S. Mahunka szerk.: Folia Entomologica Hungarica 61. (Budapest, 2000)
of 77. testacea Ruthe, 1831 from Hungary of today in any of the collections, we may have listed it as a species expected to occur in our country only. However, as Dr. Rüdiger Wagner wrote us (pers. comm.), it is better to list 77 cebennica Vaillant instead, since 77 testacea Ruthe seems to be a North West European species. As a consequence of their life-habits, thaumaleids are prisoners of the brook wherein they develop, particularly so for warmer, less high mountains. The processes of speciation in these cases may be quicker than usual. Thus the populations of widely distributed species like bezzii are isolated from each other, and no surprise that the fine details of male genitalia are different from locality to locality. To illustrate this, we depicted the gonostyles and parameres of males in three populations (Mehadia, Roumania, Bükk Mts: Miskolc and Mecsek Mts: Obánya; Figs 3-5). Thaumalea remota Martinovsky et Rozkosny, 1976 — Zempléni TK: 1 male: Nagyhuta [correctly: Regéc], Vajda-v., patak fölött, június 10.; 1 male: ibid., június 8., Papp L., Szappanos A.; 2 males: ibid., Kemence-p. fölött, június 29., Papp L., Bajza Zs.: 1 male: ibid., június 28.; 1 female: Regéc, Ördög-v., patak fölött, június 29., Papp L., Bajza Zs. [Malaise trap]. Börzsöny TK: 9 males 20 females: Szokolya, Szén-patak fölött, július 4. It was described from Moravia and Slovakia and it is new to Hungary. Its females were easily identified since their flagellomeres bear longer hairs than those of the other two species. Figs 3-5. Gonostyle (dististyle), apex of gonostyle and paramere in the Thaumalea bezzii Edwards, 1929 populations. — 3: Mehadia, Roumania, 4: Bükk Mts, Miskolc, 5: Mecsek Mts, Obánya