abi eogentgy tase ” 7 rr “ Fig pinta Amram Be mtn AT Ni th Ms it fy obimse Haifa p< antares Creer are a Tee ate eta eet Ha Oe eer tee Hin aga 0m totic , - Seo nnjeertiode, eet a - pete tie yr eee ithe Te atote ro re awe tae 5 x = oe. ait eae ah = 7 om '] SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS. wonograpns Net OF THE Pore oA OF NORTH AMERICA. PREPARED FOR THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION BY : he OVE Wie PART I. 1 7 io a | om es A ca. es B EDITED, WITH ADDITIONS, i : a |i Hie © | R. OSTEN SACKEN. WASHINGTON: SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. / APRIL, 1862. Te ee ee ee ee ee ee eA ae ; 5 : - : : ? 4 ‘ i : { ' “SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS MONOGRAPHS OF THE meee yee? ek OF NORTH AMERICA. PREPARED FOR THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION BY ELE OF Be WwW. PART I. EDITED, WITH ADDITIONS, BY RR. OSTEN SACKEN. \ WASHINGTON: SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. | APRIL, 1862. 212202 ADVERTISEMENT. THE present publication is the first part of a work on North American Diptera in process of preparation by Dr. H. Loew, of Meseritz, Prussia (one of the highest living authorities on the subject), undertaken at the especial request of the Smithsonian Institution. The materials have been derived principally from the collection of Baron R. Osten Sacken, of the Russian Legation in Washington, kindly intrusted to the author for examination. As explained by Dr. Loew, the work will appear in monographs of genera and families, sufficient materials being at hand for illus- trating particular groups only, without relation to their systematic sequence. The Institution is under obligations to Baron Osten Sacken for editing the work, adding species described by Dr. Loew subse- quent to the reception of his manuscript, and for correcting the proofs. He has also added a monograph of the Cectdomyide, a group of much interest, and one to which it was considered of importance to call the early attention of investigators. JOSEPH HENRY, Secretary S, I. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, Wasuineton, March, 1862. ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION, JuLY, 1861. PHILADELPHIA: COLLINS, PRINTER. PREFACE, THE impulse to write on North American Diptera was given to me by Baron Osten-Sacken, who, first by sending me rich collections of such Diptera and finally by intrusting me with the greatest part of his own Diptera collected in North America, has enabled me to undertake this task, and, I hope, with some success. If my observations had been written in German, and published in any of our German Transactions, I should have had good reason to fear that the results would not become sufficiently known in North America, and would at all events be longer in obtaining access there. I resolved, therefore, to give them in English, and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington has added to the many proofs it has already given of an energetic furtherance of any studies relative to the natural history of North America, the liberal resolution to print my paper on North American Diptera at its own expense. If these papers, according to my intention, contribute to the increase of the study of this interesting order of insects, the principal thanks are due to the Institution and to Baron Osten-Sacken. As for the English text, I use, it is true, the assistance and advice of a friend who is well acquainted with the English language ; should, nevertheless, some roughness occur, I beg that it may be attributed to some supplementary alterations of my own, which circumstances prevented me from submitting tohim. I hope that shortcomings of this kind will be kindly over- looked, provided my descriptions be not deficient in precision and clearness. As I do not wish to remain the sole describer of N. A. Diptera, but hope soon to have many fellow-laborers, I take the liberty of pointing out briefly what, in my opinion, should be chiefly borne in mind in making and publishing such descriptions. Without any disposition to find fault with others, I believe I may be permitted some remarks, since for the last twenty vil PREFACE. years I have been occupied with the study of Diptera, and have been obliged to spend many hours in identifying (how often fruit- lessly!) the published descriptions. What renders the identi- fication of a very great number of the existing descriptions so very difficult, is the inexactness of the system used. For however natural the axiom may appear, that a new species is only to be located in the genus to which it really belongs, it is so little re- spected by most dipterological writers, that a long list could be made out of the instances in which they have sinned against it; in- deed the number of cases, in which a new species has been placed in a wrong family, is not smal]. It is not even always sufficient to place it in the right genus, for as soon as this genus is at all numerous in species, or the species are difficult to distinguish, the peculiar group of the genus to which the new species belongs should be pointed out, and if among the species already well known there are any very similar to those described, they ought of necessity to be specially mentioned. Consequently only those entomologists will publish new Diptera with success, who are completely acquainted with the system of this order of insects, whereas he who has a defective knowledge of it, far from advancing science, lays impediments in its way. The first task, then, for those who intend to come forth with satisfactory papers on the field of Dipterology, will of course be to acquire a most complete and sure knowledge of the system. As an introduction to the following essays of a more mono- graphic character, will be found a short sketch of the terminology of Diptera, as well as one of the dipterological system. The latter afforded me an opportunity of giving an outline of the North Ame- rican dipterological fauna, as far as known to me at present. An elaborate classification, equally detailed in all its parts, would require not only a larger amount of materials than I have at my disposal, but also, in order to be intelligible, a considerable num- ber of plates. I am compelled, therefore, to give up such an un- dertaking for the present, I hope, however, to be able to execute it at some future time. Although I trust that my short sketch will prove of some help to the student, by furnishing him occasion- ally a useful hint, or guiding him aright in general, it will be readily understood that in the prosecution of the study he will require more detailed information. I will, therefore, briefly indicate the works in which he may find it: Meigen’s Zwetfliigelige Insecten (7 vols. PREFACE. Vil 8vo.) is still the best work, exhibiting the dipterological system. In order to obtain information on the progress which science has made since Meigen’s age, this work may be followed by the study of Walker’s Diptera Britannica, The excellent plates by Mr. Westwood, and the systematic arrangement prepared for the most part by Mr. Haliday, give to this work a value not shared by Mr. Walker’s other publications. Next to these I would name Mr. Macquart’s Diptéres Hxotiques, a work which, notwithstanding the errors in many of its figures and the carelessness of nearly all the descriptions, affords a great deal of useful information about the systematic arrangement of Diptera. After having acquired a general knowledge of the system by the study of these three works (or, if not familiar with the German language, of the two latter only), the best plan will be to con- centrate special study on one, or, at the utmost, on a few families . of Diptera, and to consult the monographic papers relative to them, which are not difficult to procure, in order to obtain a com- plete and sure knowledge of characters within a more limited field. For even the smallest field will always be found wide enough io afford opportunities for the most interesting discoveries. his mode of obtaining a knowledge of the system capable of serving ~as a solid foundation to valuable publications is certainly a long and tedious one. It may be considerably facilitated, however, by the use of a well determined collection of typical specimens of all the families and genera, and it will afford me much pleasure to ex- tend all assistance in my power to those who may prefer the latter eourse ; for both my wish to become better acquainted with the Diptera .of North America and their desire to study the system might well coincide to supply the wants of both parties. I am always ready to send in exchange for well preserved N. A. Diptera forwarded to me (address Mr. H. Loew, Meseritz, Prussia) a reasonable equivalent in accurately named representatives of the genera. I should probably be obliged, in most cases, to send only Huropean specimens, whereas, perhaps, it would seem more de- sirable to have N. A. species. But the number of species oceur- ring in perfect identity both in Europe and North America is so surprisingly large, and, besides, there are so many N. A. spe- cies exceedingly resembling well-known European ones, that the best foundation for the study of N. A. Diptera would be a com- plete collection of European species. It will be very useful to viii PREFACE. both parties, if those who desire an exchange would remember that the smaller and smallest species possess the greatest interest for me, and if they would at the same time point out to me such families as they are chiefly desirous of knowing. Moreover, it will be necessary to agree about the way in which the equivalents might be forwarded. In case I receive no such direction, I shall suppose I am at liberty to send them by the kind intervention of the Smithsonian Institution at Washington, through which I beg all consignments intended for me may be forwarded. I have no doubt as to a successful issue to my labors, if I con- tinue to receive the same liberal and generous assistance from the Smithsonian Institution and from Baron Osten-Sacken which I have enjoyed from the beginning, especially-if this commencement contributes to increase the number of those interested in the study, and ready to promote it by the communication of species taken by them, in the same way in which Messrs. Rob. Kennicott, S. H. Scudder, A. S. Packard, Edw. Norton, and others, have furnished materials for the excellent paper of Baron Osten-Sacken on the Limnobide of North America. H. LOEW. Mesenritz, 3 Oct. 1860. TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE Advertisement 5 : : : ; ‘ ; iv Preface . ‘ es : : : - : v Table of Contents 2 : : , : : : i On the Terminology of Diptera - : ‘ : : xi SKETCH OF THE SYSTEMATIC ARRANGEMENT OF DIPTERA ‘ i I. Nemocera : aie “ ie : : 5 IJ. Brachycera : : : ‘ : - 15 III. Coriacea : : : : : : 48 On tHE NortH AMERICAN TRYPETIDAE : ‘ , : 49 1. Extent of the family . ; : : : 49 2. Its division into Trypetina and Dacina ; : 51 3. Its natural character . : - : : 52 4. Its relationship . : : ‘ : : 56 5. North American species hitherto recorded ‘ é 57 6. Systematic arrangement of the species described, with their synopsis + : : : ; 61 7. Description of the species : : : : 64 Appendix I 3 : : : : 3 : 91 Appendix II : : ; : : ; 94 Appendix III : : : 5 : : : 99 On THE NortH AMERICAN SCIOMYZIDAE : : ‘ y L03 On tHE NortH AMERICAN EPHYDRINIDAE : : : win b29 Notiphilina, 4 : : ‘ ; aye 3 Hydrellina i : ‘ : ‘ . 149 Ephydrina : : : ‘ ‘ ge (LDS x CONTENTS. PAGE On Tur Nortn AMERICAN CecipomyIDAE. By R. Osten Sacken sity ee On the classification of the family P , ere On its habits : . ‘ : > eek On the North American Cecidomyiae at present known 186 Index q ; : 3 ; j ‘ f 207 Additions and Corrections . 3 , : ; . 220 ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. DipTeRA have so much in common with other orders of insects that the terms applied to the latter, which I may consider as gen- erally known, may frequently be used for the former. I have there- — fore merely to explain those terms which, on account of the peculiar organization of Diptera, are either applied solely to the insects of this order or are used in a more or less modified sense. It is well known, how little the various authors agree in the choice of these terms, and how many of them seem to find pleasure in departing as much as possible from the terms used by their predecessors. This is a great evil, aggravating the difficulty of understanding Dipterological publications, and impeding the progress of Dipter- ology. It would take too much space to expiain all the terms used by different authors, and I confine myself to those only which seem the-most necessary and which | have used in this publication. The following considerations have guided me in their choice. I think it a duty of a later author to accommodate himself to the usage of his predecessors, especially those who have written stand- ard works, and at the same time to reconcile them as much as possible where they differ from each other. The indispensable innovations should be introduced only gradually and in conformity with the established usage, since in such matters an agreement about the terms chosen is more important than the mode of selecting them. Meigen, Wiedemann, and Fallen in earlier times, Zetter- stedt and Macquart more recently, have in that respect a claim to our attention. It has therefore been my object to assume the position of an arbiter between them, and to avoid such terms as depart entirely from the adopted usage, except in cases in which I might differ so much from my predecessors as to become unintel- ligible if restrained by their terminology. The head has a hinder plane opposite to the thorax, called occi- xii ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. put (ceciput); that region of it lying over the junction of the head is the nape (cervix), The part of the head which reaches from the antenne as far as the occiput and is limited laterally by the compound eyes, is the front (frons), the upper part of which is the crown (vertex), the limit between the front and the occiput having the name of vertical margin (margo verticalis). The middle of the front being often of a more membranaceous substance and sometimes differing in color from its borders, is called the frontal stripe (vitta frontalis), On the crown, there are the simple eyes (ocelli), being usually three in number and forming a triangle, sometimes on a sharply defined triangular space, the ocellar trian- gle (triangulum ocellare). Most of those Diptera which undergo their metamorphosis within the larva-skin possess, immediately above the antenne, an arcuated impressed line, which seems to separate from the front a small piece usually of the form of a cres- cent, the frontal crescent (dunula frontalis). The impressed line itself, which continues over the face nearly as far as the border of the mouth, is called the frontal fissure (jfissura frontalis). It owes its origin to a large bladder-like expansion which exists at this place in immature imagos, and which helps them in bursting the pupa case. The frontal fissure of course is the true anterior limit of the front, and the frontal crescent in fact belongs to the face; however, on account of its usual situation, it is commonly considered as a part of the front. In many genera the eyes of the males meet on the front, so as to divide it into two triangles, the superior of which is called the vertical triangle (triangulum verticale), the inferior the anterior frontal triangle (triangulum frontale anterius), or simply the frontal triangle (triangulum frontale). The anterior portion of the head reaching from the antenne to the border of the mouth or oral margin (pertstomium) is called the face (facies). In most Diptera it is divided into three parts adjoining each other, the limits of which depend on the situation which the frontal fissure, continued to the oral margin occupies in the developed imago; the form and mutual proportion in size of these parts are of the highest value in the classification and distinction of the species of Diptera. Beneath the antenne there are in many Diptera longi- tudinal holes for their reception, the antennal furrows (fovee an- tennales); the antenne lie in them while the insect is still in the pupa case, sometimes even after its exclusion. That part of the head which lies on the side beneath the eyes is the cheek (genq). ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. xili The compound eyes are sometimes encompassed in a larger or smaller part of their circumference by a ring, somewhat swollen, and separated more or less distinctly from the remainder of the surface of the head; it is called the orbit (orbita), the successive parts of which may be called the anterior (orbita anterior sive fa- cialis), inferior (inferior s. genalis), posterior (posterior s. occipi- talis), superior (superior s. verticalis), and frontal (frontalis) orbits. An orbit is also often spoken of, where no ring is distinctly set off from the rest of the surface of the head; in this case a distinct color or some peculiar structure mark the nearest surroundings of the eyes. The oral parts of Diptera, destined for sucking, are called the sucker or proboscis (proboscis). They are either inserted at the end of a more or less cylindrical prolongation of the head, called the snout (rostrum), or project from a wide aperture often occupy- ing a great part of the under surface of the head, called the mouth hole (cavitas oris). The common, fleshy root of the oral parts is connected by a membrane with the border of the mouth. This membrane often has a fold, sometimes of a quite horny substance, and is then called the clypeus (clypeus s. prelabrum); it is either entirely concealed by the anterior border of the mouth and is then usually movable, or it projects over it as a ridge and is then usually immovable. The largest of the oral parts in most Diptera is the fleshy under lip (labiwm), consisting of the stem (st¢pes) and the knob (capitulum labit) formed by the two suctorial flaps (dadella). Besides the under lip, the palpi (padpz) are most perceptible and must be noticed in the description of the species. The remaining oral parts are generally rather small and stunted, having the form of bristles or horny lancets; they are considered as being the tongue (lingua), under jaws (maxille), upper jaws (mandibule), and up- per lip (labrum), the latter shutting the under lip from above. These parts are not easily applicable in distinguishing species. The thorax of Diptera as well as that of other insects consists of three segments, the prothorax, the mesothorax, and the meta- thorax. But in the order of Diptera the development of the meso- thorax exceeds so much that of the two other portions, that it forms by far the largest part of the whole thorax, and in the description of Diptera is exclusively designated with the latter name, while other names are given to the prothorax and metathorax, when some particular part of them is to be characterized. The protho- xiv ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. rax being generally very little developed, sometimes forms a neck- like prolongation which bears the head, and is then called the neck (collum). Sometimes the fore corners of the mesothorax or the shoulders (humert) are covered by a lobe of the prothorax (lobus prothoracis humeralis), distinctly separated from the mesothorax ; but it is not unusual for this lobe to be so soldered to the meso- thorax that it is not possible to discover a distinct limit between them, except in general, by their color or hairs; it is then called the shoulder callosity (callus humeralis). The prothorax sometimes also applies closely to the anterior border of the mesothorax, and has then the name of collar (col/are), The mesothorax frequently has a transverse furrow (sutura transversalis) crossing the middle of its upper side and ending on each side a little before the base of the wing; its presence or absence as well as its form furnishes characters important in the classification of Diptera. On each side of the breast—the breast side (p/eura)—there is beneath the shoulder a spiracle (st¢gma prothoracis) still belonging to the pro- thorax. To the back of the mesothorax applies the scutcheon (seutellum), separated from it by a furrow. Beneath the scutellum a part of the metathorax is to be seen, called metanotum, generally descending obliquely, often very convex, and on each side with a more or less inflated space, called the lateral callosity of the meta- notum (callus metanoti lateralis), The poisers (halteres) have their origin beneath this callosity, and before either of them we see the spiracle of the metathorax (stégma metathoracis). The mem- branous covers which in many Diptera are found above this spi- racle, have the name of covering scales (tegul@).* The abdomen is the third of the three principal parts of the body, but we usually so call its upper side only, the name of belly (venter) being given to the under side. The segments of the ab- domen are of course, as in the other orders of insects, counted from the front to the back; but the anterior ones are often soldered together, while the posterior ones are stunted, and by their con- cealed situation withdrawn from the eye; much caution is therefore required in counting them. The statements about their number are frequently rather arbitrary and conventional, and often require an explanation. At the end of the abdomen we see in the male the appendages destined to take hold of the female in the copula * Some authors call them squame.—O. S$. ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. XV (hypopygium), in the female the organ for laying the eggs (ow- positor); the former, if they have the form of pincers and are not bent under the belly, are called the pincers (forceps), the latter according to its form either the borer (terebra) or the style (stylus). Both organs are of the greatest importance in the distinction of species in many families, and their structure being generally very complicated and varying much in different families, deserves a most attentive study. The neuration of the wings of Diptera forms so essential a foun- dation of their systematical arrangement and is so useful for the distinction of species, that its thorough knowledge and a scrupulous ~ and accurate denomination of its single parts and of their mutual arrangement is quite indispensable. Our first and most important task will be to ascertain which parts of the neuration of the wings correspond to each other in the different families, since this is the only way to obtain a terminology in which corresponding things are designated by the same names, and which, therefore, is not liable to misinterpretation. At a first and superficial glance, the neuration of the wings shows so different a structure in the various families of Diptera, that it seems impossible to reduce it toacommon type. But, on a closer examina- tion, we find that we can make out without much difficulty acommon type existing in its greatest simplicity and plainness in the Muscide. The framework of the whole neuration of the wings is formed by the longitudinal veins (vene longitudinales), which are connected with each other by the transverse veins (ven@ transverse s. venule). The longitudinal veins spring from four trunks, issuing from the base of the wings; the first and fourth trunks being the least de- veloped, the second and third must be taken for the main trunks, and consequently the longitudinal veins originating from them, for the main longitudinal veins of the wing. To the anterior of these two main trunks belong three longitudinal veins, the foremost of which runs first parallel to the anterior border of the wing and joins it at a greater or less distance from the tip of the wing; it is called the first longitudinal vein (vena longitudinales prima). The second longitudinal vein proceeds from the first generally be- fore the middle of the wing, and reaches the anterior border of the wing nearer to the tip. In a similar way the third longitudinal vein has, again, its origin from the second. To the second main trunk also belong three longitudinal veins, which are counted xvi ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. from the front to the back, and are called the fourth, fifth, and sixth longitudinal veins. The hindmost vein of the anterior main trunk and the foremost vein of the posterior main trunk, 7. e. the third and fourth longitudinal veins, are connected by a transverse vein situated about the middle of the wing and called the small or mid- dle transverse vein (vena transversa minor s. media). Using this transverse Vein as a starting-point, we cannot easily have any doubt about the position of each of these six main longitudinal veins. The remaining neuration takes place in the following way: The first of the four trunks emits a usually rather stout vein, forming the anterior border of the wing; it either runs round the whole border of the wing, attenuating a little towards its end, and is called the marginal vein (vena marginalis), or it only reaches as far as the fourth or third, sometimes even the second or first longitudinal veins, and is then generally called the costal vein (vena costalis s. costa); both these expressions can be used as identical without any fear of incorrectness. The costal vein is sometimes interrupted in one or more places, thus forming a number of successive portions, a structure most characteristic in several families. Besides this vein, a second one proceeds from the foremost of the four trunks, which, from its being frequently absent, is not counted with the other longitudinal veins, but is called the auxiliary vein (vena aux- iliaris); not far from its base, it is connected by the transverse shoulder vein (vena transversa humeralis) with the costal vein. A total or partial absence of the auxiliary vein, its structure, and the peculiarities of situation which it has relatively to the first longi- tudinal vein, are very characteristic marks for the distinction of families and genera. The first and second longitudinal veins are usually simple, the third being frequently forked; this furcation arises from its emitting beyond the small transverse vein an anterior branch, which gene- rally runs to the border of the wing between the second and third longitudinal veins, and is therefore called the anterior branch of the third longitudinal vein. Both branches together form the fork of the third longitudinal vein, and that part of this vein which lies between the small transverse vein and the point of forking of both branches is called the handle (pedunculus) of this fork. Some- times the foremost branch of the third longitudinal vein is con- nected with the second longitudinal vein by a transverse vein, or it runs into the second longitudinal vein instead of running to the ON THE TERMINOLOGY OF DIPTERA. Xvii border of the wing, and thus has the appearance of a transverse vein. In most Diptera there is no other connection between the third and fourth longitudinal veins except the small transverse vein, and we can cross the wing between the third and fourth longitudinal veins in its whole length without meeting another vein but the small transverse vein. But in some families the fourth longitudinal vein, abandoning towards its end its former direction, turns to the third longitudinal vein and reaches it either at its end or a little before it, constituting thus a second connection: there is a rarer case when that connection is effected by a transverse vein placed distinctly on the fourth longitudinal vein. Meig. (= Messala Curt.), Herrrorricna Loew, DIANEPSIA Loew, Scrara Fabr., and the genus Diomonus Walk., which is unknown to me. I have not mentioned the genus SynapHa Je/g., because it seems to have been founded on an individual of a species of Leja, which possessed an irregularly formed neuration; at least as far as I know, no second specimen of Synapha has been captured since Meigen’s time, while a similar anomaly of neuration of the wings has been observed several times in other Diptera. Our knowledge of N. A. Mycetophilide is exceedingly incomplete. I have seen species of the genera MycEeTopHiLa, DoLeTINA, Scto- PHILA, TETRAGONEURA, PLESIASTINA, DiTomMyr1A, PLatTyurA, Ma- CROCERA, BOLITOPHILA, and ScraRA. Besides these, the existence of CEROPLATUS seems to be certain, and the genus DIoMONUs, which I have never seen, is founded on a N. A. species. Fam. VIII. SIMULIDAE. Charact.—Ocelli none. Thorax without transverse suture. Wings with very short hair only visible under a very high magnifying power; legs short, tibie without spurs; posterior tibie and first joint of the hind tarsi dilated. > The present family comprises only the genus Simutium Latr., rich in species and which cannot be placed in any other family. It does not seem to be less rich in species in N. A. than in Europe. Fam. IX. BIBIONIDAE. Charact.—Ocelli three. Thorax without transverse suture; prothorax much developed. Wings without discal cell; coxe not prolonged ; empodium proportionally long, whereas the pulvilli are wanting in some of the genera. The family of Bibionide is divided into two sections sharply separated from each other, and which it would be proper to con- sider as distinct families. In the Scatopsina, which form the first section, the palpi are very short, the pulvilli wanting, the tibiz without spurs; the genera belonging to them are: ScaTopsE Geoffr., Aspistes Meig., ARTHRIA Kirby. To the second section, the Bisronina, belong: Dinoruus Meig., Brsto Geoffr., PENTHE- RHYPHIDAE—XYLOPHAGIDAE. 15 TRIA Metg., CRAPITULA Gimm., PLecta Wied., Euperrenvus Macq., PACHYNEURA Zett., and Spopius Loew. ‘ Species of the genera Scatopsz, ARTHRIA, D1LopHus, Brzio, PLectIA, and EUPEITENUS are known to occur in N. A. Note.—At the time when this was written by Mr. Loew, neither he nor I possessed specimens of the genus Hesperinus, which its author, Mr. Walker, referred to the Tipulidez. Having obtained specimens since, collected by Mr. R. Kennicott near the Great Slave Lake, I found that Hesperinus be- longs to the Bibionidz, and is apparently synonymous with Spodius Loew. Accordingly, Hesperinus Walk. is to be added to the genera of this family occurring in N. A., and stricken out from among the Tipulidz. 0.5. Fam. X. RHYPHIDAE. Charact.—Ocelli three. Thorax without transverse suture; wings with a perfect discal cell; empodium similar toa pulvillus; pulvilli want- ing. Of this family also a single genus, RuypHus Mezg., is known, ~which has representatives in Europa, Asia, and N. A. Observation.—There is a genus Lpidapus Hal., remarkable for having no wings and no poisers, which I have omitted in the pre- ceding enumeration of families, because I do not know it. It is quite impossible to place it among the Mycetophilide, as Walker does, if. we characterize the families as we have done. It rather seems to find its place among the Cecidomyide; but there is nothing decisive to be said without the examination of fresh specimens. Il BRACHYCERA. ‘Fam. XI. XYLOPHAGIDAE. Charact.—The three basal cells very prolonged, the third longitudinal vein furcate; both intercalary veins always present; the marginal vein encompassing the whole wing; the third joint of the antenne annu- lated or divided into separate joints, always without style or termi- nal bristle. Tibiz with spurs; the empodium very developed and pulvilliform. | The genera belonging here are: XyLopHacus Mezg., Pacuy- stomus Latr., SupuLa Meig., HLectRA Loew, CHRYSOTHEMIS 4 16 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Loew, Racuicerus /al., Cornomyra Latr., and ARTHROPEAS Loew. The new genera CycLoreLus, Puyous, and Dimassus, es- tablished by Walker as belonging to the Xylophagide, belong in fact to the Therevide; likewise NoNacris must be removed here, but Walker’s observations on its characters are far too superficial to admit of any certainty in fixing its place; also DIALysts on ac- count of the hairy, bristle-like antennal tip ascribed to it by Walker might seem to be erroneously located among the Xylophagide, the characters of which he appears not to have understood. Cenomyia Latr. has often been separated from the Xylophagide and considered as forming a distinct family: Canomyide, or for- merly Sicarti?. This seems to have been caused by the body of Cenomyia being stout, whereas that of Xylophagus and Subula is of aslender form. Moreover, the different form of the palpi, which in Canomyra are rather cylindrical and ending in Xylophagus and Subula in a button-shaped thickening, have been made use of to justify the separation. But within a recent time forms of Ceno- myide have been discovered in which the structure of the body and palpi is such as to form a link between them and the Xylopha- gide; from this, as well as from the agreement of their other essential characters, results the necessity of reuniting them. In case the separation should be maintained, Arthropeas ought to be placed among the Cenomyide. | The family of Xylophagide may be divided into three sections: Ca@NoMYINA, RACHICERINA, and XYLOPHAGINA. The Cenomyina are characterized by their robust structure, the third joint of the antenne being annulated and pointed towards its end, the palpi being cylindrical. The genera comprised here are Ca@NomyIA and ArTHROPEAS. In the Rachicerina the third joint of the antenne is divided into separate and frequently very numerous articula- tions, and the palpi are rather club-like; the body is less heavy ~ than in the Cenomyina, but less slender than in the Xylophagina. The genera ExectrRA, CurysoTHEMis, and Racwicerus belong here. The Xylophagina have the slenderest bodies; the third joint of the antenne is annulated and never strikingly pointed; the palpi have at their end a button-shaped thickening. The genera SuBuLa, XyLopuHacus, and Pacuysromus may he referred here. I am acquainted with N. A. species belonging to the genera Ca@nomyi14, ARTHROPEAS, RAcHicERuS, SuBULA, and XYLOPHAGUS. STRATIOMYIDAE. 17 Two of the species of RAcHICERUS cannot be well placed in this genus without a modification of its characters. Observation.—I have to mention here the genus BoLBomyl4, which I established on two fossil species found in Prussian amber. When [ published in 1850 my observations on the Dipterological Fauna of amber, I thought it would be best placed among the Xy- lophagide. But I perceive from a N. A. specimen belonging to Bolbomyia that its claim to that place is more than doubtful, and at the same time that it is quite as difficult to assign it a fit place elsewhere. Fam. XII. STRATIOMYIDAE. COharact.