eyes pitchy, all the facets very small ; mouth and antennae black ; style naked. Thorax dark brown, clothed with black hairs, adorned with two hoary stripes on the back, and with a yellow stripe on each side, having a brassy hue towards the hinder part, especially on the scutellum, whose hind border is tawny. Abdomen brassy, oval, nearly flat, a little broader and shorter than the thorax, clothed with * Nowicki mentions a Selojphilus selandicus (Fabr.) from New Zealand. I can find no description of it. 4 42 DIPTERA tawny hairs^ adorned with a large tawny spot on each side of the base. Legs pitchy^ clothed with tawny hairs ; shanks tawny towards the base ; claws and foot-cushions taMaiy ; tip of claws black ; hind thighs slightly thickened. Wings slightly grey; wing-ribs pitchy; veins black. 'Length, 5 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair) . H. HocHSTETTERi. NowicM, l.c, p. 23 (1875) . Male and Female. Black, clouded ; abdomen shining-blue ; last joint of the antennae, frontal lunula, scutellum, and tubercle under the wing yolk-yellow ; wings cinereo-hy aline ; the stigma fuscous. Length, 4-4i lines ; wing, 4-4? lines. New Zealand (Edwards) , Genus-SYEITTA. >S/. Fargeau et Serville. Face keeled, epistome prominent. Second joint of the antennae naked, the third orbicular; style rather short. Abdomen elongated, narrower than the thorax. Posterior femora short, strongly inflated, denticulated below ; tibiae incurved ; first joint of the tarsi swollen. First posterior cell rounded at the base. S. ocEANicA. Macquart, Dipt. Exot., Svpp. 5, p. 112 (1854). Female. Palpi small, black. Face rather concave, with silvery down, and a black band in the middle. Anterior portion of the front with white down, the rest shining-black, prolonged into a j)oint in front. The two first joints of the antennae brownish- testaceous ; the third black, brown below. Thorax shining-black, the sides with white down. Abdomen dull black, the second segment with two yellow spots, shining, and reaching the anterior border; the third and fourth with interrupted yellow incisions ; the third with two shining spots, the fourth entirely shining. Anterior and inter- mediate femora black, the extremity fulvous ; the posterior pair entirely black; anterior and intermediate tibiae blackish, the base fulvous ; the jjosterior pair black, with the knees and a ring in the middle fulvous ; tarsi black, the first joint fulvous. Poisers fulvous. Wings clear; veins normal. Length, 3 lines. Tahiti and New Zealand (M. Bigot) . OF NEW ZEALAND. 43 Genus-MILESIA. Latreille. Head much depressed. Face often without any prominence. Antennae inserted under a projection of the front ; the third joint orhicuLar. Posterior femora rather bent and keeled. First posterior cell with the base oblique. M. BiLiNEATA. Walker, I.e., p. 566 (1849). Body black. Head as broad as the thorax, covered behind and in front with pale tawny down. Mouth and antennae black. Eyes black; facets on the fore-part of the crown larger than those else- where. Thorax adorned with two pale tawny stripes, its sides and the breast also pale tawny ; breast covered with hoary bloom. Scutel- lum clothed with long tawny hairs. Abdomen long-obconical, longer and a little narrower than the thorax, clothed beneath with tawny hairs. Legs black, clothed with short tawny hairs ; hind thighs rather thick, toothed beneath ; claws and foot-cushions yellow ; tips of claws black. Wings dark grey; wing-ribs and veins black. Poisers tawny. Length, 7 lines. Wellington (Mr. Earl). Genus-SYRPHUS. Fabricms. Face prominent. Palpi and maxillary bristles more or less elongated. Antennae inserted under a projection of the front, rather distant at the base; third joint oval; the style slightly pubes- cent. Eyes generally naked. S. ORTAS. Walker, I.e., p. 585 (1849). Head blue, clothed with black hairs, covered in front with pale- yellow down ; mouth black ; feelers piceous, ferruginous at the base ; bristles black. Thorax brassy-green, clothed with tawny hairs ; scutellum tawny ; breast hoary, clothed with white hairs. Abdomen deep black, thinly clothed with black and whitish hairs, adorned with four yellow bands, which are interrupted along the mid-back, especially towards the tip. Legs tawny, clothed with whitish hairs ; feet and hind legs pitchy. Wings colourless ; wing-ribs and poisers tawny ; veins black. Length of the body, 44 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). 44 DIPTERA S. ROPALUs. Walker, I.e., p. 593 (1849). Head tawny^ coppery on the crown; eyes red; feelers tawny; bristles black. Thorax coppery ; sides tawny ; scutellum orange ; breast hoary. Abdomen black, narrow, linear, orange on each side of the base, adorned with four broad orange bands, of which the first and fourth are interrupted along the mid-back. Legs tawny. Wings colourless ; wing-ribs and poisers tawny ; veins black, tawny towards the base. Length of the body, 4 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). S. noVjE-zealandi^. Macquart, I.e., Supp. \.,p. 115 (1854). Female. Face covered with white down with reddish reflections ; prominence shining-black. Front shining-black, a little white down on the sides in front. Antennse black. Thorax green-bronze, sides with whitish down and hairs. Scutellum brownish-yellow. Abdomen but little shining, with dull reflections ; second, third, and fourth segments with a narrow interrupted yellow band, reaching the exterior border ; the fifth shining-black ; belly shining-black. Legs black ; fore tibiae brown. Poisers brown. Wings greyish ; veins normal. Polynesia and New Zealand (M. Bigot). S. RECTUS. Nowieki, I.e., p. 34 (1875). Female. Antennae black; the whole of the front and a broad facial vitta aeneous -black. Thorax aeneous-green, passing into black aeneous ; abdomen intense black, the second, third, and fourth seg- ments ornamented with a sub-basal fascia broadly interrupted, yellow dusted with whjte ; the anterior angle of the fifth segment yellow lightly dusted with white. Anterior legs testaceous, the whole of the tarsi and the base of the femora black; posterior legs all black. Wings cinerco-hy aline ; stigma fuscous. Length, 44 lines ; wing, 4^ lines. New Zealand (Edwards). Genus-PLESIA. Maequart. Pace rather prominent, with a projection. Third joint of the antennae oval; style naked. Eyes naked. Abdomen of the same breadth as the thorax ; the sides straight. Legs simple ; posterior tibiae arched, first joint of the posterior tarsi slightly swollen. First posterior cell closed, rather distant from the posterior border, appendi- culate or elbowed ; the second cross-vein almost perpendicular. OF NEW ZEALAND. 45 P. FASCiATA. Macquart, I.e., Supp. 4, p. 157, tab. 14,/. 15 (1850). Male. Face shining-black, with green reflections ; the projection but little salient. Front linear, in front black with green reflections. Antennae black. Thorax and scutellum deep green. Abdomen dull black; the second and third segments with a fulvous-yellow band extending from the anterior nearly to the posterior border, spreading to the sides, but interrupted in the middle, where it is a little rounded ; fourth and fifth with the exterior border yellow ; the fifth has the anterior border shining. Legs yellow ; the posterior pair black, the thighs yellow on the anterior half, the shanks with a yellow ring in the middle. Poisers yellow. Wings clear ; the stigma yellowish. Length, 2 lines. Akaroa. Family — Muscid^, Proboscis distinct, with two bristles ; antennae three-jointed, the last simple and with a dorsal style ; three posterior marginal cells. Section— MUSCIDiE-CALTPTEE^. Style of the antennae generally two- or three-jointed ; first posterior marginal cell closed, or slightly open ; scales well developed. Sub-Family — Tachinaei^. Style of the antennae naked or tomentose. Abdomen oval or conical, furnished with bristles ; first segment short."^ Genus-HYSTEICIA. Macquart. Body broad. Head rather small ; face oblique, bordered with bristles above and below, naked in the middle ; epistome salient ; front narrowing posteriorly in the male. Antennae obliquely inclined, not reaching the epistome ; the second joint rather elongated, sub- conical ; the third double the second, straight above and below, a little rounded at the extremity ; the second joint of the style elongated. Eyes hairy. Thorax broader than the head ; scutellum provided with strong bristles. Abdomen broader than the thorax, almost round, provided with strong bristles. First posterior cell slightly open a little in advance of the end of the exterior margin. * Nowicki mentions a Tachina hipina (Swed.) from New Zealand. I can find no de- scription of it. 46 DIPTERA H. ORiENTALis. ScMner, I.e., p. 331 (1868). Male. Thorax brown ; dusted witli brownisli-yellow^ and with four longitudinal black streaks. Scutellum and abdomen dirty rust-yellow. Bristles strong^ two on the middle and a row on the hind margin of each of the segments ; below close yellow hair with strong black bristles ; the hindermost are short and brush-like. On the sides of the abdomen, in the centre of the fourth segment, there is a black flap-like organ, covered with short but strong bristles ; centre of the belly with pointed bristles, the sides bald. Head yellow, front brownish-red, shining-grey on the sides. Antennae black, the third joint the same width, but longer than the second, blunt ; the penulti- mate joint of the style elongated ; palpi yellow ; whiskers yellow. Legs inist-yellow ; thighs above and on the base below, and tarsi, blackish-brown. Wings almost hyaline ; all the veins, the base, and the fore-rim with a rust-brown shade. Length, 6\ lines. H. ZELICA. TValker, I.e., p. 711 (Taehim), (1849). Body clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head tawny, silky, clothed beneath with pale-yellow hairs, darker on the crown, and having there a broad dark ferruginous stripe, which widens from the ocelli to the base of the antennae ; sides of the face fringed with bristles for one-fourth from the length of the base ; epistoma some- what prominent ; eyes pitchy, hairy, red along the borders ; proboscis black, clothed at the tip with tawny hairs ; palpi tawny, long, beset with black bristles. Antennae pitchy, shorter than the face, second joint ferruginous towards the tip; third joint black, nearly linear, much more than twice the length of the second, hardly concave above, slightly convex beneath, rounded at the tip ; style much longer than the third joint; its second joint rather short, but longer than the first; third joint stout, tapering from the base to the tip. Thorax dark brown, adorned with five paler indistinct stripes ; sides and scutellum ferruginous, breast pitchy. Abdomen bright tawny, clothed with tawny hairs and black bristles ; the latter are chiefly on the hind borders of the segments, and towards the tip; a black band on the hind border of each segment. Legs ferruginous, clothed with black hairs and bristles; claws and foot-cushions pale tawny, tips of the claws black. Wings dark grey, tawny at the base, brown along the borders of the veins, and especially of the cross-veins ; tip cross-vein forming a slightly acute angle with the fourth longitudinal vein, much curved near the base, straight from thence to the tip, joining the border at some distance above the tip of the wing ; lower cross- OF NEW ZEALAND. 