The annals and magazine of natural history : zoology, botany, and geology . Wings with a brown apex, much darkertowards the costa, but leaving a small clear space in the cellB2 (first submarginal) ; a large brown patch in the middleof the wing, extending one-third of the way across and inbreadth reaching from the base of Rs to the apex of Sc;cross-veins and veins E4+5 and Cu dark-margined. Cuxjoining M slightly (?) or considerably ($) before its fork ;Cu2 joining An near its tip. Halteres yellowish. Peradeniya, ii. 1912 ; 1 £ (type; wing figured). I havealso seen the species from the following


The annals and magazine of natural history : zoology, botany, and geology . Wings with a brown apex, much darkertowards the costa, but leaving a small clear space in the cellB2 (first submarginal) ; a large brown patch in the middleof the wing, extending one-third of the way across and inbreadth reaching from the base of Rs to the apex of Sc;cross-veins and veins E4+5 and Cu dark-margined. Cuxjoining M slightly (?) or considerably ($) before its fork ;Cu2 joining An near its tip. Halteres yellowish. Peradeniya, ii. 1912 ; 1 £ (type; wing figured). I havealso seen the species from the following African localities:—Entebbe, Uganda {CapL E. D. W. Oreig, ), 1 0 5Stanleyville, Belgian Congo, 1. ix. 1901, 1 ? ; Bo, SierraLeone (Br. H. E. Arbuckle, ), 1 ? ; Gold Coast(Willoughby P. Loioe), 2 ?. The African specimens arerather larger and have the tips of the femora slightlydarkened. This species closely resembles T. exornata, Bergr., but thepresence of a well-marked brown patch in the middle of thecosta seems to indicate that it is really Trentepohlia speiseri, sp. n. Wing, x 18. 12. Epiphragma hempi, Brun. Rec. Ind. Mus. viii. p. 155(1913). Hakgala, 4500 feet, v. 1911 ; 1 £. The wing-markings of this specimen do not quite agreewith Brunettis figure, but it is certainly only a variationof his species, and may be conspecific with E. signata, Meij. On new Mammals from Dutch flew Guinea. 205 XXIII.— On new Mammals obtained by the Utahwa Expe-dition to Dutch New Guinea. By Oldfield Thomas. (Published by permission of the Trustees of the British Museum.) The British Museum owes to the organisers of Dr. A. F. recent expedition, via the Utakwa River, to thesnow mountains of the Charles Louis Range, Dutch NewGuinea, the considerable series of mammals obtained duringthe expedition. Mr. C. B. Kloss, already so well known asa mammal collector in the Malay Peninsula and islands, wasin charge of the collecting work and it was hoped that areall


Size: 3133px × 798px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdec, booksubjectnaturalhistory, bookyear1838