—Three basal cells much prolonged; veins of the two main trunks very crowded anteriorly; both intercalary veins usually existing ; costal vein reaching only to the middle of the wing. Third joint of the antenne annulated, sometimes divided into several portions. Tibie without spurs; empodium much developed, pulvilliform. This family, rich in various forms, may be divided into five sharply circumscribed sections. The first is that of the BeRmpina, easily distinguished by the abdomen not showing five segments, as in the other sections, but seven, a difference caused only by the smallness of the two last segments and their concealed situation in the other sections. The Beridina have often been placed in the family of Xylophagide, but figure more naturally among the Stra- tiomyide, The genera belonging to them are: Mrroponta Macq. (= Inopus Walk.), Brris Zaér., Actina Meig., EXoDONTHA fond., AcanTHOMYIA Sch., Dipuysa Macg., CAMPEPROSOPA WVacq., perhaps also Exocnostoma Macg.; also the genus CHIROMYZA Wied., which does not differ from Xenomorpha Macq., may be re- ferred to them. The second section is that of SARGINA, rather agreeing in the form of the body with the Berzdina, and even with the Hermetina, but differing from the former by the abdomen consisting apparently of five segments, and from the latter by the eyes of the males being much more approximated than those of the females. As genera of this section may be mentioned CAcosiIs Walk., AcrocozTA Wied., EupMeta Wied., ANALCOcERUS Loew, SatpuBpa Walk., Toxocera Macg., Hoptistes Macg., RAPHIOCERA Macq., BASENTIDEMA JMacg., DicRANoPHORA Macq., CHRYSOCHLORA Macq., Precticus Loew, Merosarcus Loew, PEDICELLA Big., 2 18 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Curysonotus Loew, Saraus Fabr., Crortsoma Rond., Curyso- MYIA Macq., and Microcurysa Loew. The third section, Herme- TINA, is well characterized by the elongated abdomen, the eyes, which are equidistant and very remote in both sexes, and the peculiar structure of the antenne, the third joint of which is transformed into a ciliated lamel. The genera Hermeria Latr., THorAsENA Macq. belong to them. The fourth is formed by the OponToMYINA, which are distinguished from the foregoing by their broad body and from the following section by the less convex ab- domen and especially by the neuration, the longitudinal veins of the Odontomyina being more crowded anteriorly, the discal cell being smaller, hexagonal or pentagonal, never large or subquad- rate; moreover, both intercalary veins are usually present, while the posterior one is almost always wanting in the Pachygastrina. The following genera may be referred to the Odontomyina: Cy- PHOMYIA Wied., CHorDONOTA Gerst., EUPARYPHUS Gerst., PYoNo- MALLA Gerst., ALLIOCERA Saund., StTRATIOMYS Geoff., ODONTOMYIA Meig., INerMyIA big., NEMOTELUS Geoffr., OxycrRA Meig., HETE- ROXYCERA Big., Epuipprum Latr., CLITELLARIA MVezg., CycLocas- vER Macg. (= Lastopa Brull.), Arremipa Walk., A1ssa Walk, Merapasis Walk., PromeranisA Walk. The fifth section is that of the Pachygastrina ; it is distinguished by the longitudinal veins being less crowded towards the costal border, by the magnitude and quadrangular form of the discal cell, the almost general want of the posterior intercalary vein, the short, generally much inflated, abdomen, and its segments soldered together in some genera. The genera belonging here are: PAcHYGAsTER Metg., LopHorees Loew, STERNOBRITHES Loew,’ PLATYNA Wied., BiastEs Walk., Prrtocera Wied., Cuauna Loew, BLAstocerA Gerst., SpyRIDOPA Gerst., Panacris Gerst., Nerua Walk., Cuncua Walk., Evaza Walk, ANACANTHELLA Macqg.; perhaps also PHYLLopHORA MWacgq., and AntsopHysa Macq. To which section of the Stratiomyide the genera Solva, Amp- salis, Tracana, Rosapha, Tinda, Saruga, Gabaza, Adraga, and Obrapa, lately formed by Walker, are to be referred, the extreme vagueness of the characters ascribed to them does not allow me to determine. The N. A. species which are now known to me belong to the following genera: I. Beridina: Meroponia, Actina; II. Sargi- - ACANTHOMERIDAE—TABANIDAE. 19 na: Sarcus, MicrocurysaA: III. Hermetina: Hermetia: IV. Odontomyina: CyPpHoMYIA, EUPARYPHUS, STRATIOMYS, ODONTO- My1a, NEMOTELUS, OxycreRA, CLITELLARIA; V. Pachygastrina: PACHYGASTER, CHAUNA. Fam. XIII. ACANTHOMERIDAH. Charact.—Basal cells much prolonged; longitudinal veins not crowded together anteriorly ; two intercalary veins always present; marginal vein running round the whole border of the wing. Oral parts with four bristles, even in the male. Third joint of the antenne annu- late. Tibie without spurs; empodium developed to a pulvillar form. This small family contains only the two genera ACANTHOMERA Wied. and RapyioruHyncwus Wied. It differs from the Stratio- myide by the longitudinal veins not being crowded together ante- riorly, by the marginal vein encompassing the whole border of the wing and by the fourth cell of the posterior margin being closed. It differs from the Zabanide in the form of the oral parts and by the tegulz being very little developed; as to the oral parts, I have no absolute opinion of my own, but must rely on the communica- tions of others. No species of this family has been as yet discovered in N. A. Fam. XIV. TABANIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged ; third longitudinal vein fur- cate; two intercalary veins always present; marginal vein running round the whole border of the wing; tegule rather large. Proboscis of the male with four, of the female with six bristles. Third joint of the antenne annulate, rarely divided into distinct joints, always without style or bristle; empodium much developed and pulvilli- form. The Zabanide are easily distinguished from the foregoing fami- lies by the structure of the oral parts and by the size of the tegule. On account of the presence or absence of spurs at the end of the posterior tibiee they may be divided into the sections of PANGoNnINA and TABANINA; the former often, but not always, possess ocelli, whereas, according to the observations hitherto made, they are always wanting in the latter section. To the Pangonina belongs, firstly, the genus PANGonia Latr. 20 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. with the genera separated from it and partly connected with each other by passages: Philoliche Hffeg., Dicrania Macq., Peleco- rhynchus Macq., Cadicera Macq., Nuceria Walk., Melpia Walk., Scaptia Walk., Tacina Walk., Phara Walk., Clanis Walk., Osca Walk., Scione Walk., Plinthina Walk., Scarphia Walk., and Lilea Walk.; moreover, the genera: Scepsis Walk., Siuvius Meig., Mz- somyIA Macq., TABANOCELLA 5ig., Eotenopsis Macg., RHINOMYZA Wied., ERopiornyncuus Macg., Gastroxipes Saund., PRONOPES Loew, Curysops Meig., and Nemorius Rond, The Zabanina comprise the genera: TABANUS Linn., with The- rioplectes Zell., DicHELACERA Macq., LEPIsELAGA Macg., SELA- soma Macq., Hapvrus Pert., Diapasis Macg., ACANTHOCERA Macq., DasyBasis Macg., HExatoma Meztg., and Hamatropora Meg. The N. A. species which we are acquainted with belong to the genera: I. Pangonina: 1. Panconta Latr., 2. Smuvius Meig., 3. Curysops Meig. II. Tabanina: 4. Tapanus ZLinn., 5. Lepr- SELAGA MJacq., 6. DiaBasis Macg., 7. Hamatovota erg. Fam. XV. LEPTIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged; third longitudinal vein fur- cate ; two intercalary veins always present; marginal vein running round the whole border of the wing. ‘Third joint of the antenne simple, with a simple or thickened styliform bristle. Tibie with spurs; empodium much developed, pulvilliform. This family is very easily distinguished from the foregoing families by the simple third joint of its antenne. A division into sections has not been attempted yet, and would be useless for the small number of genera hitherto known. The genera belonging to this family are as follows: DasyommMa J/acq., CHRYSOPILA Macq., Triprorricua Loew, Lepris Labr,, VermiLeo Macg. (= Psammorycter Blanch.), ATHERIX Mezg., Noputis Meg. (= Lbisia Rond.), and Spanta Meig. (= Ptiolina Zett. = Leptipalpus Rond. ). The location here of the genus Syneches is one of the many errors which we meet with in the writings of Mr. Walker. I know N. A. species belonging to the genera: 1. CHRYSOPILA Macq., 2. Lepris £abr., 3. Trrprorricaa Loew, 4. ATHERIX Derg. Mr. Walker has also recorded a species of the genus Spania Meig. CYRTIDAE—HIRMONEURIDAE. oT Fam. XVI. CYRTIDAE. Charact.—Thorax and abdomen inflated. Eyes occupying the greatest part of the head. Tegule vaulted, exceedingly large. Wings naked, with variable neuration, sometimes very intricate, some- times very incomplete; the basal cells, when present, are of consi- derable length. Terminal joint of the antenne simple. Tibie without spurs; empodium much developed, pulvilliform. This family is divided into the two sections of CyrTIna and OncopINA. In the former section the veins of the wings are strong and well developed, and the neuration is usually rather complicated. It contains the genera: Cyrrus Latr., PtERopexus Macq., HPt- CERINA Macg., Panops Lam. (= Mesophysa Macq.), Lasta Wied., EKuLoncuts Gerst., PstLopERA Griff. (= Mesocera Macq.), PTERO- DoNTIA Griff., AstoMELLA L. Duf., Puytiis Hrichs., OcnmA Erichs. (= Eriosoma Macq. = Exelasis Walk.), Prauea EHrichs., OxsEBIUS Cost. (= Pithogaster Loew), PuysEcasterR Macq. The section Oncodina is distinguished by the anterior veins of the wings alone being completely developed, whereas the posterior ones are not only very incomplete, but also disappear gradually, and frequently are not completely connected. The genera which belong here are: ONcopEs Latr. (= Henops Meig.), TERPHIS Hrichs. and Putnopota Weed. The N. A. species known to me belong to the genera: I. Oyr- tina: 1. Crrtus Latr., 2. OonmA Lrichs., 3. PTERODONTIA Griff., 4. AcrocERA Mezg., 5. a genus hitherto unnamed, and related to Obsebius, 6. HuLoNcHus Gerst., occurring in California. II. On- codina: 7. OncopsEs Latr. Fam, XVII. HIRMONEURIDAE. | ' Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged ; veins of the wings varying; third longitudinal vein furcate; the two intercalary veins present. Third joint of the antenne simple; terminal bristle simple or simi- lar to a style, and consisting of several joints. Tibize without ter- minal spurs; empodium pulvilliform, but more frequently minute as well as the pulvilli. This family, usually called Nemestrintde, must be divided into the two sections HIRMONEURINA and RHYNCHOCEPHALINA. The first comprises the genera: HinMoNEURA WMeig., EXERETONEURA 22 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Macq., Cotax Wied., Trichopsipea Westw., and Symmiocrus Loew, all of which are characterized by their very short proboscis. To the second belong the genera: FALLENIA Meig., NEMEsTRINA Wied., MEGISTORHYNCHUS Macqg., TRICHOPHTHALMA Westw., and Ruyn- CHOCEPHALUS L%sch. We are only acquainted with a single N. A. species belonging to HirmoneuRA erg. Fam. XVIII. MIDASIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged; third longitudinal vein fur- cate; posterior intercalary vein always present, whereas the ante- rior one is often wanting ; veins of the wings varying; wings naked. Antenne clavate with the third joint consisting of several distinct segments. Under lip fleshy. Empodium very little developed. To this family belong the genera: Mripas Fabr., CEPHALOCERA Latr., Ruopawta Macg., and DoLicnocasrer Macg.—PoMACERA Macq. may also be placed here till its true place is found. The N. A. species hitherto known belong only to the genus Mipas Fabr. Fam. XIX. ASILIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged. Third longitudinal vein of the wings furcate, the two intercalary veins always present. Third joint of the antenne simple; under lip forming a horny sheath; empodium similar to a horny bristle. This family, rich in species of the most varied forms, is divided into three sections. The first of them is that of the DAsypoao- NINA, differing from the two others by its second longitudinal vein running into the border of the wing, whereas in the others it unites with the first longitudinal vein before the border of the wing. The considerable number of genera requires a further division into two subordinate groups, the first of which comprises those genera in which the anterior tibiz end in a hooked spine, whereas the genera of the second portion have no such spine. Consequently the genera belonging to the first group of Dasypogonina are as follows: Dasypogon Mezg., SAropoaon Loew, Lastaurus Loew, Morimna Walk., Cyrropurys Loew, LAPARUs Loew, BRACHYRHO- PALA MJacg., CurtLopocon Rond., Lacopias Loew, and PxrGE- ASILIDAE. 93 SIMALLUS Loew. Those of the second group are: MicrosTyLUM Macg., Mecarotiion Walk., XipHocerus Macg., DOoLicHoDES Maeg., DiscocEPHALA Macq., SENoBASIS Macqg., PLEsIomMA Maeeq., STENOPOGON Loew, BatHyroGcon Loew, Hapropocon Loew, Houo- POGON Loew, ERIOPOGON Loew, HETEROPOGON Loew, Isopocon Loew, OLIGoPoGON Loew, StTicHOPoGON Loew, SAROPOGON Loew, Dicra- nus Loew, Trictis Loew, Euarmostus Walk., Prouepsis Walk., CopuLta Macg., CaBasA Walk., Purttus Walk., PainaMMosius Walk., GAsStRIcHELIUS Rond., Dactitiscus Rond., ELASMOCERA Rond., Puunsus Walk., Cropitocerus Loew, Pyconopocon Loew, ANAROLIUS Loew, ACNEPHALUM Jlacq., SisyRNoDYTES Loew, RuA- DINUS Loew, CERATURGUS Wied., DioctriA Metg., TERATOPUS Loew, DaspLetis Loew, Lapuyctis Loew, ScyLaticus Loew, Hy- PENETES Loew, SPaANuRUS Loew, RHABDOGASTER Loew, DAMALIS Wied., LEPTOGASTER Metg. (= Gonypes Latr.), HuscELIDIA Westw., and Lastocnemus Loew. The second section of the Aside are the LAPHRINA; it agrees with the third in the second longitudinal vein running into the first, but differs from it in the style of the antenne either being thick and stout, and generally only rudimentary, or entirely want- ing, whereas the antenne of the third section possess a distinct terminal bristle. The genera of the second section are: LAPHRIA Meig., LAmMpRiA Macg., HopuistoMERA Macg., MeGaropa Macq., RaAoPALoOGASTER Macg., Micnotamta Macqg., Atomosta Macq., LAXENECERA Macg., TAPINOCERA Macg., PHoneus Maeqg., La- PHystiA Loew, Nusa Walk., Scanpon Walk., Dasyuuis Loew, La- MYRA Loew, LAMPROZONA Loew, DASYTHRIX Loew, THEREUTRIA Loew, AMpyx Walk., Cormansis Walk., Cuo@ravDes Walk., Acu- RANA Walk., Psruporus Walk., Pogonosoma fond., and DYsERIs Loew. The third section is that of the Astitmna, which is characterized by its second longitudinal vein running into the first, and by its antennz having a distinet terminal bristle. The genera belonging to this section are: MALLopHorA Macg., Promacuus Loew, ALctI- mus Leew, Puitepicus Loew, Craspepia Macq. (= Blepharotes Westw.), PotypHonius Loew, APocLEA Macq., ERAX Macg., ErRis- Ticus Loew, PRocTACANTHUS Macg., STENOPROSOPIS Macq., SYNOL- cus Loew, Dysctytus Loew, LopHonotus Macg., TricHONoTUS Loew, Dasopurys Loew, ProtopHanes Loew, Dysmacuus Loew, Hurotmus Loew, Macuimus Loew, MocutHERus Loew (= Helig- 24 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. moneura Big.), STILPNOGASTER Loew, Epirriprus Loew, ITAMus Loew, Totmerus Loew, Crrpistus Loew, Proaconistes Loew, Asiius Linn., Eccopropus Loew, Ruapiuraus Loew, PAMPONERUS Loew, ANTIPHRISSON Loew, Eoutuistus Loew, ANTIPALUS Loew, Parnopicus Loew, LecantaA Macg., ATRACTIA Macg., and OmMaA- Tius Wied. Most of the N. A. Aszlide, but by no means all, may be placed in the genera hitherto established. I give, as far as I am able to do so under such circumstances, the following list of genera known to me as occurring on that continent :— I. Dasypogonina: 1. Dasypocon JMerg., with several species which will require the formation of some new genera; 2. Micro- STYLUM Macg., 3. DiscocePpHALA Macg., 4. PLestomMa Macq., 5. STeNopoGon Loew, 6. Batuypocon Loew, 7. Lastaurus Loew, 8. Euvarmostus Walk., 9. Poenevs Walk., 10. StrcHopogon Loew, 11. Ceraturevus Walk., 12. Leprocaster Metg. The N. A. spe- cies recorded as belonging to Diocrria MMetg. are no Dioctrie at all; at least Diocrr. ocropuNctaTA Say is by no means a true Dioctria. II. Laphrina: 13. Meaapopa Maeg., 14. Lapria Metg., 15. ANpDRENOSOMA fond., 16. Lampria Macg., 17. ATomosta Macq., 18. Lapuystra Loew. III. Aszlina: 19. Mattopnora Maeqg., 20. Promacuus Loew, 21. Erax Macqg., 22. Procracantuus Macg., 23. MocuTHErus Loew, 24. Eprrriptus Loew, 25. OmMatius Wied. Fam. XX. THEREUIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged; the two interealary veins present; third longitudinal vein furcate. Antenne with a terminal style of variable form, sometimes wanting. No empodium. Under lip fleshy. The principal genera belonging to this family are: XesTOMYZA Wied., BARypHORA Zoew, CionopHorA gg., ExapaTa MMacq., Tuereva Latr., Ecrinornyncuus Macqg., ANABARHYNCHUS Macq., Tapupa Walk., CycuoreLus Walk., Paycus Walk., and Dimassus Walk. The N. A. species with which I am acquainted may be conve- niently placed under the genus TuerEvA Lair. In case the genus a ’ j BOMBYLIDAE. 