. Fig. 14.—Hanunatorhina hella, Lw.; a, wing ; b, anteuna (after Kellogg). cue is placed higher than the others, in front of the base of the wing, the three others being lower, and in a horizontal row. On each abdominal segment is a very large triangular spot reaching nearly to the posterior margin, and of a shining pearl colour, with brilliant shining silvery reflections. Hypopygium velvet black, only the claspers a little paler, the last joint of simple structure. Legs blackish; femora brownish yellow towards the base. Halteres brownish. yellow with black clubs. Wings hyaline, moderately lar
. Fig. 14.—Hanunatorhina hella, Lw.; a, wing ; b, anteuna (after Kellogg). cue is placed higher than the others, in front of the base of the wing, the three others being lower, and in a horizontal row. On each abdominal segment is a very large triangular spot reaching nearly to the posterior margin, and of a shining pearl colour, with brilliant shining silvery reflections. Hypopygium velvet black, only the claspers a little paler, the last joint of simple structure. Legs blackish; femora brownish yellow towards the base. Halteres brownish. yellow with black clubs. Wings hyaline, moderately large, costa very black, the longitudinal veins blackish, the 1st longitudinal thicker, the rest distinctly less strong, the last one not attaining the border of the ; Length 3-4 millim. Cetlon. Genus APISTOMYIA, Big. Apistomyia, Bigot, Ann. See. Ent. France, (4) ii, p. 109 (1862). Genotype, A. elegans, Big., the original and only other species. Head very rounded ; eyes pubescent, separated in both sexes by a broad frons, and divided by an unfacetted band, as in Ble2iharo- cera, separating the large upper facets from the small lower ones; three ocelli. Palpi probably 5-joiiited.* Antennae of nine (?) or ten joints, barely longer than the head, bai-e ; 1st scapal joint short, 2nd inuch longer ; tlagellum of seven (?) or eight joints, of which the first is the longest, the last ovate, and the intermediate ones short * In his text Bigot says that the palpi are tliree-jointed (adrling that they were not clearly visible), but in his illustration the palpi are five-joiuted and exceedingly long, and Kellogg reproduces this figure. In my new species I can only assume that these organs have been broken off; otherwise it possesses only one-jointed palpi, a complete anomaly, which would of course necessitate a new genus.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectdiptera, bookyear1912