S. Mahunka szerk.: Folia Entomologica Hungarica 31/1. (Budapest, 1978)
Discussion: Male dark brown; antennae and legs light brown. Head a little longer than broad; postfrontal sutures and coronal suture not visible. Eyes small, shorter than scape. Pronotum quadrate, all angles rounded; lateral margins parallel-sided. Tegmina and wings absent. Meso- and metanotum typical. Abdomen expanded to last tergite. Ultimate tergite broad, transverse. Forceps asymmetrical; trigonal basally, cylindrical apically. Genitalia (Fig. 1) specific; paramere short, broad, V-shaped; incision of anterior margin deep and broad; genital lobes very short, without virgae; external parameres typical. Female similar to male, but forceps symmetrical, contiguous, tapering. Length of body with forceps: male: 13. 5- 26. 5, female: 14-16 mm. Distribution: Uganda, Ethiopia. Figs. 1-3. Male genital armature of 1 = Gonolabis picea Borelli, 1907, 2 = G. infelix (Burr, 1907), and 3 = G. incisa (Borelli, 1914) Gonolabis infelix (Burr) Anisolabis infelix Burr, in Sjöstedt: Kilimanjaro Orth. , p. 6. - Terra typica: Tanganyika (Type male: British Museum /Hist. Nat./.) - Gelotolabis infelix (Burr); Burr, 1915, J. R. micr. Soc, 1915: 541, pl. XII, fig. 5 (male genitalia) (Central Africa). - Paralabis infelix (Burr); Brindle, 1965, Ann. Mag. nat. Hist., (13) 7: 175. - Gonolabis infelix (Burr); Popham and Brindle, Entomologist, 99: 273 (Africa). Discussion: Male dark brown. Head broad and tumid; postfrontal sutures and coronal suture faint. Eyes small, shorter than scape. Antennae with first segment long but shorter than body; scape shorter than distance between antennái bases. Pronotum more or less quadrate, usually with a short median longitudinal impressed line. Tegmina and wings absent. Meso- and metanotum typical. Abdomen depressed; forceps asymmetrical, strongly curved apically, trigonal basally. Genitalia (Fig. 2) narrow; paramere long, about three times longer than length of external paramere; genital lobe short, without virga. External paramere broad at apical section. Female similar to male, but forceps usually symmetrical, tapering. Length of body with forceps: male: 14-16, female: 13. 5 - 14. 5 mm. Distribution: Central and East Africa.