95 Psilocephala Zett., which does not appear to be well founded, should be admitted, some species with naked faces would be located in it. Fam. XXI. BOMBYLIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged; anterior intercalary vein present almost without exception, the posterior always wanting ; third joint of the antenne simple; empodium quite rudimentary. This, again, is a family exceedingly rich in the most varied forms. A distribution into several tribes would therefore be very useful; the two sections hitherto adopted, one of which comprises the genera grouped round the genus Bombylius, having a long proboscis, while the second consists of genera more allied to the genus Anthrax, having a short proboscis, do not appear sufficient to embrace all the forms which have hitherto been discovered. I am unable to give a better distribution, and I think it will not be possible to do so until the number of sections is increased to at least five or six. The genera of Bombylide are as follows: Bom- BYLiIus Jinn., HURYCARENUS Loew, TRIPLASIUS Loew, SYSTHCHUS Loew, Sparnopouius Loew, Discuistus Loew (= Bombylisoma Rond.), Parisus Walk., Cuoristus Walk,, HeTERostyLuM Macq., Lastoprosopa JMacg., ADELIDEA Macg., AcrEorRicHus Maceq., ApatomMyza Wied., TuurpsomyzA Meig., Amictus Wied., Mrca- PALPUS Macqg., PaTuiriIA Meig., CycLorHyNnouus Macg., DASYPAL- pus Macg., Crocipium Loew, GERon Meig., Apotysis Loew, OLI- GODRANES Loew, Muuio Latr. (= Glossista Rond.), CHALCOCHITON Loew, CALLOstoMA Macq., SERICOSOMA Macq,, ToxoPHora Jezq., ENIcONEURA Macq., LepiDopHORA Macg., CornsomyzA Wied., Ecut- mus Loew, Systropus Wred., DoticHomy1A Wied., Usto Latr., Puatypyeus Loew, Crrtosta Perr., Pieas Latr., CYLLENIA Latr., Lacocuitus Loew, Anisoramia Macg., Lomatia Meig., ONcopo- cerA Macqg., Puestocera Macqg., Ligyra Newm., ANTHRAX Scop., ARGYROM@BA Schin., NeuR1A Newm., Comptosita Macq., Lito- RHYNCHUS Macg., SpocostyLuM Macqg., Enica Macqg., TOMOMYZA Wied., Arnayrosrita Hond., Exoprosopa DMacq., Auronta Loew. The N. A. Bombylide which I have seen may be distributed amongst the following genera: 1. BomByuius Linn., 2. SystacHus Loew, 3. SPARNOPOLIUS Loew, 4. LEPIDOPHORA Westw., 5. Toxo- pHORA JMMeig., 6. GERoN Metg., 7. Systropus Wred., 8. PLoas 26 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Latr., 9. ANTHRAX Scop., 10. ARGYROM@BA Schin., 11. Exopro- sopa Macq. Moreover, Macquart has founded his genus Oncodocera on a N. A. species, and described a N. A. species among his Anisotamie, though it seems to be an alien there. Mr. Walker described some N. A. species, which he placed under the genera Apatomyza Wied. and Phthiria Meig. Fam. XXII. SYRPHIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged ; third longitudinal vein sim- ple; a spurious longitudinal vein (vena spuria) between the third and fourth longitudinal veins; fourth longitudinal vein united at its end with the third; no intercalary veins. Hypopygium unsym- metrical; no empodium. This is one of the most extensive families and includes about eighty genera, the enumeration of which seems to be superfluous here. A distribution into sections, however desirable, proves exceedingly difficult. To divide the family into genera with an antennal bristle and genera with a terminal style would be no great gain, since the number of the latter is very small. I know the following genera to occur in N. A.: VOLUCELLA Geoffr., TEMNocERA St. Farg., Mioropon Meig. (= Aphritis Latr.), Certa Yabr., Sericomy1a Meig., Troprp1a Meig., SyrirTa St. Farg., Xyuota Meig., Mattota Metg., BracuipALpus JVacq., Mites1a Latr., SpHecomy1A Latr., Somuta Macg., CuRYSOTOXUM Metg., MixtemytA Macq., Mattota Meig., Hetorpartus WMeiz., Eristaris Latr., PLaciocera Macqg., OcypramMus Macg., BAccHA Fabr., Spuecina Metg., Rainata Fabr., ORTHONEURA Macq. (= Oryptineura Big.), Paraaus Latr., CuetLosta MMeig., Curyso- CHLAMYS Jtond., Doros Metg., DipEaA Macg. (= Lnica Meig.), Metitarertus Loew (= Sphxrophoria Macq.), MrsoGRAMMA Loew, Syrpuvus Fabr., Scmva Fabr., PLarycuerrus St. Farg. It results from the remarks of some authors that species of the genera: Pipiza Fall., Chrysogaster Meig., Epistrophe Walk., Po- lydonta Macq., and Merodon Latr. occur with certainty in N. A. The genus Ohymophila Macq. founded on a N. A. species must be entirely blotted out from the list of genera. For it is evident that Bigot is right in stating that the specimen on which it was MYOPIDAE. 27 founded was a composition of a body of a Microdon with the head of a Conops. The genus Toxomerus Macq. has not been mentioned in the above list, it being quite untenable. I judge Dimeraspis Newm. to be identical with Microdon. Psarus has been omitted, because the species described under this name must be placed in other genera. The statement of Humerus Meig. occurring in N. A. is founded merely on an observation of Walker, and therefore requires further confirmation. Macquart records a N. A. species of the genus Pszlota Meig., but this genus having been misunder- stood by most authors, I do not venture now to mention it among those truly represented in N. A. Fam. XXIII. MYOPIDAH. Charact.—Three basal cells large, the third closed, more or less remote from the posterior border; all longitudinal veins simple; no inter- calary vein. Eyes in both sexes broadly separated; proboscis, with few exceptions, much prolonged; maxille small; the third joint of the antenne with an apical style or a thick dorsal bristle. Hypo- pygium symmetrical, turned under the abdomen. Empodium wanting. Omitting the untenable genera into which the genus Conops has been subdivided by Rondani and the genus Myopa by Perris, we mention here the genera: Conops Linn., PLEUROCERINA Jfacq., Zovion Latr., Myopa Latr. and StacHinia Macq. This family has been divided by some authors into two families: Conopide and Myopidz, the former containing those genera which have an apical style on the antenne, the latter being characterized by a dorsal bristle of the antenne. I cannot approve of this divi- sion at all, since the difference between a style and a bristle, and the difference of an apical and a dorsal position, according to all experience, only furnishes characters of very inferior value for the systematic arrangement, as we see in the families Stratzomydz, Bombylidz, Syrphidx, Hybotidz, Dolichopidex, etc., where this organ is sometimes apical, sometimes dorsal. We might as well form two families on account of the proboscis being either straight or geniculated. But the conspicuity of the difference in the struc- ture of the antenne may serve to form two sections in the family, Conopina and Myopina, the former of which would contain the genera Oonops and Pleurocerina, the latter the genera Zodion, Myopa, and Stachynia. 28 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. The N. A. species which I know belong to the genera: 1. Co- Nops Linn., 2. Zopion Latr., 3. Myopa Latr., 4. Sracuynra Macq. Fam. XXIV. PIPUNCULIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells much prolonged, the hindmost closed near the border of the wing; third longitudinal vein simple, the fourth sometimes almost entirely wanting, sometimes furcate when perfect ; no intercalary vein. Head almost entirely occupied by the eyes, front and face exceedingly narrow; antennz with a basal bristle. Hypopygium unsymmetrical. Tibie without spurs; empodium wanting. This family only comprises the three genera: NEUROPHOCERUS Zett., PreuncuLus Latr. and CHatarus Walk. The N. A. species known to me belong all to the genus Priruncutus Latr. ; Fam. XXV. SCENOPINIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells very large; the third closed rather far from the border of the wing; third longitudinal vein furcate ; no inter- calary vein; third joint of the antenne without style or bristle. No empodium. This family possesses so many peculiarities that it is very difficult to find a fit place for it among the other families, though it ex- hibits much affinity with some of them. I would especially point out the Bombylide as deserving a closer comparison in order to investigate their true relationship. At present it seems best to follow those authors who have considered the genus ScENOPINUS as the type of a separate family. Some species of Scenopinus occur in N. A. Fam. XXVI. PLATYPEZIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells rather large, the hindmost always ending acutely, at more or less distance from the border of the wing; third longitudinal vein simple; no intercalary vein. Antenne with an apical bristle. Hypopygium symmetrically turned under the abdo- men. Middle tibie with spurs; empodium wanting. The genera which belong to this family are: PLATYPEZA Jletg., CALLOMYIA JDleig., Operia Meig., and PLATYONEMA Zett. LONCHOPTERIDAE—HYBOTIDAE. 29 ] know only one species of PLATYCNEMA, one species of CALLO- MYIA, and two species of PLATYPEZA occurring in N. A. Fam. XXVIII. LONCHOPTERIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells of moderate size, of nearly equal length ; fourth longitudinal vein furcate and united with the fifth near the base. Antenne with an apical bristle. Empodium wanting. This family is also founded on a single genus which cannot be placed in any other family. Though in LoncHopreEra the basal cells are by no means large, yet their structure and the great deve- lopment of the sixth longitudinal vein seems to prove that this family should be reunited with one of those already mentioned. However, by the form of its neuration and its anal parts it differs so widely from them, that it is very difficult to state in what their affinity consists. Mr. Walker has lately added the genus CADREMA to the family of Lonchopteride. LONCHOPTERA is found in N. A. Fam. XXVIII. HYBOTIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells complete, rather large, the third only a little shorter than the second; posterior transverse vein of the base generally running perpendicularly or at a somewhat acute angle into the sixth longitudinal vein, and thus not being parallel to the posterior border of the wing; third longitudinal vein frequently furcate; anterior intercalary vein often wanting, posterior never present. First joint of the antenne not much shortened, the third more frequently with a bristle than with a style, the bristle some- times dorsal instead of being apical. Empodium membranaceous and linear. The three families: Hybotide, Empidz and Tachydromidez run into each other so insensibly, that it is very difficult to indicate sharp limits between them. If we select this or that character as being of greater importance, we shall always obtain a different result as to these limits. I maintain the family Hybotide only with the view of falling in with the usual arrangement, since I am fully satisfied that there is no sharp limit to be drawn between it and that of the Lmpide. For neither the more convex thorax, nor the horizontal direction of the proboscis, nor the form and position of the palpi, nor the simplicity or furcation of the third longitudi- 30 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. nal vein, nor the presence or absence of the anterior intercalary vein are characters, on which—whether we use them singly or in any combination—we can found a satisfactory or sharp defini- tion of both families. The resemblance of some Hybotide with some Lombylidzx cannot be denied, but their place will never be doubtful if we consider, that in the Bombylide the third basal cell is open or only closed near the border of the wing, while in all Hybotide it always remains remote from that border. To the family Hybotide may be referred: BracuystoMa Metg., Hyzos Fabr., Synecues fal. (= Pterospilus Rond. = Harpamerus Big.), SynpyAs Loew, Strenoprocrus Loew, AcARTERUS Loew, Mercuypervus Loew, OEDALEA Jeig., EUTHYNEURA Jacq. (= An- thalia Zett.), OcyDRoMIA Metg., TricnopezA Jond. on account of of its near relation with Brachystoma and LepropezA Macq. on account of its resemblance with Ocydromia. The two last genera might as well be placed among the Hmpidz, since they agree with them in having the posterior basal transverse vein parallel to the border of the wing. The N. A. species which I possess belong to the following genera: BracuysToMA Meig., Hysos Yabr., Synecues Walk., SynpyAs Loew, and Lepropeza Macg. Mr. Walker also describes a species which he believes to belong to the genus OcyDROMIA Mezg. Fam. XX1TX. EMPIDAE. Charact.—Three basal cells complete, rather large, the third shorter than the second; posterior basal transverse vein parallel to the border of the wing; third longitudinal vein frequently furcate; anterior in- tercalary vein present, the posterior wanting. First joint of the antenne not much shortened, third joint with an apical bristle sometimes resembling a style. Empodium membranaceous and of a linear form. The genera belonging to this family are: Empis Metg., Pacuy- MERIA JMacg., ERIOGASTER Jacg., APLOMERA Macg., RHAMPHO- MyYIA Meig., Hara Metg., Racas Walk., Gtoma Metg., Mrcro- PHORUS Macg., HoRMOPEZA Zett., [TEAPHILA Zett., MICROSANIA Zett., and Cyrroma JMezg. The N. A. species known to me belong to the genera: Empis Meig., PAcHYMERIA Macg., RoAMPHOMYIA Metg., Hinara Meig., ——_ ee Se ee. ‘ TACHYDROMIDAE. 31 and CyrtoMA Meig. Mr. Walker records a N. A. species belong- ing to the genus GLoma Mezg. Fam. XXX. TACHYDROMIDAE. Charact.—The hindmost basal cell not always present, the second basal cell sometimes coalescent with.the discal cell; when present they are of a tolerable size, but the hindmost is always remote from the border of the wing; third longitudinal vein sometimes furcate; an- terior intercalary vein sometimes present, the posterior never. First joint of the antenne very much shortened so that the antenne may easily be taken for biarticulate. Empodium membranaceous and of a linear form. To this family belong the genera: HEMERODROMIA Meg. with CHYROMANTIS fond, and MANTIPEZA fond., PHYLLODROMIA Zett., TACHYDROMIA fabr., DRyopRoMIA fond., ELAPHROPEZA Macq., Pratypaupus Macg., PHoroxypHA fond., Sctopromia Hal. (= Microcera Zett.), ARDOPTERA Dlacq. (= Leptosceles Hal.), CLtINo- cERA Mezg., with which HeLeopRomia Hal. (= Paramesia Macq..,) and WIEDEMANNIA Zeit. may be properly reunited. As genera occurring in N. A. I enumerate: HrmMERODROMIA Meig., TAcnypromiA Fabr., PuLarypaupus Macg., ARDOPTERA Macq., and CxLiInocrerA Meig. If we may trust Mr. Walker’s statement, the genus Drapetis Mezg. also occurs in N. A. Observation.—With the Tachydromidz ends the series of those families of Brachycera which in the greater development of their basal cells differ from the following, and, with the exception of the Lonchopteridz, form a rather natural series, if a linear arrangement may be spoken of as a natural one. The peculiarities, which also characterize this series of families, and any of which, combined with that just mentioned, suffice to place a family under this head, are the following: 1. the third joint of the antenne is composed of a number of joints more or less soldered together; 2. the third longitudinal vein is furcate; 3. one intercalary vein or both are present; 4. the empodium is considerably developed. These pecu- liarities characterizing the whole series of families hitherto spoken of are much lessened in the Hybotide and Empide, and still more so in the Tachydromide. Tezniaptera, Dacus and other genera with the third basal cell more developed, are placed by most of the authors lower down in the series of families which follow. In 32 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERIOA. order to retain the accustomed arrangement as much as possible, I shall leave them in their usual places, though it would seem, that amore natural arrangement might be obtained, were they added to the above families which have the basal cells prolonged. Fam. XXXII. DOLICHOPODIDAE. Charact.—First basal cell rather short, the second united with the discal cell, the third small; auxiliary vein running in the first longitudi- nal vein; third longitudinal vein simple, the fourth sometimes fur- cate; no intercalary vein. Hypopygium symmetrical, bent under the abdomen. Empodium small, membranaceous, of a linear form. The principal genera are: Psttopus Mezg., Sypistroma Mezg , Hypopuy.iuvus Hal., HeErcostomus Loew, HyGRocELEUTHUS Loew, DoxicHorus Meig., TACHYTRECHUS Stann., ORTHOCHILE Latr., GYM- NOPTERNUS Loew, LYRONEURUS Loew, PLAGIONEURUS Loew, LIAN- caLus Hal., Scertus Loew, Hypropuorus Fall., CAMPsICNEMUS Hal., Tatnopuitus Wahlb., PEoprs Loew, AcHatcus Hal., Sys- TENUS Loew, SYNTORMON Loew, SYNARTHRUS Loew, POoRPHYROPS Meig., Ruapnium JMetg., XIPHANDRIUM Hal., HALTERICERUS Rond., Smiuiotus Loew (= Machxrium Hal.), Arayra Maeq., Leucosroia Hal., NeMATopRoctus Loew, Saucropus Loew, XAN- THOCHLORUS Loew, SymMpyonus Loew, TEucHOPHORUS Loew, ANEP- sius Loew, Eurarsus Hal., DiapHorus Meig., Curysotus Meig., Curysotimus Hal., Mepreterus /sch., ApHRosyLUSs. Hal. The N. A. genera which I am acquainted with are: PstLopus Meig., Hyaroceteutuvus Loew, Doticnorus Meig., TACHYTRECHUS Stann., GYMNOPTERNUS Loew, PLAGIONEURUS Loew, LIANCALUS Hal., Scrtius Loew, CAmpsicneMus Hal., SynaArturus Loew, Porpuyrops Meig., ARayRA J/acg., LeucostoLta Hal,, SAucRoPuUS Loew, XanrHocHLoRus Loew, DiapHorus Meig., LYRONEURUS Loew, Curysotus Metg., and Mrepererus Jsch. Fam. XXXII. OESTRIDAE. Charact.—Antennez inserted in rounded pits; the middle part of the face exceedingly narrow; the opening of the mouth very small; the oral organs rudimentary. Tegule large. This family has often been considered as very distant from the fol- lowing, but the late discoveries have brought to light forms which DEXIDAE, 33 are more nearly related to them. The following genera may be taken for those which constitute the family: TrypopERMA Weed. (= Cuterebra Clark), CepHatomyia Latr., CEPHENEMYIA Latr., HypopErRMA Clark, Gastrus Meig., AULACEPHALA Macq. and CrenostyLuM Macg. A thorough limitation of these genera is still wanted, and the name of Oestrus, instead of being dropped, as we see it done by some authors, may perhaps be again restored to its former rank. T have seen N. A. species of the genus TRYPODERMA, and others of the genera CEPHALOMYIA and GASTRUS, introduced in America from Kurope. There is no doubt that species of HypopERMA occur there also. Fam. XXXIII. DEXIDAE. Charact.