S. Mahunka szerk.: Folia Entomologica Hungarica 55. (Budapest, 1994)

(Figs 5, 13); trochanter of hind leg without tubercle; abdominal terga 4-7 without gradu­lus; the nocturnal female is rather rare in collections (was not available). Two genera. Genus Doryleika gen. n. Type-species: Doryleika mahunkai sp. n.; described below; by present designation. Diagnosis. Male scape wider than long (Fig. 7); vertex with a conspicuous, promi­nent tubercle of tegumental gland lying close to upper top of eye (lying on malar space in female); trochanter of middle leg with a conical tubercle (Fig. 5), tegumental gland skim­mer lying in these striations; female known, but was not available, see fig. 3b of Invrea (1951). Distribution. Contains three described species in females: 1. D. savignyi (Klug, 1829) comb, n., from Egypt, never found again since the description. 2. D. airica (Invrea, 1953) comb, n., from Niger, only type known, collected same time and place with males of savignyi and certainly is the same species. 3. D. cyrenaica (Invrea, 1932) comb, n., from Libya and Egypt, only two specimens known. The genus contains also 13 described species in males, not yet associated with the females; one of these, D. bampura (Skorikov, 1935), from Iran, cannot be recognized from the original description; the other species, very difficult to identify, are included in a tentative key presented in the second part of the present paper; all are new combina­tions in Doryleika. It is evident that D. patrizii (Invrea, 1932), differs in no other charac­ters from D. nitida (Bischoff, 1920), save its enlarged ocelli. Genus Macroocula Panfilov, 1954 Type-species: Apterogyna morawitzi Radoszkowski, 1888; by original designation and monotypy. Diagnosis. Male scape longer than wide (Fig. 11); vertex without tubercle of te­gumental gland, substituted by a small, polished surface; trochanter of middle leg without tubercle, only with a smooth, acute longitudinal keel (Fig. 13); female known, but was not available, see Tab. 1, fig. 1 of Skorikov (1935). Distribution. Contains only the type of the genus, both sexes known, from Turkis­tan, East Africa, Egypt, Israel, Sudan. Tribe Gynecapterini nov. Diagnosis. Diurnal; both sexes without median patch or apical fringe on first two terga, but mesoscutal area often, and third tergum always with a broad, basal integumen­tal yellowish white stripe in female (Fig. 35), sometimes more or less divided mesally to form a pair of lateral spots; male scape longer than wide; eye and ocelli small (Fig. 36); antenno-ocular distance much greater than transverse diameter of median ocellus; tro­chanter of middle and hind legs devoid of any trace of a tubercle (Figs 37-38); abdomi­nal terga 4-7 with gradulus; first flagellar segment of female not differentiated from the

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