47 vein with two slight curves, the lower inward^ the other outward. Scales yellow, with dark borders. , Length, 7 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). H. PACHYPRocTA. NowicM, l.c, p. 25 (1875) . Male. Head dusted-pale ; antennae and frontal stripe black ; palpi luteons ; thorax dusted-pale, cloudy ; dorsal stripes black ; scutellum luteous; abdomen ochraceons, ornamented with a broad black vitta which is serrated on each side, and much dilated behind, so that the apex of the abdomen is altogether black ; wings rather fuscous ; setse all over the body black; hairs generally pale luteous, the others black. Length, 5—6 lines ; wing, 5 i lines. New Zealand (Edwards). Genus-DEMOTICUS. Macquart. Body oblong. Head hemispherical. Face inclined, naked, a little convex ; epistome a little prominent. Front prominent, broad (male and female) . Antennae inclined ; second joint a little elongated ; third widening towards the extremity, twice as long as the second; style three-jointed, first short, second a little elongated, third swollen to the third fourth. Eyes naked. Abdomen elliptical ; some setae at the middle of the second and third segments. Feet with small hooks and pads. Wings : first posterior cell projecting nearly to the extremity. D. AusTRALiENsis. Schinev, I.e., p. 325 (1868), Male. Thorax brown, closely dusted with white on the sides ; the middle with three darkish long streaks, passing behind into whitish-yellow dusting ; shoulders, a patch at the root of the wings, sides of the breast, and scutellum, rust-yellow dusted with white. Abdomen rust-yellow with an indistinct darkish back streak, with whitish-yellow opaline spots. Macrochettes only on the rim of the segments, the last with many bristles. The hair-covering of the abdomen scattered, and the bristles black. Head rust-yellow, almost quadrangular ; cheeks broad, Avhite, shining with black-grey, and rust-red reflections ; front bristles less numerous ; front streak broad, red. Antennae bent down, brown ; second joint lengthened, the third 22 times as long as the second ; bristles thick, second joint long. 48 DIPTERA Proboscis "brown, sucker small; palpi yellow, dusted white. Some spots on the inner side of the thighs not dusted. Wings hyaline, light at the base, costa rust-yellow; cross-veins tinged with rust- yellow, the hinder much like an S. Scales large, white. Length, 5 lines. Genus-MICROPALPUS. Macquart. Body broad. Palpi short, slender, and terminated by a bristle. Face naked ; epistome salient. Antennae inclined, descending almost to the epistome ; second joint elongated, but shorter than the third ; this last prismatic, truncated at the extremity ; second division of the style elongated. Eyes hairy. Abdomen oval; two bristles in the middle of the second and third segments. First posterior cell reaching the border of the wing before the tip. M. BREviGASTER. Macquurt, I.e., Supp. 1, p. 149 (1846) . Male. Palpi fulvous, furnished with many hairs ; face very pro- minent, bordered with some yellowish-fulvous hairs, with thin whitish down; front with a fulvous band, and the sides black, with white down. Two first joints of the antennae fulvous; the third broad, black above and at the tip, fulvous below ; second joint of the style elongated. Eyes hairy. Thorax bluish-black, with thin white down and black lines ; sides with thick yellow down. Abdomen short, rounded, and a little speckled, with greenish-yellow tomentum ; sides of the two first segments yellow; two bristles on the middle of the second; belly and anus yellow. The four last joints of the tarsi black ; rest of the legs red. Scales yellowish. Wings clear. Length, 3 lines. Tasmania (M. Bigot) ; New Zealand (" Reise der ' Novara' ") . Genus-CHLOEOaASTEE. Macquart. Body broad. Face perpendicular, bordered at the base ; epistome not projecting ; front rather narrowed in the male ; sides covered with bristles. Antennae hidden, slightly elongated, not reaching the epis- tome ; the second joint elongated ; the third prismatic, one and a half times as long as the second ; style inflated for a third of its length. Eyes naked, oval. Abdomen oval; bristles in the middle of the second and third segments. First posterior cell reaching the border of the wing a little before the tip. OP NEW ZEALAND. 49 C. RUFicEPs. Sc]iiner,l.c., p. 323 (1868). Thorax Mack, dusted witli white, and with four longitudinal black streaks, the middle pair diverging behind. Scutellum similar, the point rust-yellow ; sides of the breast grey. Abdomen of male olive- green, rather shining, with a few opaline spots, and with rather distant hairs ; of the female black dusted with slate-blue. Bristles only on the margins of the segments, the last segment with many bristles. Head rust-yellow, dusted with ochre; front broad, with three close rows of short weak bristles, pale yellowish-red. Antennae yellowish- red ; the second joint with black bristles above ; the third is broad, blunt, and three times the length of the second. Palpi reddish- yellow. Lips the same colour ; proboscis brown. Legs bright yellowish - red ; tarsi brown; thighs and tibige with close black bristles. Wings hyaline ; lower cross-vein near the middle of the discoidal cell. Scales large, white. Length, 3 lines. aenus-NEMOR^A. Macquart. Body broad. Palpi slightly salient. Face generally naked; epistome slightly or not salient. Front narrow posteriorly in the male. Antennae almost hidden, rather short, not reaching the epis- tome ; second joint elongated, the third more than double the second ; first joint of the style short. Eyes hairy. Abdomen oval, often with two bristles in the middle of the second and third segments. First posterior cell reaching the border of the wing a little before the tip ; discoidal vein arched after the elbow ; the second transverse oblique, slightly arched. N. ORAsus. Walker, I.e., p. 741 (TacMna), (1849). Body black, clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head covered with dull-tawny bloom, clothed behind and beneath with black hairs, pitchy and furrowed between the ocelli and the base of the antennae ; adorned with a large ferruginous spot on each side of the face ; epis- tome not prominent, no bristles on the sides of the face. Eyes pitchy, hairy. Proboscis black, slender, long, clothed at the tip with a few tawny hairs. Palpi pale pitch-colour, long, slender, beset with black bristles. Antennae hardly three-fourths the length of the face; first and second joints dark ferruginous ; third joint black, slightly concave above, equally convex below, rounded at the tip, about thrice the length of the second joint ; style black, the second joint rather 50 DIPTERA more than twice tlie length of the first ; third joint much longer than the third of the antennae, stout, though tapering for full one-third of its length, slender from thence to the tip. Thorax covered with a dark-grey bloom, which is interrupted by three indistinct black stripes, hoary on each side. Scutellum ferruginous, armed with some long black spines. Abdomen nearly oval, not longer than the thorax, tessellated or adorned with hoary reflections, which are interrupted by four rows of black intervals ; the latter are most conspicuous on each side. Legs black, slender, rather long, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; foot-cushions small, pale tawny. Wings grey, brown along the borders of the veins ; wing-ribs dark tawny ; veins black, tawny at the base ; tip cross-vein forming an angle with the fourth longitu- dinal vein, which projects a little beyond, curved inward near the base, slightly waving from thence to the tip, joining the border a little above the tip of the wing. Scales tawny, with dark borders. Length, 4 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). Genus-EURIGASTEE. Macquart. Body broad. Face oblique, generally naked; epistome scarcely salient. Front broad in both sexes. Antennas reaching the epistome, the two first joints equally short; the third at least four times the length of the second. Eyes often hairy. Abdomen oval, generally with bristles in the middle of the segments. First posterior cell reaching the margin of the wing near the point ; . discoidal vein generally straight after the elbow, sometimes incomplete ; no spine on the exterior margin. E. FEREDAYI, Sp. TIOV. Thorax dark brown, with two indistinct longitudinal black lines. Scutellum and posterior corners of mesonotum light l)rown. Both thorax and scutellum with long black bristles. First segment of abdomen brown ; the three last bright metallic-blue, with black hairs and bristles. Head dark brown, Avith black bristles ; lower face grey ; epistome yellow. Antennae, palpi, and proboscis brown. Legs brown, with black bristles. Wings hyaline. Length, 31 lines. Dunedin. This species and the next are parasitic in the larva of the basket- moth {Liothula omnivora, Fereday). OP NEW ZEALAND. 51 E. MARGINATUSj Sp. TIOV. Metallic-blue ; scutellum bordered with fulvous. Thorax with two indistinct longitudinal black lines. Legs black; middle of tibiee of the two hind pairs rufous. Head and wings as in the last. Length, 31 lines. Dunedin. ^ E. cLATHRATUs. NowicM, l.c.,p. 27 (1875). Male. Black ; head and legs the same colour ; palpi luteous ; second, third, and fourth segments of the abdomen ornamented with a large red spot on each side, and (except the posterior margin) dusted white, sprinkled with shining tessellations ; tegulse dirty- whitish; wings cinereous. Length, 5 lines ; wing, 4i lines. New Zealand (Edwards). (}enus-MILTO&RAMMA. Meiffen. Body narrow. Head thick. Peristome bordered with little bristles. Face almost naked, concave; epistome not salient. Front salient, with short bristles. Antennae short, scarcely half the length of the face, hidden in the cavity of the face ; the third joint generally double the second ; style short, sometimes tomentose. Abdomen cylindrical or conical, generally without bristles, even on the margins of the segments. First posterior cell almost closed, reaching the border of the wing before the tip ; discoidal vein curved after the elbow ; no point on the exterior border. M. (?) MESTOR. Walker, I.e., p. 74^1 (1849). Head ferruginous, brighter on the face, along whoso sides there are no bristles ; a pitchy stri]3e between the ocelli and the base of the antennae ; underside clothed with white hairs ; epistome not prominent ; proboscis black, clothed at the tip with short tawny hairs ; eyes red with a brassy tinge, not hairy. Antennae ferruginous, very short, half the length of the face; third joint nearly elliptical, longer than the second, but not much deeper; style black, tapering, stout near the base, very slender towards the tip, more than twice the length of the third joint of the antennae ; its first and second joints of moderate and equal lengths. Thorax and breast dark grey ; thorax clothed with black hairs and bristles ; sides slightly ferruginous. Scutellum ferru- ginous. Abdomen tawny, rather long and narrow, nearly cylindrical. 52 DIPTERA tapering towards the tip, thinly beset with short black bristles^ armed on the sides of the hind borders of the segments and at the tip with black spines ; black at the base, and having an interrupted black stripe from the middle to the tip of the back. Legs tawny, clothed with black hairs, beset with black bristles ; feet black ; foot-cushions tawny. Wings slightly grey ; wing-ribs tawny ; veins pitchy ; tip cross-vein forming a right angle with the fourth longitudinal vein, which sends forth a short stump beyond it, very slightly curved along the whole length, joining the border at some distance above the tip of the wing ; lower cross-vein with two curves, the lower inward and very distinct, the other outward and very slight. Scales pale tawny. Length, 5i lines. Perhaps this species belongs to Clytia, New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). Genus-MELANOPHORA. Meigen. Body generally small, narrow. Face generally naked, more or less elevated ; epistome not projecting. Antennae of various lengths ; style tomentose or thinly haired. Eyes generally naked. Abdomen cylindrical ; no bristles in the middle of the segments. First posterior cell open or closed, often petiolate ; the exterior border generally furnished with a point. M. (?) sosiLUs. Walker, I.e., p. 796 (TacMna), (1849). Body black, clothed with black hairs and bristles. Eyes red, not hairy. Proboscis, palpi, and antennae black. Abdomen oval, hardly longer than the thorax. Legs black, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; foot-cushions dark tawny. Wings white ; wing-ribs and veins yellow ; tip cross-vein forming a slightly obtuse angle with the fourth longitudinal vein, very slightly curved oiitward, joining the third longitudinal vein at some distance from the tip of the latter; lower cross-vein very slightly curved inward, nearly straight at the base and at the tip. Length, l4 lines. Sub-Family — DEXiAEiiE. Style of antennae plumose. Face generall}'- keeled. Legs elongated. Abdomen generally cylindrical ; sometimes two bristles in the middle of the segments. OF NBW ZEALAND. 