—Bristle of the antenne hairy or pectinated. Thorax short. First posterior cell of the wing slightly opened, sometimes closed. Tegule large. Legs long. The family Dexidz agrees with the Tachinidx, Sarcophagide, Muscidx, and Anthomyide, in having the tegule larger than any of the following families of the Brachycera. These five families have been therefore united under the name of Muscarie calyptrate, and contrasted with the following, called Muscartz acalyptrate. There is no possibility, it seems, to discover any other constant character; that which appears the most serviceable was pointed out to me by Mr. Haliday; it is the transverse suture of the thorax being usually of the same depth on its whole extent in the Muscariz calyptrate, whereas in the Muscariz acalyptrate it is generally distinct at each side and imperceptible on the middle of the thorax. But as some families among the so-called Musca- riz acalyptrate have the tegule so well developed as to resemble those of many Anthomyidx, a high importance cannot be attached to that subdivision. Should it be maintained, the Oestride ought to be placed among the Muscariz calyptrate. , The four families: Dextdee, Tachinide, Sarcophagide, and Mus- cidzx, agree in the first posterior cell being very much narrowed or closed at the end, and differ in this from the family Anthomyide. The former have, for this reason, been comprised under the common name of Creophile, in opposition to the latter, which 3 ; 34 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. received the name of Anthophilz. The differences in the organi- zation of the Muscariz calyptratz are much smaller than those of any two families among the first series of Diptera brachycera, which ends with the Zachydromidx, with the sole exception of the group formed by the Hybotide, Hmpide, and Tachydromide, in which a similar relationship exists. Consequently the families in question here owe their existence much more to the immense number of species and genera than to a real necessity, based on differences of structural characters. Hence it is much more diffi- eult to define their limits, and one must already be well acquainted with a great number of forms, in order to attempt to point out with certainty the right place for new ones. In the limitation of these families I have made use of what has been said about them in Walker’s British Diptera; for however insufficient I may find it, I know of nothing better to be put in its place. In the family of Dexidz a number of genera have been already formed; as they still require considerable sifting and a much sharper limitation than they have at present, it seems useless to enumerate them here. The N. A. Dexide known to me cannot all be placed in the genera hitherto erected. The species about whose position there is no doubt belong to the genera: ProsEena St. Farg., Micropu- THALMA Macg., Dinrera fob. Desv., and Esturria ob. Desv. There is also no doubt about TricHopuRA Jacq. and MrGaproso- pus Macq. occurring in N. A. Fam. XXXIV. TACHINIDAE. Charact.—Bristle of the antennz bare or with a very short pubescence. Thorax short. First posterior cell closed or only slightly opened. Legs short. The immense extent of this family renders the formation of see- tions indispensable. It is best divided into four sections, which might perhaps be raised into families. The two first of them are the Zachinina and Ocypterina, both of which differ from the two last by their abdomen being beset with long bristles. All TACHININA have an oval abdomen, or when it is nearly cylindrical, its first segment is much shortened. The abdomen of the OcyPrERiNa is always of a slender cylindrical form, and its first segment elongated. SARCOPHAGIDAE—MUSCIDAE. 35 The third section, the GymNnosomina, has a broad front and a vaulted abdomen. ‘The fourth is that of the Paasina, having a very narrow front and a flat abdomen. My knowledge of the N. A. Tachinide is a very incomplete one. I know, however, the following genera: I. Zachinina: 1. DEJEANIA fob. Desv., 2. Ecutnomyta Meig., 3. JurinEA Rob. Desv., 4. Hystricta Macg., 5. Micropatpus Macg., 6. Gonta Metg., 7. Nemorma Rob. Desv., 8. BLEPHARIPEZA Macgq., 9. Beivorsta Rob. Desv., 10. Tacnina Mezg., 11. Curysosoma Macq., 12. Meroria Meig., 13. MitroaramMa Merg., 14. InticerRA fob. Desv., 15. Masicera Macq. II. Ocypterina: 16. Ocyprera Lair. III. Gym- nosomina: 17. GyMNosoMA fall. IV. Phasina: 18. Puasta Latr. 19. Hyatomy1a Macg., 20. Tricnoropa Latr. Fam. XXXV. SARCOPHAGIDAE. Charact.—Bristle of the antennz plumose or hairy, with the apex bare. First posterior cell only slightly opened or else closed. Tegule large. Legs stout. All the N. A. species I have seen belong to the genera: SARCO- PHAGA Meig., Puryssopopa fod. Desv., and Cynomyia Meig. Fam. XXXVI. MUSCIDAE. Charact.—Bristle of the antenne entirely plumose or pectinated. Body never slender; thorax short. First posterior cell only slightly opened or else closed at the border of the wing. Tegule large. Legs stout. This family contains two sections: the Muscina with plumose antenne, and the Sromoxyna with pectinated antenne. The N. A. species which I have examined belong to the genera: Musca Linn., Pottenta fob. Desv., CyrtonrurA Macqg., PYREL- ua Rob. Desv., Luciti1a Rob. Desv., CaLLipHorA Macgq., and Stomoxys Geoffr. The number of species which N. A. has in common with Europe is exceedingly striking in this particular family. 36 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA, Fam. XXXVII. ANTHOMYIDAE. Charact.—Thorax with a complete transverse suture. Fourth longitudi- nal vein straight or nearly so, hence first posterior cell fully open. Tegule rather well developed, though in many cases of no large size. The riches of the N. A. Fauna in this family have been very little explored. I know species of the following genera only: AntuomyIA Meig., Homatomyta Bouch., HyLemyra Macg., ARt- c1A fob. Desv., Lispe Latr., and Ca@nosia Metg. The notices of Mr. Walker about the occurrence of some species of Hriphia and of one Dialyta appear to me very uncertain. Fam. XXXVIII. CORDYLURIDAE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings complete; both posterior basal cells of considerable size; auxiliary vein well separated from the first lon- gitudinal vein; first longitudinal vein bare. Whole lateral border of the front bristly; anterior border of the mouth with Strona, usually numerous vibrisse. Tibize with spurs. With the Cordyluride we begin that division of Diptera which is called acalyptratz, and the systematical arrangement of which is still and will be an unsolved problem, till their structure has been much more thoroughly studied than has been hitherto the ease. In the present state of our knowledge their subdivision into a greater number of families seems to be the most advisable course to pursue. As for their exterior, the Cordyluridz mostly approach to the Anthomyidx, and namely to the species of the genus Coenosia, but the smaller size of their tegule and the less incomplete develop- ment of the transverse suture on their thorax serve to distinguish them. On the other side they are closely allied to the Helomyzide, in which, however, the front bears bristles on its upper half only, the two posterior basal cells are smaller, and the costa of the wings is always bristly. N. A. possesses species of CorpYLuURA, some of them very inter- esting, and a number of ScaropHAG among which several coin- cide with Kuropean species. HELOMYZIDAE—SCIOMYZIDAE. Hi Fam. XXXIX. HELOMYZIDAHE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings complete; costa bristly; first longitudi- nal vein not abbreviated, but bare; the auxiliary vein is often rather approximated to it. Front bristly on its upper half only; a stout bristle at each side of the anterior border of the mouth. All the tibiz with spurs and outwards before their tips with a more or less developed erect bristle. The close relation of the Helomyzide to the Oordyluridex in- duces me to assign them a place here, although the consideration of the smaller size of their two posterior basal cells would remove them to a more distant place, in the neighborhood of the Geomy- zide and Heteroneuride. In fact both families are related to the Helomyzide ; but they differ from them by. their having the first longitudinal vein abbreviated and the auxiliary vein lying close by it, and besides the Heteroneuridx have the peculiarity of the costa of the wings being without bristles. The known N. A. species belong to the genera HELomMyza and ScHa@nomyza. Some of them are likewise identical with European species. Fam. XL. SCIOMYZIDAE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings complete; two posterior basal cells of rather considerable size; auxiliary vein well separated from the first longitudinal vein. On the lateral border of the front before the vertical bristles there are two bristles, one behind the other; face proportionately long without distinct furrows for the antenne; bor- der of the mouth sharp, without vibrisse. Middle tibie with a greater number of bristles at the tip; all the tibiz on the outside before the tip with a small upright bristle. I know N. A. species that belong to the genera SEPEDON, TETA- NOcCERA, and SclomyzA. Some of them are most nearly related to European species, others seem altogether identical with them. If we place, and we may well justify our doing so, the genus Dryo- MYZA among the Sciomyzidex, it must also be named as a genus represented in N. A.; one of the two species of this genus occur- ring there does not seem to differ from the European Dryomyza anilis Fall. The genus Actora Mezg., which agrees with the Sctomyzidz in many characters, may be referred to them without any great difficulty; but on account of its deviation in the struc- 38 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. ture of the face, the character of the family would have then to be slightly altered. Mr. Walker has described a N. A. species which he contends to belong to AcTorRA. Fam. XLI. PSILIDAE. Charact.—Body elongated, with short hairs and almost without bristles. Neuration of the wings complete; the auxiliary vein lies close by the first longitudinal vein, but diverges from it at its end and runs towards the border of the wing; by a transverse fold most charac- teristic in this family running from the tip of the auxiliary vein as far as the base of the third posterior cell, the outward end of the auxiliary vein is obliterated; the posterior basal cells are very large. Front with only a few bristles in the neighborhood of the crown; face’receding; opening of the mouth small and with no bristles at its border. Only the middle tibie have spurs, and all the tibiz are without erect bristle on the outside. This family is represented in N. A. by the genera Loxocera, Psina, and CuyuizA. The N. A. species, which induced Mr. Walker to form a new genus Prochyliza, placed by him close by Chyliza, belongs to some other family. Fam. XLII. MICROPEZIDAE. Charact.—Body slender, elongated, with very short hairs and very scarce bristles. Legs proportionately short; only the middle tibie have spurs, these being generally very small and weak; no small erect bristle on the exterior side of the tibie. Neuration of the wings complete; first longitudinal vein bare; the auxiliary vein is very close by it and diverges from it towards its end only; the two posterior basal cells are very large. Front with some bristles in the neighborhood of the crown only; bordering of the mouth without vibrisse. Last segment of the abdomen of the female prolonged into a blunt, cylindrical tube. The family MZcropezide comprises genera which differ among each other, both in the form of the head and the structure of the antenne and oral parts. ‘The head is sometimes rounded, some- times more elongated; the bristle of the antenne is generally dorsal, but in some genera apical; the clypeus sometimes very much de- veloped, sometimes only rudimentary; the palpi sometimes large, sometimes small, but never rudimentary. The clypeus being very much developed and the proboscis very much thickened in the ORTALIDAE. 39 genus Zeniaptera Macq., this family approaches so much to the Ortalidx, that the bareness of the first longitudinal vein, the difference in the structure of the female ovipositor, and the corre- sponding difference in the structure of the male appendages, must be considered as the chief characters, which distinguish it from them. The Sepsidx, too, are rather nearly related to the MZicro- pezidzx, but are distinguished from them not only by the structure of the female ovipositor, but also by their palpi being always rudi- mentary. The N. A. species I know of are: one true CALOBATA, nume- rous TANIAPTERA, and two Microprezm. Whether the N. A. Species which Mr. R. Desvoidy refers to the genus NERIUvs, really belong to it, appears to me most doubtful, as they seem to be Teniaptere all together. The genus Lissa Meg. occurring like- wise in N. A., in most characters agrees with the Mcropezide, and may provisionally be placed among them, till a more convenient place in the system will be pointed out for it. The genus Hums- TOPIA erected by Mr. Macquart on aN. A. species, is also related to the latter, and may likewise obtain here a provisional place. Both these genera differ from the great bulk of the Ahcropezide by having the legs less slender, the tarsi less abbreviated, and the last segment of the abdomen not prolonged so as to form a cylin- drical tube. Fam. XLII. ORTALIDAE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings complete; auxiliary vein separated from the first longitudinal vein and running to the border of the wing in the usual way, under an acute angle and remaining perfectly distinct in its whole length; third longitudinal vein generally with coarse hairs; two posterior basal cells large, and the outward one frequently prolonged in an acute angle. Front with bristles on the upper part only; no vibrisse at the border of the mouth; clypeus commonly very much developed, and proboscis often very much thickened. Middle tibie alone with spurs; no tibie with an erect bristle on the exterior side before the tip. Ovipositor of the female rather flattened and horny, consisting of three elongated segments, forming three drawers like those of a telescope, and end- ing in a simple point. The family of Ortalide is exceedingly rich in variously shaped organizations, which caused a considerable increase of genera in 40 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. it. Unfortunately most of them are founded on characters so va- riable that they are of very little use, and it seems best to retain the old ample genera. We feel the more compelled to do so, as many species existing in N, A. cannot be referred to any of the modern genera. The whole of the Ortalide may conveniently be divided into two sections: the first, which may be named TEranopina, has the front more prominent, the face receding, the opening of the mouth rather small, the clypeus less developed, and the proboscis less thick; in the second, the OrTALINA, the front is not prominent, the clypeus very much developed, the opening of the mouth much wider, and the proboscis much thicker. The N. A. Fauna possesses in Pyrcora a genus of the first sec- tion, particularly striking, and even somewhat deviating. Among the other N. A. Ortalide known to me there is only one species belonging to CeEPHALIA, whereas all the rest belong to the genus Ortatis, if we take it, as Meigen did, in a wider sense, and are distributed especially among the genera Ceroxys, Ortalis, Rivellia and Delphinia, of modern authors. Fam. XLIV. TRYPETIDAE. Charact.—Neuration complete ; the end of the auxiliary vein runs steeply to the border of the wing and becomes obsolete; first longitudinal vein always with bristles, the third frequently, the fifth sometimes ; two posterior basal cells rather large, the hindmost is often prolonged to a point. Front on each side with two rows of bristles, one of . which is more above and interiorly, the other below and exteriorly. Border of the mouth with no vibrisse. Clypeus none or rudimen- tary. Proboscis never incrassated. Only the middle tibie with spurs; all tibiz without erect bristle on the outer side before the tip. Ovipositor horny, consisting of three elongated retractile segments like the drawers of a telescope, the last of which ends in a simple point. They are divided into two sections, Dactina and TRYPETINA. In the former the female abdomen, before the ovipositor, has ap- parently only four segments, the fifth segment being diminutive and entirely concealed under the fifth; in the Zrypetina the five segments are all equally developed. As the Dacina, represented in Europe only by Dacus Olee, LONCHAEIDAE—SAPROMYZIDAE. 4] which lives on the olive-tree, and Petalophora capitata, exclusively dependent on the lemon-tree, are in all respects strangers in the HKuropean Fauna, so they appear to be no natives of N. A.; no species of this division has hitherto been noticed there. The Z7y- petina, on the contrary, are represented there by numerous, partly very handsome species, all belonging to the genus TRYPETA in Meigen’s and Wiedemann’s sense. Fam. XLV. LONCHAEIDAE. Charact.—Neuration complete; the auxiliary vein runs to the border of the wing in the usual way, under an acute angle and without be- coming obsolete, and is very near to the first longitudinal vein; this vein is bare; the two posterior basal cells are small. Front at each side with a single row of bristles; border of the mouth with- out vibrisse; clypeus rudimentary. Middle tibie with spurs; all tibie without erect bristle on the exterior side before the tip. The ovipositor of the female consists of three joints and is rather horny, quite flattened, and ends in a simple point. They are divided into the PALLOPTERINA having more slender legs and a broader front, and the Loncuz1na with stouter legs and a more narrow front. There is only one species in N. A., that I know of, belonging to the genus PALLOPTERA: of the second division I have several species of LoncH#a, a part of which seem to be identical with Huropean species. | Fam. XLVI SAPROMYZIDAR. Charact.—Neuration complete; auxiliary vein of the usual structure, fre- quently very much approximated to the first longitudinal vein; costa of the wings without bristles or marginal spine; longitudinal veins without peculiar hairs; posterior basal cells small. Front with a single row of bristles on each side ; no vibrissez on the border of the mouth; clypeus rather rudimentary. Only the middle tibize have terminal spurs; all tibise with a small erect bristle on the exterior side before the end. Ovipositor of the female not horny. N. A. has numerous species of the genera SAPROMYZA and LAUXANIA, and a few species belonging to Pacuycerina Maczg., a genus detached from Lauxania, 42 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Fam. XLVII. PHYCODROMIDAE. Charact.—Thorax, scutellum and abdomen flat; pleurze excised above the coxe. Front bristly; border of the mouth hairy, with no distinct vibrisse. Legs stout, tibize with spurs and each with an erect hair or small bristle on the outside before the tip; the first joint of the posterior tarsi not abbreviated ; last joint of all tarsi enlarged, with stout claws and long pulvilli. Neuration of the wings complete; auxiliary vein distinct in its whole length; costa without bristles ; basal cells not small. A certain resemblance with the Borboride can by no means be overlooked; however, the Phycodromide are readily distinguished by the completeness of the auxiliary vein, the absence of the vibrisse so remarkable in those, by the first joint of the posterior tarsi not being abbreviated, and by the increased size of the last joint of all tarsi. They appear to have more true relation to the Helomyzide, but from these too they are sufficiently distinguished by the costa of the wings having no bristles and the border of the mouth having close hairs, but no real vibrisse. Of this family I have seen only one Ca@Lopa captured in N. A. It was remarkable by the exceedingly strong spines of its legs. Fam. XLVIII. HETERONEURIDAE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings complete, but the first longitudinal vein rather short, and the auxiliary vein very much approximated to it; costa without bristles; basal cells small. Front with long bristles ; border of the mouth with a vibrissa at each side; clypeus not deve- loped; palpi broad and proportionately large. Legs, and especially the tarsi, slender; middle and posterior tarsi with spurs; all the tibize without erect bristle on the exterior side before the tips; claws and pulvilli very small. I know five N. A. species of this family, four of which belong to the genus Hrereroneura JVetg.; the fifth cannot be conveniently placed in any of the genera as yet established. OPOMYZIDAE—SEPSIDAE. 43 Fam. XLIX. OPOMYZIDAE. Charact.—Front with stout bristles above; clypeus rudimentary ; border of the mouth either pubescent or with long hairs, the foremost of which sometimes forms a distinct vibrissa. Proboscis short; palpi rather small. Middle tibie with a distinct, posterior tibie with a very short spur; the exterior side of the tibie without erect small bristle before the tip; claws and pulvilli small. Wings elongated and narrow, with no bristles at the costa; the axillary incision and alule are either wanting or very diminutive. First longitudinal vein much abbreviated ; the auxiliary vein hecomes obsolete before reaching completely the first longitudinal vein; the latter emits, shortly before its end, towards the costa, a branch, which may be considered as the end of the auxiliary vein; basal cells small. No species belonging to this family has as yet been noticed in Ws: Fam. L. SEPSIDAE. Charact.—Head rounded ; front bristly; border of the mouth more or less hairy, the foremost hair often imitating a vibrissa; clypeus rudi- mentary; proboscis short; palpi exceedingly small or wanting. Abdomen tapering towards the base. Middle tibie with distinct spurs; claws and pulvilli small. Neuration of the wings complete; the auxiliary vein distinctly separated from the first longitudinal vein; the two posterior basal cells rather large. The most essential character of this family is the rudimentary condition of the palpi. With this exception its characters are rather similar to those of the Jcropezide. The genus Cephalia approaches very much the Sepszde in structure, but its incrassated proboscis, its large and broad palpi, and its considerably developed clypeus prevent it from being reunited with them; it must, there- fore, remain among the Ortalde. The species of Seps¢de occurring in N. A. belong to the genera NEMOPODA and Sepsis, and are, in part, identical with European species. 44 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Fam. LI. DIOPSIDAE. Charact.—Neuration of the wings incomplete from the absence of the foremost of the two small basal cells; the auxiliary vein very much approximated to the first longitudinal vein. Head prolonged in two lateral apophyses bearing the eyes; front bristly only on the upper part; border of the mouth with no vibrisse. Anterior femora incrassated. One species, or—if the second one, described by Dr. A. Fitch, should really prove different—two species of the genus SPHYRACE- PHALA Say have hitherto been found in N. A. Fam. LII. PIOPHILIDAE. Charact.—The auxiliary vein, on its whole length, is coalescent with the first longitudinal vein; with this exception the neuration of the wings is complete. Front with some small bristles above only; bor- der of the mouth with a vibrissa on each side; clypeus rudimentary; legs rather stout, almost of the structure of those of the Sciomyzide; middle tibie with spurs; all the tibiz without erect bristle on the exterior side before the tip. The three N. A. species of PropH1na which I have seen are quite identical with European ones; a fourth differs so much from all the known Piophile in the form of the head and the structure of the antenn, that it must be considered as the type of a new genus. It seems to be the same species on which Mr. Walker has founded his genus Procuyuiza;, if that be really so, he would, by assigning it a place immediately by Ohyliza, have shown that he had been fully mistaken about its true relation. Fam. LIT. EPHYDRINIDAE. Charact.—Face convex, with no distinct furrows for the reception of the antenne and without vibrissz, though frequently beset with hairs or bristles ; clypeus very much developed; opening of the mouth large ; proboscis incrassated with a swollen chin. Neuration of the wings incomplete; the auxiliary vein distinct only at its base; the fore- - most of the two small basal cells reunited with the discal cell. Middle tibiz with spurs. They are divided into three sections: Wotiphilina, Hydrellina, and Lphydrina. The Notiphilina are characterized by the second GEOMYZIDAE—DROSOPHILIDAE. 45 joint of the antenne being unguiculate. The Hydrellina and Ephydrina, in which that joint is not unguiculated, differ from each other by the former having the eyes hairy and the latter bare. | The N. A. species hitherto recorded have been so badly charac- terized that there is no possibility to decide to which section, and of course far less to which genus they belong. The species which IT am acquainted with and have described in the following pages, are distributed among the three above named sections as follows: I. Notiphilina: 1. Dicuazra Veig. with two European species ; 2. NorrpHita Fall. five species; 3. PARALIMNA Loew, one species; 4, Psttopa Fall. five species; 5. Discocerina Macq. five species. Ii. Aydrellina: 6. Hyprewiia Desv. six species; 7. PHILYGRIA Stenh. three species. III. Hphydrina: 8. OcutHERA Latr. four species, one of which is identical with a European species; 9. BRACHYDEUTERA Loew, one species; 10. Parypra Stenh. two species; 11. Epuypra Vall. one species; 12. ScaTELLA Desv. three species, one of which cannot be positively distinguished as yet from a European species. Fam. LIV. GEOMYZIDAHE. Charact.—Front with stout bristles above; border of the mouth with vi- brisse. Clypeus rudimentary. Middle tibie with spurs; all the tibiez with a small erect hair on the exterior side before the tip. Wings with bristles on the costa; first longitudinal vein exceed- ingly abbreviated, and the auxiliary vein so approximated to it that it is distinctly separated from it only towards the base; the two posterior basal cells very small. I know only one species of this family indigenous in N. A. and belonging to the genus DiastatTa. Mr. Walker records an insect which he believes to be likewise a Diastata. Fam. LV. DROSOPHILIDAE. Charact.—Front with bristles above; face with distinct sub-antennal fur- rows; at the border of the mouth there is a feeble, frequently rather indistinct small vibrissa. Middle tibie with very feeble spurs; on the exterior side of the tibie there is either a very small or no erect bristle before the tip. Wings without bristles on the costa; the 46 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA, first longitudinal vein is exceedingly abbreviated; of the auxiliary vein there is only a rudiment; the discal cell is usually, but not in all genera, united with the foremost of the two small basal cells. Claws and pulvilli very small. Numerous species of DRosopHILa are found in N. A., some of which are perfectly identical with European species, and one StTr- GANA, the difference of which from the European Stegana hypoleuca is at least liable to doubt. Fam. LVI. OSCINIDAE. Charact.—Front without bristles, the crown having only a few short ones; border of the mouth without vibrisse, which, however, are repre- sented sometimes by a small hair on each side. Middle tibie with small spurs; all the tibie without erect bristle on the exterior side before the tip. Costa of the wings without bristles. The auxiliary vein is completely wanting; the anterior of the two small basal cells is united with the discal cell, the posterior one is totally wanting. The N. A. species of this family known to me are distributed among the genera CHLOROPS, CRASSISETA, SIPHONELLA, MEROMYZA, and Oscinis. The species described by Wiedemann under the name of Homalura plumbella likewise belongs to the genus Stpho- nella. Macquart has established a genus, EcTECEPHALA, on a N. A. species, and he says it is nearly related to Platycephala and Hurina; if that is really the case, it must also be recorded here. Fam. LVII. AGROMYZIDAE. Charact.—Front with strong bristles; border of the mouth with a vibrissa on each side. Middle tibiz with a terminal spur; all the tibie on the exterior side without erect bristle before the tip. Wings with- out bristles on the costa; first longitudinal vein very short, and the auxiliary vein connected with it at the tip; basal cells existing, but small; posterior transverse vein generally far distant from the bor- der of the wing. The N. A. species which I have seen belong to the genera AGRO- MYZA, LopioprerA, and MILICHTA. PHYTOMYZIDAE——ASTEIDAE—BORBORIDAE—-PHORIDAE. AT Fam. LVIII. PHYTOMYZIDAE. Charact.—Front bristly ; border of the mouth with vibrisse on each side. Middle tibiz with spurs; all the tibiz without erect bristle on the exterior side. Wings withont bristles on the costa; first longitu- dinal vein very short; auxiliary vein connected with it at the tip; basal cells existing, but small; posterior transverse vein wanting. The genus PHytomyza is represented in N. A, Fam. LIX. ASTEIDAE. Charact.—Front bristly above; border of the mouth with a vibrissa at each side. Middle tibie with spurs; all the tibie without erect bristle on the exterior side. Wings without bristles on the costa; first longitudinal vein exceedingly short; auxiliary vein connected with it only at the tip; second longitudinal vein very short; twe posterior basal cells as well as the posterior transverse vein want- ing. No N. A. species of this small family is as yet known. Fam. LX. BORBORIDAE. Charact.—Thorax, scutellum, and abdomen flat; front bristly; face exca- vated, with a vibrissa on each side of the border of the mouth; clypeus developed; first joint of the posterior tarsi abbreviated. Neuration of the wing incomplete, only a commencement of the auxiliary vein being at best visible; the hindmost two basal cells are not complete in all genera. N. A. seems to possess numerous species of the genus Borsorwus, which have not yet been carefully compared with the European species. One species taken in Cuba is identical with an African one. Fam. LXI. PHORIDAE. Charact.—Antenne apparently single jointed, with a long bristle. Wings with several stout veins running into the costa, and three or four weak ones, which run across the surface of the wings and are not completely connected with the hindmost of the stout veins, from which they appear to issue. Femora flattened. Many species of Puora seem to ocenr in N. A.; their form, as far as J am acquainted with them, differs in no way from that of the European ones. 48 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Ill: CORPAGIiR Fam. LXIT. HIPPOBOSCIDAE. Charact.—Head flattened; first joint of all the tarsi, or at least of the an- terior and middle tarsi, abbreviated. N. A. possesses species of the genera Hippoposca Linn., MELO- pHaaus Latr., OrNiITHOMYIA Leach, and OLrersta Weed., several of which are perfectly identical with European species. Fam. LXIII. NYCTERIBIDAE. Charact.—Head not flattened; first joint of all the tarsi rather long or very long, in comparison with the following. One SrREBLA only and a species belonging to a new genus are known to me as occurring in N. A. II. ON THE NORTH AMERICAN TRYPETIDAE. 1. Extent of the family TRYPETIDA. In stating that the family of Zrypetide comprises the genera Trypeta Meig. and Dacus Wied. we define its limits as exactly as is possible before having developed its character. The genus Z7rypeta was founded by Meigen in Llhiger’s Magazine II, 277, 94. Shortly after, the same genus was published in Schrank’s Fauna Boica under the name of Zrupanea, and still later, it appeared in Latreille’s writings, in a more vague circum- scription, under that of Zephritis. The number of species belonging to it has so much increased since the time of its creation, and so considerable differences in their organization have been observed, that not only the limits of ‘the genus have become a little uncertain, but also the necessity of a division into smaller genera was felt, and more than one attempt to satisfy this want has been made. The first attempt, abortive both from the choice of unfit charac- ters and from the vagueness of the observations used as foundation for the characters, was made by Robineau Desvoidy, who distri- buted the species known to him among the genera Hnsina, Stylia, Oxyna, Oxyphora, Terellia, Foreliia, Xyphosia, Sitaria, Orellia, Tephritis, Urophora, Aciura, Prionella, Sphenella, Urellia, Acinia, and WVeeta, to which his genera Acidia and Strauzia must be also added. Subsequently Macquart reunited these genera into five: Uropho- ra, Terellia, Tephritis, Acinia, and Ensina, to which he added the genus Ceratitis M’Leay, which he had previously described himself under the name of Petalophora. Later, in the ‘‘Diptéres exotiques,” he added Acanthoneura, Campylocera, Meracantha, Toxura, and Epicerella; the four last, however, if we may depend on his de- scriptions and figures, must be placed among the Ortalide. Mr. Walker, in the ‘ List of the Diptera of the British Museum,” adopted the genera of R. Desvoidy, after modifying the characters 4 50 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. of several of them, and retained the genera Anomota and Luleia, which he had previously founded himself; besides, he erroneously brought again among the 7rypetide the genus Camptoneura, which Macquart had formed on 7rypeta picta Wied., and correctly placed among the Ortalide. The most recent attempt at a detailed classification of the Eu- ropean species of the old genus Zrypeta is that given by Rondani in his ‘‘Prodromus Dipterologie italice.” He retains—though in a much altered sense—the genera of R. Desvoidy: Oxyna, Uro- phora, Rivellia, Tephritis, Acinia, Aciura, Terellia, and Orellia, and adopting the genus Ceratitis M. Leay and Myopites Breb., he creates the following new genera: Goniglossum, Carpomyia, Cera- jocera, Chetostoma, Epidesmia, Myoleja, Spathulina, Dithryca, and Oplocheta. But these genera are less fit for reuniting what is really allied, than for isolating out of their nearest relationship such species as are distinguished by any specific peculiarity and for crowding them inordinately together. The dichotomic division of genera from single characters without any indication of the true generic distinctions, renders it impossible to refer to them the other species described by authors, and it is not at all sufficient for this purpose to name a typical species, especially as some of these typical species have not yet been described, and the correct- ness of the names of the others is not proved. Moreover, the characters ascribed by Rondani to the single genera are not all quite certain, and some of them, for instance the scutellum of Myoleja, which is said to have two bristles, the scutellum of Cera- titis six bristles, appear to be errors of the observer. If we add to what we have said already that the genera Xar- nuta, Themara, Calantra, and Aragara, erected by Walker in the ‘‘Proceedings of the Linnean Society,” with some probability belong here, and that perhaps the genus Dasyneura Saund., and Rachiptera and Elaphromyia Bigot are Trypetide, both the va- riety of the forms belonging to the genus 7rypeta Meig. and a picture of the chaotic state into which their arrangement has been thrown will be sufficiently illustrated. The genus Dacus, restricted by Meigen to the Dacus Olee Fabr. (the renowned blight of the olive) and used by Wiedemann in a wider sense, is nearest related to the genus 7rypeta Meig. ; Fabricius, who formed this genus, comprises so different species in it that we may scarcely consider it as a creation of his. How- DIVISION OF THE FAMILY INTO TRYPETINA AND DACINA. 