53 Genus-RUTILIA. Rob. Desvoidy. Body broad. Antennse short, not reaching the epistome. Face swollen, the protuberance excavated in the middle ; epistome salient. Front narrow in the male, broad in the female. Scntellum large. Third segment of the abdomen bordered posteriorly with bristles which are short in the male, strong in the female ; the fourth sloped in the middle of the posterior border, covered with hairs in the male, with hairs and bristles in the female. First posterior cell slightly open, near the tip of the exterior border of the wing. R. LEUcosTiCA. Schiner, I.e., p. 319 (1868) . Thorax metallic blue-green, with four black-blue longitudinal streaks, and snow-white spots ; two larger ones on the shoulders ; between these two there are broader streaks which enlarge towards the suture ; behind the suture four round spots close together ; sides of the breast black, passing into rust-brown below, with two large round snow-white spots. Scutellum rust-yellow with metallic-green reflections. Abdomen velvet-black ; on the second segment a beautiful large green-and-red transverse band, interrupted in the middle ; on the third and fourth segments two spots of the same colour, separated by a back streak ; second segment white below, passing up on the sides ; the third with two white spots ; the fourth white on the sides. Bristles only on the second and fourth segments. Head silky, golden yellow ; bristles on the mouth continued to the middle. First joint of the antennse brown ; second rust-yellow. Front with a broad velvet-black middle streak. Occiput black on the top, the sides white. Proboscis pitch-brown ; palpi long, filiform, rust-yellow. Legs black with rust-yellow knees. Wings hyaline, a yellowish-brown stain on the veins of the fore-rim ; on the base a rust-brown spot. Veins normal. Length, 7 lines. R. PELLUCEUs. Macquart, I.e., Supjj. I, p. 177, pi. 16,/. 4 (1846). Male. Proboscis black. Face fulvous, cheeks black, with grey down. Front black, the sides with grey down. Antennae black. Thorax black with thin white down, the posterior border brownish- testaceous. Scutellum testaceous. Abdomen black, with thin white down ; each segment transparent, testaceous on the sides ; belly testaceous with a black band. Scales yellowish. Wings clear ; a brown patch near the base. Length, 6 lines. Australia (Macquart) j New Zealand {'' Reise der ' Novara ' ") . 54 DIPTERA Genus-BOTHEOPHOEA. Schiner. Head hemispherical ; front a little protruding ; lower face deeply hollowed out ; keel small and high, like a partition ; rim round the mouth strong, drawn forward ; cheeks broad and almost straight below ; mouth large ; proboscis with bristles. Antennse bent down ; first joint short ; the second a little lengthened ; the third rather more than twice the second, rounded in front. Style naked. Thorax flat, hollowed, and large. Scutellum semi-circular. Abdomen very broad and plump, four segments ; genitalia hidden. Legs moderate. Wings when at rest rather extended ; the first joosterior cell reaches the exterior border before the tip of the wing. Discoidal vein angularly bent in front, then curved outwards; diagonal vein S-like behind. Scales large. B. zELEBORi. Schiner, I.e., p. 317 (1868). Blackish-brown. Thorax dusted with greyish-yellow; with four velvet-black longitudinal streaks ; the middle pair short below and joined to the shoulder spots in the form of a horse-shoe ; sides of breast with reddish fox-like hairs ; a row of black bristles downward from the root of the wing. Scutellum dark rust-yellow. Abdomen rust-yellow, with narrow oblique velvet-black bands on each side and a dark line on the back, close to which the ground colour is whitish ; the whole surface with fox-like hairs ; the second and fourth segments with bristles which are black at the base and reddish at the point. Head yellow ; lower face shining brass-yclloAV, with blackish- brown reflections ; front and sides blackish, with grey reflections ; a broad black streak in the middle, which is deeply divided below. Occiput grey; cheeks and middle breast with reddish hairs. Legs pale pitch-brown; the thighs and fore part of tibiae and tarsi darkened ; fore tarsi with gold-brown tomentum inside ; thighs with matted hairs and bristles ; the middle of posterior tibiae sparsely bristled outside; hair golden yellow; bristles black. Wings hyaline, brownish at the base and front margin; longitudinal veins with a dark shade ; small cross-vein, curved part of discoidal vein, and hinder cross-vein with a broad rust-brown margin. Lengthy 8i lines ; breadth of abdomen, 4 lines. Genus-MICEOTEOPESA. Macquart. Body broad. Head hemispherical, thick; proboscis with thick lips ; palpi arched, enlarged at the extremity. Face broad, ciliated to OF NEW ZEALAND. 55 near the middle ; epistome salient ; keel small, occupying only the upper part of the face. Front broad, a little narrowed above ; lateral bristles small, in two rows which descend and curve round to the base of the third joint of the antennae ; two rather stronger bristles near the border of the eyes. Antennae approximated, hidden ; the first joint short ; the second rather longer ; third one and a half times as long as the second, rounded at the end ; style naked. Eyes naked. Thorax short : scutellum broad. Abdomen rounded. Legs medium. The second, third, and fourth joints of the anterior tarsi dilated in the female. Wings narrow; first posterior cell reaching the exterior border before the tip of the wing; discoidal vein straight from the elbow; first cross vein oblique; the second situated at three-fourths of the distance from the first to the elbow. M. siNUATA. Donovan. Macquart, I.e., Supp. 1, p. 186, pi. 16, /. 6. Black. Palpi, face, front, and antennae yellow-orange; frontal band sometimes black. Thorax with four anterior patches of white down; sides with white down and yellow hairs. Scutellum brownish- yellow. Third and fourth segments of the abdomen with a whitish patch in the shape of a white vase ; no bristles on the posterior margin of the second segment; those of the fourth and fifth in- terrupted by a whitish patch; belly whitish, with black transverse patches, and lateral patches contiguous to the black of the back. Legs fulvous ; the four last joints of the tarsi brown ; the anteriors dilated transversely. Scales yellowish- white. Wings with the an- terior half orange, the posterior half brown. Tasmania (Macquart) ; New Zealand {'' Reise dcr ' Novara ' ") . Genus-AMENIA. Rob. Desvoidy. Body broad. Head thick. Palpi a little swollen. Face project- ing, terminating in a point (profile view) bordered with bristles at its base; a plane keel a little excavated longitudinally. Cheeks descending a little, almost naked. Front convex, a little narrowed in the male, bordered by small bristles. Antennae separated by the base of the keel, only half the length of the face ; the two first joints short ; the third four times as long as the second, its sides straight ; rounded at the end. Style plumose. Eyes separated in the male. Thorax as broad as the head, with short hairs. Scutellum broad. Abdomen as broad as the thorax, short ; two small bristles on the posterior margin of the second segment. Legs normal. Exterior margin of the wings arched ; discoidal vein straight from the elbow. 56 DIPTERA A. LEONiNA. Fabricius, Sijst. Ent. (1775), ^?. 77Q ; Syst. AntiL, p. 290. Macquart, I.e., Vol. II., 2^. 117, pi. U, f. 5. Greenish-bronze. Thorax spotted with silvery. Abdomen shining- blue ; the second and fourth segments each with two silvery spots. Length, 6 lines. Australia, New Zealand {'' Reise der ' Novara ' ") . A. PARVA. Schiner, I.e., p. 316 (1868). The under surface hairy. Thorax with two white longitudinal bands, distinct at the commencement. Front of male much con- tracted behind, so that the eyes almost touch. The front bristles weak, but long and dense. The rest like A. leonina. Length, 2— 2i lines. No locality is given for this species, but it would seem that New Zealand was intended. Genus-DEXIA. Meiffen. Body cylindrical. Proboscis short and membranous. Abdomen cylindro-conical ; segments generally with two bristles in the middle, D. RUBRiCARiNATA. Macquavt, I.e., Supp. I, p. 187, jo/. 16,/. 8 (1846). Black. Palpi not salient. Face blackish, with thin whitish down ; keel testaceous, large, with a groove ; front black ; sides with whitish down. Thorax; with thin whitish down and black lines. Abdomen lengthened, irregularly marked with white down. Legs black. Scales yellow. Wings clear, the small cross-vein bordered with brown ; a point on the exterior border. Length, 5| lines. Tasmania (Macquart) ; New Zealand (" Reise der ' Novara ' ") . Sub-Family — MusciN^. Style of antennae plumose to the extremity. Abdomen short, tvithout bristles. Legs moderate. Genus-STOMOXYS. Geoffi^oij. Proboscis solid, slender, elongated ; the terminal lips small. Palpi not passing the epistome. Front broad in the male. Third joint OF NEW ZEALAND. 57 of the antennae tliree times as long as tlie second; style plumose above. First posterior cell only slightly narrowed at the end. Dis- coidal vein convex. S. iENos. Walker, I.e., p. 1160 (1849). Body thinly clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head dark brown, adorned in front with silvery lustre ; epistome slightly pro- minent ; sides of the face beset with bristles at the base ; eyes j)itchy, fore-part nearly fiat, its facets rather larger than those elsewhere ; proboscis black, smooth, shining ; palpi tawny. Antennae pitchy, shorter than the face ; third joint flat above, very slightly convex beneath, obliquely truncated at the tip, about twice the length of the second joint ; style black, about twice the length of the third joint, thinly feathered, stout for more than half its length. Thorax black, adorned with indistinct tawny stripes, and on each side with a tawny patch ; breast grey. Abdomen black, tinged with yellowish-brown ; two tawny stripes on the under-side. Legs black, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; knees and foot-cushions tawny. Wings colourless ; wing-ribs pitchy ; veins black, tawny at the base ; tip cross-vein united by a very slight curve to the fourth longitudinal vein, slightly curved inward from thence to the tip, joining the border at a short distance below the tip of the wing ; lower cross-vein nearly straight, but with a slight inward inclination in the middle part of its course. Scales yellowish-white, with pale-yellow borders. Length, 2 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair) . aenus-IDIA. Meigen. Proboscis rather elongated. Epistome projecting, rostriform. Palpi dilated. Antennae short, only half the length of the face; the third joint three times the length of the second ; style plumose above only. First posterior cell generally slightly open at the extremity of the wing. I. MURiNA. Schiner, I.e., p. 309 (1868). Male. Thorax and scutellum dark coppery, with numerous small punctae ; sides of the breast pale yellow, punctate ; middle of the breast shining-black, partially hoary. Abdomen black ; the three first segments transparent pale-yellow; anal segment metallic-green. Head black ; eyes close together ; projection of lower face brownish-red ; cheeks and occiput below pale yellow, and whitish hairs. Antennae 5 58 DIPTERA yellow-brown. Palpi yellow, tlie point "brown. Proboscis and legs black. Basal half of the tibiae, and tarsi from basis, yellow. Wings hyaline ; on the fore-rim a brownish washed-out spot. Poisers whitish. Female. Sides of breast whitish-grey. Abdomen metallic-black ; yellow on the first and second segments ; grey side-patches ; belly whitish-grey. Front broad ; a small middle streak, forked backwards. Antennaj and palpi dark brown. Legs with a large brownish-yellow patch on the thighs and tibiae. Lengthy 8-82 lines. Genns-CALLIPHORA. Macquart. Face bordered with hairs ; epistome a little projecting. Antennae nearly reaching the epistome ; the third joint four times as long as the second ; style plumose. Abdomen hemispherical. First posterior cell reaching the border of the wing a little before the extremity ; discoidal nerve generally strongly arched after the elbow. C. DASYOPHTHALMA. Mucquavt, l.c, VoL II., p» 130, pi. 16, /. 2 (1842). Female. Proboscis black; palpi fulvous. Face blackish-brown, with thin grey down ; cheeks brown, with grey down and black hairs ; an intermediate band of deep brown, with longitudinal striae. Antennae black with thin grey down. Eyes hairy, with yellow hairs. Thorax bluish-black, with indistinct longitudinal bands of white reflec- tions ; the sides with a little elongated longitudinal fulvous patch ; scutellum blackish-brown. Abdomen brilliant blue, with violet re- flections ; no down. Legs black ; a little fulvous at the extremities of the thighs, and at the bases of the anterior and intermediate tibiae. Scales blackish, bordered with little whitish hairs. Wings greyish ; base and exterior border slightly yellowish ; a fulvous spot at the base. Length, 5^ lines. Auckland Islands ; New Zealand. Probably the same as the next species. C. QUADRiMACULATA. Swedcrus, Nya Handling, VIII., j). 