51 ever striking the difference may be between the greatest part of the species of Zrypeta and the larger naked species of Dacus, yet some of the latter approach very much to the larger species of the polymorphous genus 7rypeta, and show the near relation of both genera. Wiedemann, misled by some 7rypete, had become uncertain about the limits between the genera Dacus and Trypeta, or he would not have placed the large Brazilian 7rypeta parallela among Dacus. One of the surest marks for separating both gen- era is furnished by the structure of the female abdomen, which in Trypeta shows five, in Dacus four segments before the borer, the fifth being very short and concealed under the fourth. None of the other characters, however marked they may appear, is so con- stant as this. Macquart has already justly observed that the whole of the first group of Dacus Wied. is not only a stranger to this genus, but cannot even remain in the same family with it; therefore giving it the generic name of Senopterina (which must be mended into Stenopterina), he assigned it its right place in the Ortalide, as will be detailed in the sequel. Among the new gen- era introduced by Macquart, Leptoxys and Hnicocera, perhaps also Cardiacera, may be very nearly related to the genus Dacus, which cannot be, however, asserted positively, on account of the insuffi- ciency of Macquart’s statements and the incorrectness of his figures. The genus Bactrocera, founded by Guérin, seems also to belong here. The same, perhaps, may be said of the genera Avoxa and Strumeta, formed by Walker in the ‘“‘ Proceedings of the Linnean Society,” while the genus Dasyneura of Saunders, which Walker in the ‘‘luist of the Diptera of the British Museum” places near Dacus, seems to stand much nearer to Zrypeta. The species of the genus 7rypeta and those smaller genera which either have been comprised in Zrypeta or founded in its neigh- borhood, together with the species really belonging to Dacus and the smaller genera subordinate to or co-ordinate with it in a simi- lar way, form the family 7rypetide, one of the group of closely related families of the Acalyptera which are characterized by their corneous ovipositor. 2. Division of the family into TRYPETINA and DACINA. A division in two groups may be established as above indi- cated. The two groups would be: Trypetina, with five distinct segments of the female abdomen, and Dacina, with apparently four 52 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. segments. The latter, moreover, have some peculiarities in the structure and neuration of their wings, which, however, allow of no very sharp limitation. Most frequently a dilatation of the second basal cell and of the space between the third and fourth longitudinal veins (in consequence of which the second longitudinal vein is pushed towards the costal margin) and the posterior angle of the anal cell extended in a long point, are the most striking peculiarities in the structure of the wings. But a sharp limitation of the two groups is perhaps not to be urged too much, as transi- tions from the one to the other are certainly not wanting, and another division quite as useful seems to be possible. In the mean time the groups Z7rypetina and Dacina, as we have defined them, are chayacterized as well as our purpose requires. We have now to fix the relation of the family 7rypetide to the nearest families, particularly to that of Ortalide, since almost all authors have mixed the species of these two families. For this purpose we want only to find out the natural character of the family, which cannot be obtained but from a close examination of the greatest possible number of species and from a careful appreciation of the system- atic value to be assigned to the observed peculiarities and differ- ences. 3. Natural character. After examining nearly 300 species from different parts of the world, I believe I may speak as follows about the organization of the Zrypetide. . The bare eyes, in both sexes, are separated by the front, which is of equal breadth or only a little narrowed anteriorly. The mid- dle of the front is not sharply separated from the lateral lists, but has often a different color. The front is even, usually with an almost microscopic, rarely with a longer pubescence, sometimes it is totally bare. On its vertical border it always bears two very strong bristles, rather distant from each other. Two short callo- sities, usually little perceptible, run from them, converging but faintly anteriorly, and bearing one or two bristles directed upwards. On the vertical border itself there are two bristles, each near the upper angle of the eye, and in the middle behind the ocelli there is another pair of bristles, sometimes very stunted. This is also the case with a pair of bristles directed anteriorly, and inserted be- tween the ocelli. More anteriorly on the front there are, at each side NATURAL CHARACTER. 53 of the orbit, two or three stouter bristles, but generally less stout in the Dacina than in the Zrypetina, whereas in the males of some Trypetina they are thickened into spines, or even inserted upon lateral processes. The little crescent cut off by the frontal fissure is often very distinct, though never very large. The antenne are directed downwards, the third joint elongated or long; the bristle nearly bare, or with a very short pubescence; only in a few spe- cies it has longer hairs, but is never pectinated. The face shows below each antenna a flat excavation, more deepened in those few species which have a keel in the middle of the face; the anterior border of these excavations forms a more or less distinct eleva- tion, and sometimes almost a keel. The cheeks are more or less hairy; in a few 7rypetina the furthermost hairs almost have the appearance of vibrissee, which, however, are never present. All more naked species have also less hairy cheeks. The proboscis is never much thickened; the suctorial flaps are sometimes very short and rather broad, sometimes rather long, sometimes of an extraordinary length, as for instance in the species of Myopites Breb., where they seem to become much stouter, which was the reason why a species of Myopites was placed by Fabricius in Sto- moxys. The prolongation of the suctorial flaps is proportionate to that of the stem; not unfrequently in most nearly related species the structure of the proboscis seems to be very different; but on a closer examination this difference appears not to be essential, and cannot even always be used in characterizing the small genera into which the genus Zrypeta Meig. has been divided. Among the Dacina I have never seen a species with a very prolonged pro- boscis. The oral cavity is large, sometimes very large and widened, and not seldom a little prolonged at its anterior border; its form depends very much on that of the proboscis; for in those species which have a very long proboscis, the anterior border of the mouth is usually also much more projecting. The palpi are either more applied to or more laid upon the labium, when it is retracted into the mouth-hole; their form is more or less spatulate, and generally more elongated in those species which have a long pro- boscis than in those with a short one. The clypeus owing its origin to a duplication of the skin which connects the stem of the labium with the border of the mouth is narrow, and being con- cealed within the mouth-hole can only be seen anteriorly in those 54 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. species in which the anterior part of the peristoma is more drawn upwards. There is no striking peculiarity in the structure of the thorax. The transverse suture, in agreement with nearly all the Acalyptera, is distinct in the neighborhood of the lateral border, and totally obsolete in the middle of the thorax. The bristles of the thorax not only offer good specific characters, but sometimes also prove very fit for the separation of genera. In that respect the bristles of the middle of the upper side of the thorax deserve attention ; in those species in which their number is the most complete there are three pairs, one before the suture, the second behind the suture, the third a little before the scutellum. More frequently only the second and third pair of these bristles are present, sometimes only the third; in almost all African species of Dacus they are all wanting. Besides these bristles of the middle of the thorax there are two rows of bristles on each side; the exterior row consists of four bristles, the first of which stands on the humeral callosity, and is often wanting in the Dacina; the second has its place before the transverse suture ; the third, which is often much weaker than the others, in the lateral dilatation of the transverse suture; the fourth above and a little behind the base of the wing. The inte- rior row consists of three bristles only, corresponding to the three last bristles of the exterior row, but is placed a little more back- wards than these. The scutellum, which is more or less convex, generally bears four stout bristles, but in many Dacina and some Trypetina only two; there is sometimes on each side a weaker bristle between the stout ones. The abdomen of the male shows only four distinct segments, the last of which is more or less elongated. The abdomen of the female has five segments before the borer, and the last of them in the Trypetina is always distinct, whereas in the Dacina it is very small, and so concealed under the fourth segment that the abdomen of the female seems to consist only of four segments. That seg- ment which is usually numbered the first, and will also be numbered so in the following descriptions, seems to be composed of two segments soldered together. In many Dacina we also see the next segments more or less completely coalescent on their upper side. The borer of the female is always of a corneous substance ; it is formed of three segments, which are retractile like the drawers of a telescope, and often very long; the last ends in a simple more or NATURAL CHARACTER. 55 less sharp point; the first segment is either more conical, or more cylindrical, and then usually thick at its base, or it is quite flat; in most species it is hairy, in others it is beset with hairs at the tip only; in others again is quite bare; its length varies exceedingly in the various species; the second and the third segments of the borer are always bare. To the length of the borer of the female corresponds that of the thread-like penis of the male. The hairs of the body are sometimes fine and short, sometimes coarse and long; in the latter case the posterior margin of the abdominal segments is generally beset with bristles, which in the species having fine and short hairs, are either totally wanting or are pre- sent only at the posterior borders of some segments, most frequently on that of the last. The legs are always of moderate length, and of a rather robust structure; they are beset everywhere with short hairs, which be- come longer on the upper side of the posterior tibize of some species. There are usually some longer bristles on the under side of the anterior femora, and frequently also on their upper side; similar bristles exist on the posterior femora of several species, and some- times even on the middle femora. The tips of the middle tibie are always spurred ; otherwise, the tibiz have no bristles. It is very characteristic for all the Zrypetide that the erect bristles are totally wanting, which some allied families, for instance the Sapromyzide, possess on the outside of the tibie, not far from the tip. The first joint of the tarsi is always prolonged. The claws and pulvilly are small, and of equal form in both sexes. The neuration of the wings is that of Acalyptera in its highest perfection, and shows many characters peculiar to this family. The auxiliary vein is separated from the first longitudinal vein, though often approximated to it, especially in some Dacina; it never runs in the usual way, that is, at an acute angle and with equal distinctness as far as its end or even incrassating towards the border of the wing, but turns suddenly towards it, and, at the same time, becomes much more indistinct, the more so as the space between its end and that of the first longitudinal vein is incrassated. At the place where it runs into the border of the wing, the latter bears a small marginal spine, quite indistinct in many species, and which cannot, therefore, be considered as one of the characters of the Zrypetide. Generally the whole length of the first longitudinal vein is beset with bristles; this is also most 56 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. frequently the case with the base, or a greater part, or even the whole length of the third longitudinal vein; much more seldom there are bristles on the fifth longitudinal vein. The two small basal cells are proportionately large; the posterior of them, 7. e., the anal cell in most, but not all species, has its posterior angle drawn out into a point. The thickening of the costal vein always reaches to the fourth longitudinal vein. The surface of the wing has in all species a microscopic pubescence. From the above enumerated structural peculiarities we may de- rive the following characters for the family of 7rypetide:— 1. The borer of the female is corneous, three-jointed, and ends in a simple point; the penis of the male answers the borer in length, and is thread-like and not divided at its end. . The front is broad in both sexes, and there are stout bristles on the anterior part of its lateral border, not belonging to the row which descends from the vertex, but forming a separate row which is placed nearer to the lateral border of the front. 3. There are spurs at the end of the middle tibia, and no bristles whatever on all tibizw, except, in a few species, bristle-like hairs on the upper side of the posterior tibiz. ~ 4. The neuration is the completest among the Acalyptera; the auxiliary vein takes a steep turn towards the border of the wing, and becomes indistinct towards its end. i) 4. On the relations of this family. The family most nearly related to the 7rypetide is that of the Ortalide. The two principal characters, by which the former are distinguished from the latter, are the stout bristles existing on the anterior part of the lateral border of the front, and the steep direc- tion in which the tapering end of the auxiliary vein runs to the border of the wing. Both these characters are very constant ; should it happen that one of them is less sharply expressed, the other will be the more striking, and so an absolute certainty is afforded about the limits of these two families, the species of which have hitherto been so much mixed together. The Pallopteride and Loncheide are not quite so nearly related to the Zrypetide as the Ortalide. They also want the bristles .on the anterior part of the lateral border of the front, and the end of the auxiliary vein never shows the peculiarity which cha- ON THE N. A. SPECIES HITHERTO RECORDED. 5T racterizes the Zrypett?de. Moreover, their basal cells are smaller, and the first longitudinal vein never has any bristles, but only a short pubescence like that of the remainder of the surface of the wing. The Lauxanide and Sapromyzide have still less relation to the Trypetide. They are readily distinguished from the Trypetede by their middle and hind tibie being spurred with bristles before their tip, and the outside of the tibie bearing an erect bristle before the tip; the first longitudinal vein of the wings has no bristles, and the end of the auxiliary vein never has the character peculiar to that of the 7rypetide; the two posterior basal cells are small; the bristles on the anterior part of the lateral border of the front are wanting; in this respect we must not be deceived by the rows of bristles, which run from the two bristles of the vertical border, and which, being more scattered, extend farther anteriorly; there always exists only a single row of bristles, whereas the frontal bris- tles in the Zrypetide always form two rows on each side, one of which may be called the superior and interior, the other the inferior and exterior. . With the exception of the families mentioned above there is no other so nearly allied to the Zrypetide, that it would be necessary to point out its differences. 5. On the N. A. species hitherto recorded. What has been written about the N. A. 7rypetide is very little in amount. No species at all of the section Dacina has been described. I have, however, seen the fragments of a fly captured in Cuba, which belongs either to Dacus or to one of the nearest genera of the Ortalide; but as it is one of those osculating forms between the two allied families, nothing can be said with certainty about its systematic place before having seen a better preserved specimen. The N. A. Zrypete hitherto recorded are as follows :— 1. acidusa Walk., unknown to me, is either a relation of Tryp. suspensa and unicolor, the descriptions of which will be given hereafter, or belongs to those species similar to them which have the fifth longi- tudinal vein also beset with bristles. 2. albiscutellata Harr. must be omitted, since it is undescribed. 3. antillarum Macq. belongs to the Ortalidz, being erroneously placed by Macquart‘in Urophora, a genus of the T7ypetina. 4. arcuata Walk. differs in nothing from Tryp. flexa Wied. and belongs to the Ortalidz. 58 is 2) 10. 41. 