289, n. 49 (1787). Head brown, sparingly tomentose, with a few black bristles. Proboscis black. Palpi yellow. Antennae inserted in a frontal groove, grey ; seta with black hairs. Thorax sub-tomentose, black, the fore- OF NEW ZEALAND. 59 part indistinctly tessellated, the sides with a few hairs. Scutellum black, rounded behind, with a few bristles. Breast tomentose, black, marked on each side with two fulvous spots, the anterior somewhat larger at the base, the posterior at the apex. Abdomen purple-violet, shining, unspotted, tomentose ; obscurely violet below. Wings brownish, veins black, a yellow spot at the base. Legs black, tomen- tose. The size of M. vomitorice. New Zealand (Sir J. Banks). C. AUBEOPUNCTATA. Macquurt, l.c.y Snpp. 5, p. 130 (1854). Female. Palpi fulvous, broad. Face and cheeks black, with thin white down. Front with a broad black band ; the sides with yellow down slightly golden, which descends a little on the sides of the face. Antennee black, with faint green reflections, with thin white down, and black lines. A small humeral patch, and another at the insertion of the wings, orange-yellow. Abdomen brilliant blue, with faint green reflections. Legs black. Scales brownish, bordered "with white. Wings greyish ; veins normal. ^ Length, 22—4 lines. Australia and New Zealand (M. Bigot) . This very common species may be the same as C. icela (Walker). It is viviparous. C. AUREONOTATA. Mttcquart, I.e., Supp. 5, p. 135 (Pollema), (1854). Palpi black. F^ce black, with thin grey down ; rather fulvous on the anterior border of the epistome. Front with a black band ; the sides with thin grey down ; a small patch of shining yellow at the base of the antennae. Antennae black ; the second joint terminated by white down; style with but little elongated hairs. Eyes hairy. Thorax denuded of down, but with black hairs; a small patch of golden down under the shoulders, and another at the insertion of the wings. Abdomen very brilliant blue ; belly shining-black, with blue reflections. Legs black. Scales brown, margined with white. Wings clear ; externo-median vein slightly arched from the elbow. Length, 3—4 lines. New Zealand (M. Bigot) . Perhaps the same as the next species. C. HORTONA. Walker, I.e., p. 894 (1849). Female. Body black, dull, clothed with black hairs and bristles. Front flat, very broad ; epistome not prominent ; sides of the face bristly at the base; eyes coppery, fore-part convex, its facets very 60 DIPTERA small ; proboscis black, clothed at the tip with tawny hairs ; palpi black. Antennse pitchy ; second joint ferruginous ; third decreasing in depth from the base to the tip, which is conical, full four times the length of the second ; style black, very much longer than the joint. Thorax tinged with grey. Abdomen bright-blue, obconical, much broader but hardly longer than the thorax ; tip tinged with purple beneath. Legs black, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; foot-cushions tawny. Wings grey ; wing-ribs and veins black ; tip cross-vein forming a slightly obtuse angle with the fourth longitudinal vein, very slightly curved inward near the base, straight from thence to the tip, joining the border at some distance above the tip of the wing ; lower cross-vein with two curves, the lower inward, shorter than the other, which is outward. Scales grey, with dull pale-yellow borders. Length, 3 lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). C. icELA. Walker, I.e., p. 897 (1849). Body clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head covered with hoary bloom, adorned above with a tawny covering on each side of the crown ; epistome slightly prominent ; sides of the face beset with bristles for one-third of the length ; eyes dark red, facets on the fore- part rather larger than those elsewhere ; proboscis black, clothed at the tip with tawny hairs. Palpi tawny, beset with black bristles. Antennae black, as long as the face ; tip of the second joint and base of the third joint ferruginous ; third joint linear, nearly truncated at the tip, about four times the length of the second ; style much longer than the third joint. \ Thorax black, adorned with grey stripes ; breast tinged with grey. Abdomen elliptical, brilliant purple mingled with blue, a little shorter and broader than the thorax. Legs black, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; thighs tinged with grey ; knees ferruginous ; foot-cushions pitchy. Wings grey ; "wing-ribs and veins black ; tip cross-vein forming an obtuse angle with the fourth longi- tudinal vein, having a short and extremely shallow inward curve near the base, straight from thence to the tip, joining the border a little above the tip of the wing ; lower cross-vein with two slight curves, the lower inward, the other outward. Scales grey, with dingy-white borders. Length, 2f lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). C. ANTENNATIS, SJ). UOV. Thorax black, with blue reflections, and with three indistinct pale bands on the fore-part ; a faint reddish mark on the shoulders, and a OP NEW ZEALAND. 61 conspicuous yellow spot at the insertion o£ the wings; the whole covered with hairs, and with long black bristles. Scutellum black. Abdomen metallic-blue. Head dark pitch-brown ; an orange spot on each side of the lower face between the antennse and the eyes. Third joint of the antennas bright orange ; first and second joints and style black. Proboscis dark pitch-brown ; palpi orange. Eyes naked. Legs black; a spot on the exterior of the anterior coxse^ and the knees of all the legs, reddish. Wings tinged with dusky ; veins normal. Calyptrai black, Poisers orange. Length, 5 lines. Dunedin. This species is intermediate between C. dasyophthalma and C. aureo- punctata, but is easily recognized from all our other blue-bottle flies by the third joint of its antennae being orange-yellow. C. vioLACEA. Macquart, Mus. Ex. 2, pt. 3, p. 128, tab. 16, /. 6. Violet. Thorax with white stripes. Palpi and face rufous. Africa (Macquart); New Zealand (Nowicki). aenus-MUSCA. Linnaeus. Epistome slightly salient. Antennse nearly reaching the epistome ; the third joint three times the length of the second ; style plumose. First posterior cell reaching the margin of the wing near the extremity ; discoidal vein a little concave after the elbow.'^ M. TAiTENSis. Macquart, I.e., Vol. II., p. 153, jo/. 20,/. 8 (1842). Palpi black. Face and front black ; sides with whitish down. Antennse black. Thorax black with white bands. Abdomen marked with black and yellow. Legs black. Scales yellowish. Wings rather brownish ; discoidal cell extending as far as two-thirds of the distance to the angle of the first posterior. Length, 2^ lines. Tahiti (Macquart) ; New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). Genus-POLLENIA. Macquart. Face slightly swollen ; epistome a little projecting. Antennae short, not reaching the middle of the face ; the second joint clawed ; * Musca vicaria (Walker) ia mentioned by Nowicki as coming from New Zealand. I can find no description of it. 63 DIPTERA the third double the second; style generally plumose. Thorax covered with down. Wings almost closed ; the first posterior cell open a little before the tip ; sometimes closed ; discoidal vein gene- rally concave after the angle. P. (?) LiEMiCA. White. Dieffenbach's Neio Zealand, II., ^;. 291 (1843). Walker, I.e., p. 906. Voij. " Ereb.'' and' ' Terror," P- 7, f. 18. Body tawny, clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head black above, pale tawny in front, thicldy clothed beneath with golden hairs ; a pitchy stripe, widening from the ocelli to the antennae; facials obliquely striated ; epistome prominent ; sides of the face fringed with bristles along half the length ; eyes brassy red, fore-part ilatj composed of much larger facets than those elsewhere ; proboscis black, pitchy, and clothed with pale-tawny hairs at the tip ; palpi bright tawny, slender, slightly clavate, beset with black bristles. Antennae black, a little shorter than the face ; first and second joints ferruginous ; third joint linear, rounded at the tip, full four times the length of the second. Style very much longer than the third joint. Disc of the thorax grey, adorned with six indistinct dark-brown stripes; breast thinly clothed with golden hairs. Abdomen dark green, obconical, a little shorter and broader than the thorax, tessel- lated with golden reflections, thickly clothed at the base and beneath with bright golden hairs. Legs pale tawny, clothed with black hairs and bristles; feet black; foot-cushions dark and tawny. Wings colourless, tawny at the ' base ; wing-ribs ferruginous, veins black, ferruginous towards the base; tip cross-vein forming hardly more than a right angle with the fourth longitudinal vein, curved inward near the base, straight from thence to the tip, joining the border at some distance above the tip of the wing; lower cross-vein with two curves, the lower inward, the other outward and very much deeper than the first. Scales pale grey. Poisers tawny. Length, 4^—5 lines. Mr. White considered this species to belong to Sarcophaga. It may belong to Cynomyia. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair) ; Australia; Polynesia. Genus-CUETONEURA. Macquart. Epistome a little prominent. Antennae not reaching the epistome ; the third joint at least triple the second ; style plumose. First pos- OF NEW ZEALAND. 63 terior cell rather narrow, reaching the posterior border ; discoidal vein convex after the angle. C. STABULANS. Meigeu. Macquart, Dipt., II., p. 277. Ash colour. Palpi ferruginous. Face and sides of the front silvery. Frontal band and antennae black ; base of the third joint ferruginous. Thorax with black lines ; scutellum and extremity ferruginous. Abdomen marked with black. Legs ferruginous ; base of the thighs and tarsi black. Length, 3—1 lines. New Zealand ("Reise der ^Novara'") ; Tasmania; Europe. Probably introduced. Section— M USCIDiE.ACALTPTEE^. Style of the antennae generally one-jointed ; first posterior marginal cell open; scales small or rudimentary. Sub-Family — ANTnoMTZiN^. Third joint of the antennae elongated ; style two-jointed. Eyes generally contiguous in the male. Pulvilli elongated in the male. Scales medium or small. aenus-AEICIA. Macquart. Style of antennae plumose. Abdomen oval, generally furnished with bristles. Scales rather large, the lower valve passing the upper. Wings open. A. MELAs. Schiner, I.e., p. 302 (1868). Black. Thorax with two indistinct darker streaks. Abdomen yellow-grey, with whitish fine incisions ; each segment with two or three black three-cornered spots together, which are separated by a small pale-dusted space, in the centre of which is a blackish spot. The spots are most distinct on the third segment ; the fourth segment is black with two whitish spots on the posterior margin. Head black ; face white ; front faint black, broad in the male. Antennae black ; the third joint hardly twice as long as the two basal ones together ; proboscis and palpi black. Legs pitch-black; knees small, rust- yellow ; tibiae a little lighter than the femora ; a remarkable bristle-like covering. Wings tinged pale rust-brown, darker on the base and fore-rim ; cubital and discoidal veins diverging in front ; hind cross- vein S-shaped. Scales rust-yellow. 64 DIPTERA Genus-C^NOSIA. Meiyen. Third joint of the antennae elongated, slender, compressed ; style plumose, tomentose, or naked. Front broad in both sexes. Abdomen elongated, compressed, bent over below, and generally swollen at the extremity in the male ; oval in the female. Scales small ; lower valve passing the upper. Wings without any point on the exterior margin. C. spiNiPEs. Walker, I.e., p. 969 (1849) . Body thinly clothed with black hairs and bristles. Head bright tawny ; sides of the face without bristles ; epistome not prominent ; eyes red, fore-part rather flat, its facets much larger than those else- •where ; proboscis pitchy, clothed with tawny hairs ; palpi tawny, beset with black bristles. Antennae deep black, shorter than the face -, third joint linear, slender, rounded at the tip, about thrice the length of the second, which is dark ferruginous ; style black, slender, downy, rather stout for one-third the length from the base, full twice the length of the third joint. Thorax and breast grey ; disc of the thorax with a tawny tinge, adorned with three slender brown stripes. Abdo- men grey, spindle-shaped, adorned with a large triangular hoary spot on each side of the fore-border of every segment; ferruginous at the tip beneath, longer and a little narrower than the thorax. Legs dark tawny, clothed with black hairs and bristles ; feet black, tawny towards the base ; claws black ; foot-cushions pale tawny. "Wings grey ; cross-veins clouded with brown ; wing-ribs tawny ; veins black, tawny towards the base ; lower cross-vein almost straight, slightly oblique, separated by more than its length from the middle cross-vein, which is stouter and more oblique. Scales moderate, whitish with pale-yellow borders, the lower extending beyond the upper. Poisers tawny. Length, Si lines. Sub-Family — TETAJTOCEEiNiE. Third joint of the antennae oval ; the second elongated, equalling or surpassing in length the third, hairy. Abdomen elongated, of five distinct segments. Genus-CYLINDEIA. Roh. Desvoidy. Front projecting. Antennae as long as the head; second joint broad, compressed, equal in length to the third. Posterior femora OF NEW ZEALAND. 65 slightly elongated, thickened and spinose ; middle tibise terminated by- two small spines. C. SIGMA. Walker, I.e., p. 1084 (TetanoceraJ , (1849) . Body ferruginous, thinly clothed with black hairs and bristles. Crown and hind part of the head beset with black bristles. Crown bright tawny, with the exception of a narrow ferruginous stripe be- tween the ocelli and the base of the antennae ; face large, flat, silky- white, with a yellow tinge, having four little black hairs on each side ; eyes black, fore-part red, rather flat, composed of much larger facets than those elsewhere ; proboscis black, clothed with tawny hairs ; palpi black, beset with black bristles. Antennse ferruginous, nearly as long as the face ; second joint thickly beset with black bristles ; third conical, a little broader but hardly longer than the second, dark fer- ruginous except at the base ; style black, tawny at the base, feathered with short hairs, much more than twice the length of the third joint. Crown concave in the middle, convex and ferruginous on each side. Fore-part of the thorax with four indistinct darker stripes; breast paler. Abdomen linear, a little longer and narrower than the thorax. Legs ferruginous, rather thick, clothed with short black hairs, beset ■wdth a few black bristles ; claws black. Wings grey, tawny for half the breadth beneath the fore-border; adorned with nine brown spots, of which five are along the fore-border, one on the middle cross-vein, one at each end of the lower cross-vein, and one on the fourth vein at a short distance from its tip ; the second and third of those on the fore-border are close together, and each is rather smaller than the first, but larger than the fourth ; the fifth is larger than any of the preceding ; wing-ribs tawny ; veins black, tawny at the base ; lower cross-vein curved into the form of an 8. Poisers pale tawny. Length, 34 lines. New Zealand (Earl). aenus-LIMNIA. Rob. Desvoidy. Front projecting. Antennse as long as the head; second joint broad, compressed, equal in length to the third. Posterior femora not elongated nor thickened ; middle tibite terminated by two long spines. L. TRANSMAEiNA. ScMuer, I.e., p. 234 (1868). Male. Rust-yellow. Thorax with whitish stripes ; two longi- tudinal shining lines on the middle, two darker grooves on the sides, and the lateral margin to the shoulders white-striped; sides of the 66 BIPTERA breast white. Abdomen palish, basal segment darker, the whole surface shining-white, covered with blackish hairs ; posterior clavate. Head rust-yellow ; front deep brown round the ocelli, rim round the eyes white ; bristles black, upon black warts. Palpi and antennae yellow ; third joint rather shorter than the second ; style pubescent, whitish towards the point. Legs yellow ; fore-part of the hips white ; tarsi black-brown near the end. Wings tinged with rust-yellow, with brown spots on the margin, so that the subcostal cell appears dark and light; the rest with greyish spots, arranged in ring-like spots ; lower margin brown ; the two cross- veins brown-margined, the lower one bent ; mediastinal cell free from spots. Length, 3 lines. Sub-Family — Sciomtzin-s:, Third joint of the antennse oval or round, longer than the second, nearly reaching the epistome ; face nearly perpendicular. Abdomen generally elongated, nearly naked, of more than five segments, convex, not terminated in a club. Legs moderate, without spines. Wings not quivering; mediastinal vein double; first posterior cell not nar- rowed. Genus-SAPROMYZA. Fallen, Head sub-hemispherical. Face a little inclined backwards ; epis- tome naked, not projecting. Antennae short; third joint generally oblong, compressed, the extremity obtuse ; style hairy or tomentose. Wings sometimes quivering. S. DicHROMATA. Walker, I.e., p. 988 (1849). Body tawny, thinly clothed with short black hairs. Head and thorax beset with a few black bristles ; sides of the face without bristles ; epistome not prominent ; eyes pale red, convex, facets of the fore-part a little larger than those elsewhere ; proboscis tawny, clothed with tawny hairs ; palpi tawny, beset with black bristles. Antennae tawny, very much shorter than the face ; third joint conical, downy, about twice the length of the second ; style black, slender, downy, much more than thrice the length of the third joint. Abdomen pitchy, nearly obconical, much shorter than the thorax. Legs tawny, clothed with short black hairs ; feet dark tawny ; claws black. Wings tawny ; wing-ribs and veins tawny, the latter darker towards the tips ; lower cross-vein nearly straight. Poisers tawny, with pitchy knobs. Length, 2| lines. New Zealand (Dr. Sinclair). OF NEW ZEALAND. 67 S, scioMYZiNA. Schiner, I.e., p.278 (1868). Thorax rust-yellow. Abdomen black. Head black; lower face standing back a little ; rim of the eyes with white streaks. Antennae blackish-brown ; style pubescent. Legs black-brown ; hips and root of thighs yellow ; middle and hinder tarsi light brown. Wings tinged brownish. Length, 2i lines. S. (?) DECORA. Schiner, I.e., p. 277 (1868). Dark-brown. Thorax paler, with two separate white streaks from the front over the scutellum. Abdomen rather shining. Sides of the breast with whitish lines and spots. Head brown ; front paler, with a reddish-yellow centre, and with white streaks on the margin of the eyes, which are also continued on the lower face ; lower face yellow-red ; proboscis with large lips ; palpi longish, arcuate. Legs rather slim, those in the front lengthened ; tibiae clavate and shorter than the tarsi. Legs brown ; middle tibise almost altogether, and hinder tibise with part of the middle, yellowish ; tarsi the same ; the last joint of posterior limb brown. Wings very slightly tinged with yellow ; veins normal ; the two cross-veins twice as wide apart as the hinder one on the rim of the wing. Length, ^ line. (}enus-SCIOMYZA. Fallen. Head large. Face perpendicular, epistome not projecting, naked. Front very broad. Antennae short, inclined, distant ; the third joint oblong, obtuse ; style plumose or naked. Eyes round. Abdomen depressed. S. NiGRicoRNis. Macquart, I.e., Supp. 4, p. 277, pi. 25, f. 11 (1850). No bristles on the epistome. Face and front fulvous, with thin whitish down ; frontal band testaceous. The two first joints of the antennae testaceous ; the third black, slightly elongated ; style naked, tomentose at the base. Thorax testaceous, with indistinct bands. Abdomen testaceous, short. Thighs a little swollen, the tip black, the first pair in the male armed with bristles ; tibiae fulvous, the tips black ; tarsi black, the first joint yellow. Wings yellow. Length, 3^ lines. Akaroa and Tasmania. 68 DIPTERA Sub-Family — OETALiDEiE. Third joint of tlie antennae oval or elongated ; longer than the second. Head hemispherical ; front without any dilatation ; mouth with a hood under the epistome ; face convex or keeled. Abdomen generally oval; oviduct not protruding. Legs moderate. Wings raised, quivering. Genus-LAMPEOGASTER. Macquart. Proboscis very thick ; palpi small. Hood convex. Face a little inclined; epistome projecting. Antennae short, scarcely half the length of the face, the third joint triple the second; style naked. Abdomen oval. Spines on the middle tibise very small. Wings large ; the first transverse vein oblique. L. sTRiGiPENNiS. Macquart, I.e., Supp. 4>, p. 20, pi. 27, f. 2 fTephritis), (1850). Green. Abdomen with grey bands. Front testaceous. Wings with three dusky bands, the base thin. Length, 2^ lines. Australia (Macquart) ; New Zealand (" Eeise der ' Novara ' ") . L. ciERULEA. Macquart, I.e., Supp. I, p. 212, ])l. 18, /. 15 (Tephritis), (1846) . Shining-blue. Wings with four dusky bands. Length, 2\ lines. Sydney (Macquart) ; New Zealand (" Eeise der ' Novara ' ") . Sub-Family — Geomtzin^. Small. Third joint of the antennae oblong; the second shorter; style naked or hairy. Abdomen Oval or oblong, convex. Legs moderate. Wings generally closed, not quivering; the mediastinal cell generally simple. Genus-OPOMTZA. Fallen. Face a little inclined backward ; epistome sometimes naked, sometimes with a few bristles. Antennae inclined ; third joint oval ; style with fine hairs, especially above, sometimes tomentose. Eyes round. Thorax elongated, of six distinct segments. The second cross-vein of the wing generally near the internal border. OF NEW ZEALAND. 69 O. APiCALis. Walker, I.e., p. 1114 (1849). Body pale ferruginous^ shining. Head and tliorax beset with very few black bristles. Head pale tawny beneath; eyes red; pro- boscis, palpi, and antennoe pale tawny. Antennae much shorter than the face ; third joint conical, longer than the second ; style slender, black, downy, tawny at the base, more than thrice the length of the third joint. Abdomen oval, a little longer than the thorax, pitchy above, except at the base. Legs tawny; claws black. Wings colour- less; a brown spot at the tip between the second and third longi- tudinal veins. Wing-ribs tawny; veins pitchy, tawny towards the base ; longitudinal veins straight ; lower cross-vein nearly straight, almost upright, parted by more than twice its length from the middle cross-vein, by more than thrice its length from the end of the fourth longitudinal vein, and by less than half its length from the end of the fifth longitudinal vein. Poisers whitish. Length, \\ lines. New Zealand (Sir J. Hooker). Sub-Eamily — HETEEOMYziNiE. Third joint of the antennse round. More than one cross-vein in the wmg, distant from each other. Wings longer than the abdomen. First joint of the tarsi not dilated. Genus-CCELOPA. Meigen. Body oblong. Head rather small. Proboscis thick. Palpi small, oval. Face short, very concave ; epistome salient, hairy. Front very broad, flat, obtusely advanced, covered with long bristles. Antennae retracted, the second joint thick, bordered with bristles, the third smaller, lenticular. Eyes almost round. Thorax elongated, enlarged behind ; scutellum small. Abdomen oblong, of five distinct segments. Feet very thick; the second, third, and fourth joints of the tarsi conical. Wings long. C. LITTORALIS, Sp. HOV. Grey. A broad band on the head, stretching up on each side of the ocelli. Antennse, palpi, proboscis, and legs reddish-brown. Legs and abdomen with long black hairs ; thorax with short black hairs. Wings hyaline, with brown veins. Length : Male, 2\ lines ; female, 3 lines. Dunedin; Wellington. On seaweed^ common. 70 DIPTERA Sxjb-Ordeu— PUPIPAUA. Viviparous ; larva and pupa developed in tlie abdomen of the mother. Head retracted. Antennae in the cavity of the head. Parasitic. Family — Hippoboscid^. Spider-like, horny, flat-bodied, with large eyes ; wings developed ; poisers free, small. Genus-O.RNITHOMYIA. Latreille. Head situated in a notch in the thorax; antennae elongated beyond the palpi; palpi cylindrico-conical, hairy. Antennae in the form of hairy valves. Claws of the tarsi tridentate. Wings obtuse, the mediastinal vein double ; basal cells nearly equal in length ; one distinct anal cell. Living on birds. O. opposiTA. Walker, I.e., p. 1145 (1849). Body tawny, smooth, shining, thinly beset with black bristles ; antennae and palpi dark brown; eyes and ocelli pitchy; facets of the eyes rather large, especially next the crown : a short spine projecting on each side of the fore-border of the thorax, which has one longi- tudinal and two cross furrows; one of the latter disappears in the disc. Abdomen dull, thickly clothed with black hairs. Legs pale tawny, tinged with green, beset with a few bristles ; claws black, pulvilli whitish. Wings pale brown ; veins pitchy-black. Length, 2 lines. • New Zealand (Earl). INSECTA ORTHOPTERA. Obdeb-ORTHOPTERA. Wings four ; the two anterior coriaceous, pergameneous, or sub- membranous ; the two posterior membranous, folded longitudinally. Mouth masticatory ; mandible toothed ; labium completely cleft. Larva and pupa more or less resembling the imago, but without wings. Anal segment without a forceps. Hind legs formed for walking. Head retracted. Cursoria. Head exserted. Gressoria. Hind legs formed for leaping. Saltatoria. Anal segment with a movable forceps. Euplexoptera. Section— CURSORIA. Body ovate, depressed. Head retracted into the pro thorax. Legs slender. Family — BLATTiDiE. Antennae setaceous ; tibiae spiny ; tarsi five-jointed ; wing-covers overlapping medially; abdomen with nine or ten dorsal, and six (female) or eight (male) ventral, rings. Genus-BLATTA. Linnceus. Fore wings fully developed, coriaceous, smooth, with distinct veins; the anal area with five or six axillary veins ; infra-median vein of the fore wings flexuous, not angular; that of the hind wings emitting no branches towards the dividing vein. Femora armed with spines. Supra-anal lamina triangular, entire or slightly notched. Subgenital lamina of the male without, or almost without, styles ; apical ventral segment of the female ample, flat, with no subgenital lamina. B. coNJUNCTA. Walker, Cat. Blattaria Brit. Mus., p. 109 (1868). Male. Testaceous, fusiform, smooth, shining, flat. Head extend- ing rather beyond the prothorax. Eyes piceous, rather far apart. 72 ORTHOPTERA. Antennas pulaescent, rather stout, a little longer than the body ; joints compact, very numerous. Protliorax much narrower in front, with a broad, paler, nearly hyaline lamina on each side, which is rounded ; hind-border straight; fore-border truncated. Abdomen extending beyond the hind wings ; styles rather long and stout. Cerci very long, piccous towards the tips. Legs stout ; femora with a few short bristles ; arolia large. Wings not extending beyond the abdomen. Fore wings with a broad, tliickly and irregularly reticulated costal area ; costa rounded ; veins pale testaceous ; post-medial costal veins forked; transverse sectors rather numerous and irregular. Hind wings pale cinereous ; veins pale testaceous. Length of the body, 5| lines; of the wings, 16 lines. (Walker.) New Zealand (Colonel Bolton) . B. LATiPENNis. Brunner von Wattenwyl, Nouveau Sijsteme des Blattaires, p. 109 (Phtjlloclromia) , (1865). Male and Female. Testaceous. Head large, brown; pronotum broad, truncated before and behind, pellucid ; disc the same colour. Elytra arched, broad at the shoulders ; anal vein sinuated, scarcely impressed, reaching the border near the middle. Points of the wings obtuse. Scapular vein with six branches, the other veins irregular. Abdomen ferruginous, above and below bordered with brown. Length : Male, 10 mm. ; female, 12 mm. Auckland ("Novara" Exp.) ; Ceylon (Sidney). Genus-PEEIPLANETA. Burmeister. Wings small or none. Femora armed with many spines. AjDical ventral segment of the female with valves. Cerci extending beyond the supra-anal lamina, which in both sexes is emarginated or quadrate, acutely angular or lobate. P. FORTiPES. Walker, Cat. Blatt. Brit. Mus., p. 137 (1868). Polyzosteria novce-seelandice : Watt, Blatt., p. 218. Male and Female. Black, fusiform, shining, very thickly and minutely punctured. Head smooth, extending a little beyond the prothorax in the male, but not in the female ; sockets of the antennse, fore-border, and palpi piceous. Eyes piccous, wide apart. Antennae slender, dark red, black towards the base, as long as the body. Pro- thorax widening from the fore-border to the hind-border, with a very shallow furrow on each side; fore-border hardly truncated; sides OF NEW ZEALAND. 73 rounded; liind-border straight. Abdomen with the hind angles of the sixth and seventh abdominal segments elongated and acute ; supra- anal lamina truncated. Cerci long, lanceolate. Legs robvist, reddish- black ; femora with stout spines ; tarsi red towards the tips ; arolia large. Wings none. Length of the body, 11—13 lines. (Walker.) Var. 13. A piceous tinge along the sides of the thorax. Var. y. Femora and tibise red. ^''ar. S. Tibife bright-red, black at the base and at the tips. Var. e. Antennse and legs Avholly black. P. UNDULiviTTA. JVcilkev, Cat. Blatt. Brit. Mus., p. 1 14. (1868) . Male and Female. Testaceous, fusiform, smooth, shining. Head not extending beyond the prothorax ; two black stripes, which are dilated towards the vertex. Eyes black, wide apart. Antennae piceous, slender, testaceous at the base, a little longer than the body. Prothorax somewhat conical ; two undulating black stripes, which do not extend to the fore-border, the latter hardly truncated ; sides slightly rounded ; hind-border straight. Abdomen with two stripes and the apical part black, or almost wholly black ; supra-anal lamina bilobed, notched at the tip ; sides deflexed ; styles of the male distinct. Cerci tawny, fiat, long, lanceolate. Legs short, thick; femora with slender spines ; arolia moderately large. Length of the body, 7k lines. (Walker.) P. ORiENTALis. Limiceus. Serville, Orthopteres, jj. 72. Body reddish-brown ; labrum yellow, a spot of the same colour near the base of each antenna. Prothorax almost orbicular, smooth, shining, with a broad and oblique impression on each side. Fore wings sensibly shorter than the abdomen, of a clearer tint than the rest of the hodj. Hind wings rather shorter than the fore wings, dirty yellow. iVntennse much longer than the body, rather pubescent, reddish-brown. In the female the hind wings are absent, and the fore wings are rudimentary. Length, 10 lines. Introduced into New Zealand. P. TRUNCATA. fVatt, Blatt., p. 217 (1865). Female. Testaceo-castaneous. Pronotum oblong, rufo-castaneous, margined with testaceous. Elytra horny, subquadrate, sutural margin close; anal vein impressed. Wings none. Legs testaceous. Abdo- men brown washed with testaceous. Length, 17 mm. New Zealand and New South Wales (Wattenwyl) . 6 74 ORTHOPTERA Section— &EESS0E1A. Body long and narrow. Head exscrted. Legs slender, the femora sometimes compressed or dilated. ramily — Mantid.t:. Head free, vertical ; tliorax and abdomen elongate ; Avings large ; front legs flattened, sharp, raptorial. Animal-feeders. Geniis-TENODERA. Burmeister. Prothorax very long, sti-ongly keeled. Superior wings sub- membranaceous, translucent, with some horny patches behind the principal longitudinal A'ein; the margin firmer than the space immediately behind the principal longitudinal vein. Entirely green. T. INTERMEDIA. Sciussure, Mitt. d. Schw. Ent. Ges. III., y^. 233 (1870) . Smaller than T. superstitione ; prothorax shorter ; base of the wings with a brown spot ; anterior coxee finely denticulated. Female. Length, 85 mm. ; pronotum, 31 mm. ; elytra, 62 mm. New Zealand (Saussure). Family — Phasmidje. Body linear, rod-like, with all the legs equal, and often lobate dilatations of the femur and tibia. Vegetable-feeders. Division— APTEROPHASMINA. iviiigs wai arrived at their full growth Tegmina and wings wanting in both sexes when the insects have aenus-BACILLUS. Latreille. Body filiform ; thorax long ; the metathorax considerably elon- gated, glabrous. Legs long or of moderate length, simple or armed with small spines. Antennae very short, or at least not so long as the thorax, with few (scarcely ever more than twenty) joints, the basal joint often broad and flat. Tarsi of the fore legs with the basal joint elongated. B. HooKERi. White, Votj. " Ereb." mid " Ten'or/' Ins., p. 24, pi. 6, /. 6 (1846). Westwood, Cat. Orthopierous Insects in Brit. Mus., Pt. I., p. 14. Green; head obliquely keeled between the eyes and the base of the antennse, vertex Avith thin black lines, and tAvo black lines on the OF NEW ZEALAND. 75 sides of the head ; this and the thorax smooth ; pronotum with a thin median black line in front and a shorter one behind ; metanotum with a black median line on the anterior portion ; legs acntely keeled ; the single keel of the femora variably serrated ; tibise unarmed ; antennae black, the two basal joints yellow. (Westwood.) Male. Length of body, 2i inches ; antennae, 7 lines ; prothorax, li lines ; mesothorax, 5 lines ; metathorax, 4 lines ; abdomen, 11 lines + 4 lines = 15 lines. Female. Length of body. Si inches ; antennae, 12 lines ; protliorax, 2 lines ; mesothorax, 8 lines ; metathorax, 7\ lines ; abdomen, 16 lines + 6 lines + style (anal) 2 lines = 24 lines. B. GERHARDii. Kaup, Pvoc. Zool. Soc, p. 577 (1866). Green ; head obliquely keeled between the eyes and the base of tlie antennae ; vertex with two black spots ; occiput globular ; this and the thorax subgranular ; meso- and metathorax armed with small spines ; tibiae and tarsi with small acute foliaceous lobes near the base. (Kaup.) Length of the body, 4 inches 2 lines ; antennae, 6 lines ; meso- thorax, 7 2 lines ; metathorax, 7 lines ; abdomen (with the short anal style 2i), 22 lines. Hab., Invercargill. B. GEisovii. Kaup, Proc. Zool. Soc. (1866),^;. 578. Green; head obliquely keeled between the eyes and the base of the antennae ; vertex and occiput with ten black spines ; prothorax granulated ; meso- and metathorax and abdominal segments spinose ; legs spinose and foliaceous. (Kaup.) Male. Length of the bod}^, 18-2 lines ; antennae, 4 lines ; pro- thorax, 1 line ; mesothorax, oh lines ; metathorax, 4 lines ; abdomen, 10 lines + 1 line =11 lines. B. HYSTRicuLEA. Westwood, Cat. Ortliop. Ins., p. 16, pi. 1, /. 4 (PachymorphaJ , (1859) . Female. Brown, rugose, opaque, armed with numerous spines ; sides of the mesonotum ferruginous ; apical segment of the abdomen yellowish ; joints of the antennae obscure ; head with two tubercles between the eyes ; abdomen armed on the back with spines, the fourth segment with foliose appendages at the sides ; legs spiny. (Westwood.) Length of the body, 20 lines; antennae, 4 lines; prothorax, li 6* 76 ORTHOPTKRA lines ; mesothorax^ 1 lines ; raetathorax, 3i lines ; abdomen^ 7 lines + 3 lines = 10 lines. In the Male the body is without spines, and the fourth abdominal segment has no i'oliaceous appendages. Genus-ACANTHODERUS. Gray. Body scabrous. Head small, subquadrate. .Vntennse moderately long, setaceous, with the second joint much shorter than the third. Thorax cylindrical, shorter than the abdomen, spinose. Metathorax nearly as long as the mesothorax. Abdomen rather short, cylindrical. Legs moderately long, more or less spined, or furnished with foliaceous lobes. Tarsi with the basal joint shorter than the two following. A. spiNiGER. White, Voy. " Ereb." and " Terror," Ins., p. 24 (1846). Male. Head greenish-grey, with a broadish protuberance between the eyes, divided longitudinally in the middle ; vertex smooth ; antennae greyish, with the third and following joints black at the tip (only fourteen joints remain, of which the terminal ones are long) ; prothorax greenish-grey, smooth; mesothorax narrow, green, cylindrical, with about eighteen strong spines, placed somewhat in pairs, nine on the upper and nine on the under side, brownish-black at the end ; metathorax green, narrow, cylindrical, with three spines above and eight below ; abdomen subrcylindrical, the joints thickened, first segment with two spines in the middle on the under-side ; (fore legs broken oif ;) two hind pairs greyish, with six wide brown bands ; femora white at the base, with two short spines at the very end, and two longer on the inside near the tip ; tibiae Avith a slight tooth on the outside near the base ; tarsi slender. (White.) Length of the body, 3 inches 7 lines ; head, 2 lines ; prothorax, 1| lines; mesothorax, 10 lines; metathorax, 84 lines; abdomen, 19 lines + 3 lines = 22 lines. A. HORRiDus. White, Voy. " Ereb." and "Terror," Ins., p. 21, ^j/. 5, /. 4 (1846) . Wesiwood, Cat. Orthop. Ins., p. 49. Head grey ; a slight ridge with four sinuations behind the antenna; and between the eyes ; two spines and two or three tubercles on the vertex. Prothorax grey, with several small irregular conical tubercles ; meso- and metathorax brown, Avith many longish spines, especially on the sides and under parts ; there are several tubercles on the upper parts. Abdomen on the under side with spines shorter than those on OF NEW /EALAXD. 77 the thorax ; the upper parts with several suhspiniform tubercles ; fourth aud sixth segments dilated on the sides at the end; coxse of the fore legs with four or five spines ; coxae of the middle and hind legs with two spines ; femora sharply angled, .some of the angles with a few teeth ; a crested dilatation at the base of the tibiae of the two hind pairs ; basal joints of the tarsi of two hind pairs of legs crested, with a notch at the ends. (White.) Length of body, 5 inches 9 lines ; head, 3 lines ; metathorax, 16 lines; mesothorax, 12 lines; abdomen, .30 + 6 lines = 36 lines. A. PRAsiNUs. Westwood, Cat. Orthop. Ins., p. 49, pi. III., /. 2 (1859). Green, rather polished. The head considerably larger and wider than the prothorax, oval, with a number of small spines on the crown arranged symmetrically. The antennae rather short, brown, with the broad basal and second joint fulvous. The prothorax entire; the mesothorax gradually dilated from the fore margin to the middle, behind which the sides are parallel ; the upper surface is armed with a number of small spines placed irregularly ; the metathorax is slightly wider than the mesothorax, being rather swollen in the middle on each side, and in front of the base of the hind feet ; its upper surface bears a few small erect spines ; the hinder margin, as well as that of the basal segments of the abdomen, being slightly margined. The abdominal segments are gradually narrowed from the base to the extremity, which is furnished with two large oval foliolets ; the sixth segment is constricted in the middle, with its hinder angles prominent. The fore legs moderately long; the femora bent at the base, aud armed Avith several spines on the upper edge, the tibiae simple; the four hind femora thickened and angulated, with a spine near the base of the upper edge ; the under edge with several spines, those near the extremity being largest ; the tibiae rather dilated, with a small spine near the base. The operculum has a small spine at its base, and extends to the middle of the ninth dorsal segment. The mcso- and metasternum and abdominal segments beneath are armed with a few very small tubercles. (Westwood.) Length of body, 3 inches 7 lines; antennae, 9 lines; head, 3 lines; prothorax, 2 lines ; mesothorax, 7i lines ; metathorax, 7 lines ; abdomen, 17 + 6 lines = 23 lines. New Zealand (Sir G. Grev). 78 ORTIIOPTERA Sectioit— S ALT ATOEI A . Body generally slender ; hind legs saltatorial, the femora thickened. Female generally Avith an ovipositor. Elytra horizontal in repose. Gri/llidce. Elytra inclined in repose. Antennae long, setaceous. Locustida. Antennae shorty filiform. Acrididoe. Eamily — GiiTLLiDiE. Body cylindrical ; head free, thick ; antennae setaceous ; fore wings horizontal, hinder larger^ closely folded. aeniis-aEYLLOTALPA, Ray. Fore legs fossorial, palmate; hind tarsi normal; tarsi three-jointed ; ovipositor not exserted. G. AFRiCANA. Pal. Beauv. Walker, Cat. Denuap. Salt. Brit. Mas., p. 4. Body silky, reddish-hrown above and yellowish-brown and very pubescent below ; front femora not notched in front. Length, 13 to 14) lines. South Africa ; India ; Australia ; New Zealand (Mr. Clmrton ; Major Parry). No doiibt introduced from Australia. I have seen no New Zealand specimens. Genus-GEYLLUS. LimKBus. Fore legs simple ; head prominent, rounded in front. Hind tibiae with stout approximate spines ; tarsi three-jointed, the first joint smooth in the hind legs. Oviduct long, narrow. G. ruLiGiNosus. Serv., Hist. Orth., p. 334 (1839). Walker, I.e., p. 4.2. Head and thorax shining-black ; elytra scarcely longer than the abdomen, uniformly blackish in the male, shaded with paler in the female, the sides depressed, smokj^-grey with brown nervures. Wings smoky, prolonged into a tail which extends half an inch beyond the elytra. Abdomen blackish. Legs blackish ; posterior thighs strong, tinted reddish, especially at the inferior base ; posterior tibiae armed above, for the lower three quarters of their length, with two rows of strong spines, six on each side. Antennae black, about the length of the body. (Scrville.) Length, 1 inch. Australia. Auckland, Wellington, Nelson, Probably introduced from Australia. OF XEW ZKALAXD. 79 Geniis-SCLEROPTERUS. Hay. Fore legs not fossorial. Head prominent. Hind tibiae with slender wide-apart spnrs. Fore wings complete^ coriaceous, not reticulated. S. MAORicus. Walker, Cat. Derm. Salt. Brit. Mus., p. 74- (1869). Female. Black, sliiniiig. Eyes piceous, A^ery prominent. Third joint of the palpi clavate, truncated. Antennse extremely slender, more than twice the length of the body. Prothorax with cinereous down. Cerci and oviduct a little shorter than the abdomen. Cerci very slender. Oviduct curved upwards. Legs tawny ; hind legs long, their tibiae with three slender spines alternately on each side. Fore wings convex, extending to the tip of the abdomen, with no lateral keels. Hind wings not apparent. Length of the body, 2 lines. New Zealand (Colenso and Bolton). Family — LocirsxTDJE. Body long, laterally compressed ; antennae setaceous ; Avings imbri- cated ; males with a sound apparatus in the right elytron ; tarsi four- jointed; claws Avithout a distinct pulvillus. Oviduct more or less salient.^ Geniis-DEINACEIDA. TFhite. Body long, rather compressed, rounded above, wingless ; head large ; antennae long and slender ; palpi long, slender, clubbed at the end ; mandibles rather short ; fore tibiae without a spine in the middle in front. D. HETERACANTHA. White. Groifs Zoological Mi.sc., 1842, j^. 78. Diejfenbach^s New Zealand, II., p. 280. Zool. " Ereb:' aniL " Terror," Ins., p. 24, pi. 5, /. 1 . Bvller, Trans. N.Z. Inst., 1^70, p. 35. Ochre-yellow ; the end of the ovipositor, and tlic tips of the spines on the legs, brown ; the margins of the abdominal segments lighter, the transversely-ridged and rough-surfaced femora Avitli many liglit- coloTired streaks ; the greater portion of the dorsal surface of the * Tlie locality iu tl)e British Museum Catalogue of Jgrrecia solida, Sundaw Island, New Zealand, presented by J. B. Jukes, Esq., must be an error, as there is no such place, and Mr. Jukes never visited New Zealand. Sunday Island, Australia, is no doubt the correct locnlitv. 80 ORTIIOPTERA thorax somewlmt ferruginous. Head punctured on the vertex ; antennae at least two and a half times the length of the insect ; labial palpi with the terminal joint swollen at the end ; maxillary palpi long, the three last joints cylindrical, the last longest, gradually clubbed at the end. Thorax punctured, with some small smoothish places in the middle, the lateral margins somewhat thickened. Hind legs nearly twice the length of the insect ; tibiae quadrangular, broadest behind, the edges armed with spines coming out alternately ; spines very strong and sharp. (White.) Length of body (exclusive of appendages), 2—22 inches. North Island, not south of the Waikato District. D. (?) RUGOSA. BuUer, Trans. N.Z. Imt., 1870, p. 36, pi. U, f. 1 and f. 3. Intermediate in size between D. heteracantha and H. megacephala. The extreme length of the body is an inch and three-quarters, the thoracic shield measuring half an inch in length by three-quarters in width (following the curvature). Although a male specimen, the head is very small and rounded, measuring only half an inch in length by three-eighths in width. The eyes are large and very prominent ; the antennae comparatively short, measuring scarcely four inches. Femur one inch ; tibia one inch ; tarsus and claws half an inch. The edges of the thoracic shield are raised, and the surface is deeply punctured and indented. The posterior edges of the dorsal plates are raised, and the lower ones have a fringe of hard papillae along their outer margin. All the plates are more or less punctured, and the whole surface presents a rovghened appearance, which at once distinguishes the species from D. heteracantha, to which it more nearly approaches. Head, thorax, and body bright reddish-brown, the edges of the plates darker; thoracic shield and tw^o succeeding plates marked with black. Antennse and legs yellowish-brown, the joints of the latter spotted with black. Under-parts yellowish-brown, darker on the edges of the abdominal segments. (Buller.) Wanganui District. Geniis-HEMIDEINA. TValker, Body long, convex, shining, wingless, nearly cylindrical, generally smooth. Head large, generally a little broader than the prothorax, very convex above, slightly prominent between the antennae. Palpi long, slender. Antennae very long, generally slender. Prothorax slightly transverse; border generally slightly retiexed. Abdomen OF NEW ZEx\LAND. 81 elongate. Oviduct curved upward, more or less long. Legs stout, rather long ; four anterior femora unarmed ; hind femora with a single row of three minute spines ; four anterior with four minute spines on each side ; hind tibia more or less dilated, with four long thick spines on eacli side ; tarsi slender. H. CAPiTOLiNA. Walker, Cat. Loaistidce, Brit. Mus., p. 161 (1869). Yellow, shining, thinly punctured. Head extremely large, broader than the prothorax, reddish and very convex above, keeled, and with four yellowish streaks between the eyes ; front black, transversely striated, with a reddish band ; face yellow ; labrum tawny. Man- dibles black. Palpi tawny, first and second joints short ; third and fourth long, of nearly equal length ; fifth longer than the fourth, subclavate, and piceous at the tip. Third joint of the labial palpi clavate, jjiceous. Antennae tawny, very much longer than the body. Prothorax black, transverse, broader than the mesothorax, broader in front, irregularly bordered on each side with yellow, this hue extend- ing for a short space along the fore-border and along the hind-border. Mesothorax with a black spot on each side and with some minute black marks. Metathorax and abdominal dorsal segments with a row of black spots and with black bands on the hind-borders, the spots successively widening to the apical segment. Apical appendages and cerci tawny, the former twice the length of the latter. Legs stout, rather long ; femora with a row of interrupted lilack streaks on each side ; hind femora beneath with a few denticulations on each side and towards the tip, with a single row of four minute black-tipped spines ; four anterior tibiae Avith four small black-tipped spines on each side ; hind tibise reddish, slightly dilated, with two small black-tipped spines beneath, and with four thick piceous spines on each side, the spines on the inner side much longer than those on the outer ; tarsi reddish. Length of the body, 18—21 lines. H. MEGACEPHALA. Bulkr, Zoologist, 1867, ;;. 850; Trans. N.Z. Inst., 1870, p. 86, pi. U, f. 2. Head of male very large. " The tibiie arc considerably thicker [than in H. thoracica'\, and more strongly armed with lateral spurs, although not longer than in other" species ; the thorax is of uniform dark umber, narrowly margined with brown ; the licad is almost entirely black, and the body deep reddish-l)rown with transverse bands of black. The femora are marked on each side with three series of minute black spots, which are more conspicuous in the male. The following are the measurements of the male : Head and mandibles. 82 ORTHOPTERA one inch ; from anterior edge of thorax to end of abdomen^ one inch and three-sixteenths ; the plate of the thorax measuring a quarter of an inch. The antennae are four inches long ; femur, three-quarters of an inch ; tibia, one inch and three-sixteenths ; tarsus and claws, three- eighths of an inch. The vertex is much rouuded or elevated, and perfectly smooth." (Buller.) Wellington. H. THOiiAcicA. White, Voy. '' Ereb." and ''Terror,'^ Ins., p. 25, pL 5,/. 2 (184G). H. prodncttt : Walker, Cat. Locust'nhe, p. 163." Female. Tawny, cylindrical, shining, thinly punctured. Head black ; face and labrum tawny. Eyes ferruginous, prominent. Palpi testaceous ; fourth joint of the maxillary palpi longer than the third; third joint of the labial palpi clavate, black at the tip. Antennae piceous, tawny at the base. Prothorax slightly transverse, with an obliqne blackish furrow on each side. Abdomen long; hind borders of the segments piceous. Oviduct slightly curved, rather shorter than the abdomen. Legs stout, rather long ; femora with a row of short oblique interrupted black streaks on each side ; hind femora with a single row of black small spines which from the tirst to the fourth successively increase in size ; four anterior tibiae with three rather small black-tipped spines on each side, excluding the apical spines ; fore tibiae contracted near the base ; hind tibiae slightly dilated, with four long thick black spines on each side, and with three minute spines. Length of the body, 19 lines. H. riGURATA. Walker, Cat. Locn.S^oc.,!l878, p. 4. Head and thorax black ; abdomen red and black. The mandibles and palpi pale testaceous, as are also the anterior and intermediate coxae and trochanters ; the legs otherwise red. The thorax opaque, and, with the metathorax, the sides, and beneath, covered with a fine sericeous pile ; wings sub-hyaline, the nervures and stigma fuscous, the tegulae with a white spot. The three basal segments of the abdomen black, with their apical margins ferruginous ; the following segments with an oblong-quadrate black spot in the middle, extending to about two-thirds of the length of the segments. Length, 21 lines. Dunedin. A probable variety of this species has the posterior coxae black. 128 HYMENOPTERA Sub-Pamily — Pimpilin^. Abdomen sessile ; oviiiositor long. Genus-RHYSSA. Antennae long and setaceous, but shorter than the body ; the first joint broadly notched on the side. Body long, compressed at the extremity in the females, cylindrical or filiform in the males ; the eighth and last segment of the abdomen in the males with a long narrow tongue partly covering the two valves. Mesothorax wrinkled transversely. R. ANTiPODUM. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1876, p. 479, pi. IV., /. 4. Female. Dark ferruginous, variegated with yellow. Head : the orbits of the eyes, slightly interrupted opposite the insertion of the antennse, and the clypeus, yellow ; the palpi ruf o-testaceous ; the apical third of the antennae yellowish-white, the apex fuscous. Thorax : the mesothorax transversely rugo-striate ; the lateral margins of the prothorax, the tegulse, and a spot beneath the wings, the scutellum, post-scutellum, and the apical half of the metathorax, yellow; wings hyaline or faintly fulvous, the nervures black ; legs ferruginous ; the anterior and intermediate coxae and trochanters, and the posterior trochanters, yellow. Abdomen smooth and shining ; at the apical margin of the first and second segments a yellow fascia, which emits a short yellow line in the middle ; each of the four following segments has a longitudinal oblong spot in the middle, and also an elongate one laterally ; the sixth has two yellow spots, and the two following segments have their posterior margins yellow, extending to the apical segment also, which has two additional yellow lines beneath the spot. Length, 15 lines. Male. Resembles the female, except in the abdomen, which is dark brown, the first segment only having near the apical margin a yellow fascia, which is interrupted in the middle. Length, 15 lines. — F. W. H. North Island ; Canterbury ; Southland. Genns-LISSONOTA. Gravenhorst. Thorax smooth ; abdomen shining, with smooth segments ; ter- minal ventral segments entire in the female; scutellum triangular; areolet obsolete or triangular ; ovipositor long ; antennae as long, or longer than, the body, the first joint swollen and truncate. OF NEW ZEALAND. 129 * L. FLAvo-picTA. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1S7H, p. 4. Ferruginous ; the head and thorax spotted with yellow. Head, the orbits of the eyes, the clypeuSj and the mandibles yellow, the latter black at their tips. The mesothorax with two narrow longi- tudinal lines which widen anteriorly into an angnlated shape, the prothorax with two longitudinal stripes at the sides, an oblong broad stripe beneath the wings, and all the coxae above, yellow ; the scutellum, post-scutellum, a minute spot on each side of the metathorax above, another in the middle of its posterior margin, and a broad stripe on its sides, yellow ; the metathorax transversely finely aciculate ; wings hyaline, the stigma ferruginous. Abdomen smooth and shining. Length, 4—5 lines. Dunedin. The male is smaller, usually 34 lines long, is coloured like the female, but has the face entirely yellow. L. ALBO-picTA. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1878, p. 4. Male. Ferruginous, with the head black. The head with the orbits of the eyes white ; the mandibles white at their base. Thorax : a central longitudinal black line on the mesothorax, and a narrow interrupted white one on each side of it, which expands anteriorly into a sub-triangular shape ; a large ovate spot beneath the wings, and two or three small ones before it, two being on the sides of the pro- thorax, an oblong spot at the side of the metathorax, and the scutel- lum, white ; the metathorax finely wrinkled transversely ; wings hyaline and brightly iridescent, the stigma and nervures black; the two apical joints of the tarsi black. Abdomen clavate, with the apical joints fuscous. Length, 3—4 lines. Dunedin. The female is not known. The male resembles that of L. flavo- picta, but is certainly a distinct species. Family— PEOCTOTRUPID^. Latreille. Egg parasites ; minute. Body rather long and slender ; antennae eight- to fifteen- jointed, the joints often hairy ; wings covered with minute hairs, and with most of the nervures absent ; maxillary palpi three- to six-jointed; labial palpi usually three-jointed. Abdomen with five to seven segments ; tarsi usually five-jointed, rarely foitr- jointed. 10 130 HYMENOPTERA aenus-PROCTOTRUPES. Antennae long and feathered, twelve-jointed. Anterior wings with the beginning of a cubital cell, and two longitudinal veins on the posterior half. Abdomen spindle-shaped, and very acutely pointed, the terminal segments being tubular in their arrangement. Mandibles without teeth. Anterior tibise Avith a single spur. Valves of the ovi- positor long, exserted. P. iNTRUDENs. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1878, p. 5. Female. Black, with the legs ferruginous, the apical joints of the tarsi fuscous. The mesothorax smooth and shining, as is also the scutellum ; the metathorax coarsely rugose, and having at its base, in the middle, a deep longitudinal channel, which extends to half its length ; at the commencement of the channel, on each side, a deep fossulet ; the coxse more or less fuscous or black. Abdomen very smooth and shining ; in some examples the apex rufo-piceous. Length, 2 1 lines. Variety. The scape of the antennae rufo-piceous. In some speci- mens a fine silky down is observable on the mesothorax. Canterbury. Genus-DIAPRIA. Latreille. Head horizontal, longer than broad, with the ocelli on the front edge ; antennae long and, filiform, with a projection on the underside; fourteen-jointed in the male, twelve in the female ; wings without veins or stigma ; abdomen long, oval, and pedicelled ; mandibles forci- pate; cells obliterated; a small callous spot, in the place of the stigma. D. (?) coccoPHAGA. Maskell, Trans. N.Z. Inst., 1879, p. 228, pi. IX., /. 2 to 5. Black to the naked eye, but under the microscope the vertex of the head is green, the eyes red, the thorax and abdomen brown with green streaks ; the whole body diapered with spots. The posterior wings are furnished with two minute hooks. The antennae are monir liform, with from twelve to fifteen joints ; elbowed at the third joint, the last three being soldered together. The head is transverse, the eyes facetted, the mandibles forcipate. The tarsi are five-jointed ; the anterior pair of legs have a sharp curved spur, with three joints at the end of the tibiae. Christchurch. OF NEW ZEALAND. Igl Srs-ORDER— TEREBRANTIA. Abdomen sessile, in the female armed with a saw or borer. Larvee with six legs and a nnmber of pro-legs. Feed on vegetable sub- stances. Family— TJEO CERID^. Abdomen of female furnished with a borer ; labium entire ; pro- thorax elongated ; front tibiae with a single spur. Genns-DEHECYRTA. Smith. Head subglobose, vertex swollen or convex ; eyes lateral, large, ovate ; ocelli prominent, placed in a triangle between the eyes ; antennae setaceous, composed of twenty-three to twenty-six joints, the scape short, curved, slightly thickened towards the apex ; the first joint of the flagellum half the length of the scape, the second as long as the scape, third and four following joints as long as the first, the remaining joints are each in succession shorter than the preceding. Thorax as wide as the head, oblong, the sides parallel ; the prothorax narrowed anteriorly into a short neck ; the mesothorax slightly ele- vated in front ; the scutellum elevated ; the metathorax with a deep incision in the middle ; the anterior wings with one or two marginal and four submarginal cells, the marginal cell, or cells, elongated, with a short appendix at the apex ; the first submarginal cell small, the second oblong, widest at the apex, the third subquadrate, the fourth extending to the apex of the wing ; the second and third cells each receive a recurrent vein a little within their base; legs slender, not compressed ; the four hind tibite bi-spinous at their apex ; ungues with a strong broad tooth at the base. Abdomen cylindrical, about twice the length of the head and thorax ; the ovipositor short, and slightly exserted. D. DECEPTUS. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1876, p. 474, pi. IV., /. 6. , Female. Ferruginous; abdomen rufo-fulvous, variegated with yel- lowish-white. Head globose, shining, and with scattered punctures ; a broad yellowish-white line round the orbits of the eyes, slightly interrupted at their vertex ; two lines of the same colour run longi- tudinally over the vertex, and unite with another line that borders its posterior margin; the clypeus and mandibles yellowish, the latter obliquely truncate, and with four black teeth ; the flagellum black, except its basal joint and the curved scape, both of which are ferru- 132 HYMENOPTERA. ginous. Thorax : the prothorax forming a short neck ; a line on each side of its posterior margin running to the base of the wings ; two obliqiie stripes on the mesothorax inclining inwardly^ and uniting with a transverse waved stripe at its basal margin, two spots on the scutel- lum^ and also the post-scutellum, yellowish- white; wings fulvo-hy aline, the nervous ferruginous, the stigma fuscous ; a large yellowish spot beneath the wings, and the posterior coxse j)ale beneath ; the legs pale ferruginous. Abdomen yellowish towards the base. Length, 5 lines. Genus-XIPHYDRIA. Latreille. Ovipositor short ; body rather jlattened and somewhat turned up behind; tip of the abdomen ending in an obtuse point. Antennae short, curved, and tapering at the end. Prothorax elongated into a neck ; two marginal and four submarginal cells ; maxillary palpi long, five- jointed. X. FLAVO-PicTA. Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, 1878, p. 1. Male. Ferruginous, the head and thorax variegated with yellow ; the sixth, seventh, and eighth segments of the abdomen black. An- tennae black, with the two basal segments ferruginous. The head yellow; a broad ferruginous stripe from the posterior margin of the vertex to a little beyond the ocelli ; an angulated ferruginous spot at the sides of the vertex, touching the eyes, and three small ones at the inser- tion of the neck. The posterior margin of the prothorax yellow ; the mesothorax with two oblique stripes inclining inwardly and uniting at its posterior margin, a lunate spot on each side of the scutum, two ovate ones at the base of the metathorax, and three small ones at its apex, yellow ; a large oblong spot beneath the wings, and the legs, yellow ; wings pale f ulvo-hyaline and splendidly iridescent ; the tarsi pale ferruginous. Length, 4 lines. Dunedin. 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