14, 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. . armata R. Desv., published by the author as Strauzia armata, is Tryp. longipennis Wied. 5. . asteris Harr.; the description being unfortunately inaccessible to me, I can say nothing about it. The name is preoccupied by Mr. Haliday. ' . avala Walk., quite unknown to me; Mr. Walker’s statements are not sufficient to decide whether it belongs to the Ortalide or not. . beauvoisii &. Desv.; the description is too bad to allow its true position to be determined ; but it is certainly not among the species known to me. . caliptera Say is Tryp. sparsa Wied.; the older name deserves the preference, the more so as that of Say is not correct. cinctipes Harr. is an undescribed species, and must be therefore omitted. comma Wied. a good species and readily recognizable ; not possessing it, I cannot give a more detailed description; but having seen it in some collections, I subjoin a fugitive sketch of the reticulation of the wing (Tab. II, fig. 28), trusting that by this figure and Wiede- mann’s description the species will be recognized. It is not quite certain whether Macquart’s Acinia comma is the same, since he says that the posterior border of the wings has a large clear spot, which was not the case with the individuals of the genuine Zryp. comma Wied. which I have seen. The clear drops near the end of the sixth longitudinal vein being very much crowded, their eventual coalescing into a larger clear spot does not seem impossible. . cornigera Walk. is identical with Tryp. longipennis Wied. 13. cornifera Walk. is a slight variety of Tryp. longipennis Wied., in which the bands of the posterior border of the wings are obsolete, which is not seldom the case. ; culta Wied. (not cutta, a misprint corrected by Wiedemann himself). It is a relation of the European Tryp. reticulata Schrank, and Wiede- mann’s description is sufficient for recognizing this species. On Tab. II, fig. 29, I subjoin a sketch of the reticulation of the wings, which I made several years ago; though the circumference of the wing may not be quite correct, yet the species will, I hope, be recog- nized from it. dinia Walk. seems to be a Trypeta related to the European Tryp. rotundiventris Fall., tibialis R. Desv., etc. It may stand nearest to Tryp. insecta, the description of which follows hereafter. electa Say will be exactly described in the sequel. fimbriata Macq. is Tryp. culta Wied. flavonotata Macq. is Tryp. electa Say. flexa Wied. is by no means a Zrypeta, but an Ortalis not rare in collections. . fucata /abr. seems to be a true Zrypeta, but will be rather hard to recognize, unless an original specimen can be compared. 21. 22. 23. 24, 25. 26. 27. 28. 33. 34. ON THE N. A. SPECIES HITHERTO RECORDED. 59 fulvifrons Macq. I hardly conceive how Macquart could locate among Urophora a species which is an Ortalis, and nothing else but Ortalis znea Wied. inermis R. Desv., published by the author as Strauzia inermis, is Tryp. longipennis Wied. Q. interrupta Macq. seems to be an Ortalis related to Herina rufitarsis Macq., if it is not a mere variety of this species, so variable in the color of its body; moreover, it is so vaguely described that it is not possible to say anything with certainty about it. latipennis Macq., described by Macquart under the name of Platy- stoma latipennis; it is, however, certainly a Trypeta, and I hope not to be mistaken in identifying it with Tryp. sparsa Wied.; the representation of the head is certainly nothing but the invention of the draughtsman, or a foreign head had been glued to the speci- men. lichtensteinii Wied. I have seen this beautiful species about six- teen years ago, and made a sketch of the picture of the wing, which I give in Tab. II, fig. 25. The bristle of the antenna is thickened at its base in a rather striking manner. longipennis Wied. will be more accurately described in the sequel. The name of it is ascertained from the inspection of the originals. It is surprising that Wiedemann does not mention the thickening of the frontal bristles of the male, though the males in his collection show it. Perhaps he had specimens enough to satisfy himself that this peculiarity is not constant. marginepunctata Vacq. is unknown to me. melliginis Fitch belongs to the Ortalide, and is Herina rujfitarsis Macq. - mevarna Walk., a Trypeta which has the apex of the wings only reticulated, and is allied probably to the European Tryp. stellata Fiissl Among the below described species .Trypeta solaris may have the greatest resemblance to it. . mexicana Wied. seems to be a Trypeta; the original perhaps exists in the Berlin Museum. It is none of the species known to me. . narytia Walk. I believe it also to be a Trypeta; it is likewise not among my species. . noveboracensis Fitch is the same species as Tryp. sparsa Wied. and caliptera Say. nigriventris Macq. probably a Trypeta of the group of Tryp. rotundi- ventris Fall. obliqua Macq., a Trypeta, which seems to be nearly allied to Tryp. suspensa from Cuba and Tryp. unicolor from New Granada, but differs from both by its small transverse vein having an inclined position, and the first hyaline band running uninterruptedly from the border _ of the wing to the anterior of the two small basal cells, whereas in those species it is interrupted not far from the costal border. 60 35. 36. ov. 38. 39. 40. 41. DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. obliqua Say seems to be related to the European Tryp. Arctii Deg. and the below described Tryp. palposa from North Wisconsin; the latter has on its abdomen four rows of black spots, whereas Tryp. obliqua Say has only two. ocresia Walk. apparently related to Tryp. unicolor from New Granada, but it cannot be identified with this or any other species known to me. The description given by Walker is very vague. picta Fabr. a Camptoneura and consequently an Ortalideous species. quadrifasciata Macg. I believe it to be a Trypeta which I do not possess. quadrifasciata Walk. belongs to the Ortalide and is Herina rufitarsis Macq. quadrivittata WVacg. belongs to the Ortalidz. scutellaris Wied. I have seen the typical individuals of this beau- tiful species in the Berlin Museum sixteen years ago. If I recollect right, there were bright bands of a more black than brown color on the two last segments only of the abdomen in the male, but on all segments in the female. I was surprised to see in the female the markings of the wings (Tab. II, fig. 27) more extended than in the male (Tab. II, fig. 26). . scutellata Wied. a Trypeta quite unknown to me. . septenaria Harr. must be omitted as being undescribed. . solidaginis Fitch has been amply described in the sequel. . sparsa Wied. I give a detailed description of it. . tabellaria Fitch, not among the Zrypetez known to me, nor does it seem to belong to them, but is probably an Ortalida. . tribulis Harr. not described and therefore to be omitted. . trimaculata Macq. is the same variety of Tryp. longipennis Wied. which Walker has described under the name of Tryp. cornifera. . trifasciata Harr. must be omitted as being undescribed. . villosa R. Desv. may be a Trypeta, but is so badly described that there is scarcely a possibility to recognize it. The result of the remarks given about the enumerated 50 species will consequently be as follows :— 1. Five species must be omitted, because they have never been described: albiscutellata Harr., cinetipes Harr., septenuria Harr, tribulis Harr., and trifasciata Harr. 2. Fourteen species must be blotted out as identical with species previously described: arcuata Walk., armata R. Desv., caliptera Say, cornigera Walk., cornifera Walk., jimbriata Macq., flavonotata Macq., tnermis R. Desv., latipennis Macq., marginepunctata Macq., melliginis Fitch, novebora- censis Fitch, quadrifasciata Walk., and trimaculata Macq. ON THE SYSTEMATIC ARRANGEMENT OF THE SPECIES. 61 3. Of the remaining thirty-one species seven, the five first with all certainty, the two last with great probability, must be placed among the Ortalide. These are: antillarum Macq., flexa Wied., fulvifrons Macq., picta Fabr., guadrivittata Macq., interrupta Macq., tabellaria Fitch. 4. Consequently twenty-four N. A. 7rypete have been described, namely: acidusa Walk., asteris Harr., avala Walk., beau- voisit R. Desv., comma Wied., culta Wied., dinta Walk., electa Say, fucata Fabr., lichtensteinit Wied., longipennis Wied., mevarna Walk., mexicana Wied., Narytia Walk., nigriventris Maéq., obliqua Macq., obliqua Say, ocresia Walk., quadrifasciata Macq., scutellaris Wied., scutellata Wied., solidaginis Fitch, sparsa Wied., and villosa R. Desyv. 5. Of these twenty-four species I possess four only [now five.— O. 8.], which I shall fully describe hereafter ; they are: electa Say, longipennis Wied., solidaginis Fitch, sparsa Wied. [and obliqua Say.—O. 8.]. Moreover I have seen in other col- lections four species; they are: comma Wied., culta Wied., lichtensteinit Wied., and scutellaris Wied. As an addition to my paper I subjoin the descriptions which Wiedemann _has given of them, and accompany them with drawings of the wings, which, however, on account of their being only fugitive sketches, have not the same claim to correctness as the figures of the wings of the other species. 6. On the systematic arrangement of the species to.be described. Besides the above mentioned four species I have to describe nineteen new ones, which I leave all united in the genus Zrypeta. Though they differ in their organization, I think my course is both reasonable and proper. It has been already sufficiently shown, how very uncertain the limits of the family Zrypetide are. For the immediate purpose, it will be quite sufficient if insects of other families are no longer mixed with these. The number of accurately known species must increase considerably, before a convenient classification can be thought of. The smaller genera hitherto founded on the various forms of the Trypetina are partly formed on Huropean species, partly estab- lished in a very superficial manner on single species of other parts 62 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. of the globe. Among the former there are some, which are avail- able or may be rendered available by removing the aberrant species from them; the remaining genera either have no claim to the names of genera, or are understood by different authors in so different a sense as to render their adoption more perplexing than useful. But afew of the available genera are represented in North Ame- rica. The genera created for single species have usually been established on account of a single striking character, no informa- tion being given about the other characters ; so it will be next to impossible to place new species in such genera without incurring the risk of gross mistakes. Such being the case, I will be justified, I think, in comprising all species under the head of Zrypeta, in the sense of Meigen and Wiedemann. I should be glad indeed if by the communication of numerous species I was enabled to divide the N. A. Zrypetina into smaller genera. To obtain numerous species is only possible by breeding them, which is a very easy task; for the larve are easily discovered ; they live in stalk-galls, or in berries and berry- like fruits; but most frequently in the flower-heads of Composite, among which they prefer the Oynarocephale to all others. To prevent any misunderstanding I finally have to observe, that in the following descriptions, by the length of the borer I always meant the length of its first joint only, which is also comprised in the indication of the length of the females. The length of the whole borer depends so much on the more or less extension of its three segments, that no certain measure of it can be given. Synopsis of the species described in the sequel.* 1 | Wings pictured (reticulate or banded). 2 Wings not pictured, hyaline. 26 2 { Wings banded. 3 Wings reticulate. 15 3 | Third longitudinal vein with bristles. 4 Third longitudinal vein without bristles. 10 eto black. 1 discolor, n. sp. Abdomen yellow. 5 * If a species is not found among those enumerated in this synopsis, before pronouncing it to be new the Appendices I and II should be con- sulted. This table contains only species described from specimens, and not merely quoted from other works. O. §. SYNOPSIS OF THE SPECIES DESCRIBED IN THE SEQUEL. 63 Face very receding. 2longipennis Wied. Face not receding. 6 { Back of the thorax not striped. 7 Back of the thorax striped. 9 ; § Abdomen with black dots. obliqua Say.* Abdomen without black dots. 8 ( The band rising over the posterior transverse vein is connected with 9 | the preceding on the posterior border. 3 fratria, n. sp. | The band rising over the posterior transverse vein is not connected l with the preceding. 4 suspensa, 0. sp. (The two middle bands of the wing diverge towards the posterior | border. 5 unicolor, n. sp. a4 The two middle bands of the wing are converging towards the poste- rior border. 6 electa Say. Thorax and abdomen differing in color. 7 insecta, n. sp. Thorax and abdomen of the same color. 11 Color of the body yellow. 12 { Color of the body black. : 14 12 { Abdomen with black dots. 8 palposa, n. sp. Abdomen without black dots. 13 Basal third of the wing hyaline. vernonia, n. sp.t fo third of the wing pictured. 9 suavis, 0. sp. | Scutellum yellow. 10 cingulata, n. sp. Scutellum black. 11 polita, n. sp. 15 Wings much widened. 16 Wings not widened. 17 Tip of the wings with an interrupted white seam. Tip of the wings with an uninterrupted white seam. 12 sparsa Wied. 10) | 13 rotundipennis, n. sp. Proboscis geniculated. 18 Proboscis not geniculated. 19 18 { Stigma with a limpid drop. 14 clathrata, n. sp. Stigma without limpid drop. 15 humilis, n. sp. f Reticulation of the wing not radiating at its tip. 20 UReticulation of the wing radiating at its tip. 21 20 { Front exceedingly broad. 16 solidaginis Fitch. Front of moderate breadth. 17 seriata, n. sp. 21 | Wings reticulate only on the apical half. 18 solaris, n. sp. Wings reticulate on their whole surface. 22 { The whole reticulation equally broken. 19 zequalis, n. sp. The reticulation broken much less in the middle. 23 { Abdomen yellow. 24 Abdomen black. 25 * See Appendix III. + Ibid. 64 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 94 J Reticulation paler in the middle. 20 festiva, n. sp. Reticulation everywhere of the same color. 21 bella, n. sp. ( The curvature inside of the first posterior cell considerable. 22 latifrons, n. sp. Or “° | The curvature inside of the first posterior cell very small. [ 23 melanogastra, n. sp. , § Stigma fuscous. albidipennis, n. sp.* t Stigma pale. . alba, n. sp.f 1. Description of the species. 1. ©. discolor Lorw. %. (Tab. II, fig. 1.)—Lutea, abdomine nigro, alarum fasciis quatuor obliquis fuscanis, prima et secunda antice, tertid et quart& postice connexis, vend longitudinali tertié setos4, venulis transversis valde approximatis. Luteous yellow with the abdomen black; wings with four very oblique brownish bands, the two first being anteriorly, two last posteriorly connected; third longitudinal vein with bristles and the two transverse veins approximate. Long. corp. 0.13. Long. al. 0.15. Yellow with a rather glossy black abdomen, which color becomes more blackish-brown near the base. Front proportionately rather narrow; three bristles at each side are of a browner color and directed anteriorly. Antenne yellowish, not reaching as far as the border of the mouth; bristle of the antenne thin, apparently naked. Face descending rather straight downwards, but little excavated. Opening of the mouth proportionately large. Pro- boscis short, palpi somewhat prominent. Upper side of the tho- rax with short yellow hairs and yellowish-brown bristles; it has no pale stripes, but there is an obsolete, paler, longitudinal stripe between it and the pleure. Pleure of the color of the upper side of the thorax, with yellowish bristles; the neighborhood of the cox is blackish. Scutellum with four bristles. Abdomen with short black hairs. Legs yellow, anterior femora with ochra- ceous bristles on the under side. Wings glassy with four very oblique brown bands, which are partly tinged with brownish- yellow on the inside. The first band begins at the base of the wing, where it is connected with the second, runs over the anal cell as far as the base of the third posterior cell, and, including the fourth longitudinal vein, projects a little, whereupon leaving the latter, it bends towards the posterior border of the wing, which it * See Appendix III. + Ibid. TRYPETIDAE. 65 reaches in the middle between the tips of the fourth and fifth lon- ¢ gitudinal veins; its color is yellowish-brown near the base of the ,wings and dark brown beyond the basal cell. The second band runs first from the base of the wing to near the tip of the first longitudinal vein, then crosses the wing obliquely, on the border of which it includes the tip of the fifth longitudinal vein; the two transverse veins are included by it in such a way that their anterior ends are placed exactly on the outside border of the band; the color of this band is brownish-yellow with darker brown edges which gradually overcome the lighter color at the posterior end; also that portion of it which covers the stigma and the space imme- diately beneath it, is dark brown. ‘The third band begins on the costal border immediately behind the stigma and reaches the pos- terior border immediately behind the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein; it is brownish-yellow, edged with dark brown, the posterior end being likewise dark brown. The fourth band begins a little before the tip of the second longitudinal vein and runs on the bor- der of the wing as far as the fourth longitudinal vein, where it is connected with the third band; its color is dark brown, being brownish-yellow only at its anteriorend. The two transverse veins are very near each other and very steep; none of the longitudinal veins is extraordinarily arcuated; the second, third, and fourth longitudinal veins diverge a little at their tips; the bristles of the third longitudinal vein are very distinct and reach as far as its tip. Hab. Cuba. (Riehl.) 2. T. longipenmis Wirp. % & ©. (Tab. HU, fig. 2 4,3 9.)—Flava, angusta, rivulis fasciisque alarum angustarum flavo-fuscanis, facie valde recedente. Yellow, slender; the narrow wings with brownish-yellow rivulets and bands; the face much receding. Long. corp. 0.17—0.26. Long. al. 0.22—0.30. Syn. Zrypeta longipennis WiEDEMANN, Auss. Zweifl. II, 483, 12. — Strauzia armata R. Desvorpy, Myod. 719, 2. (%.) Strauzia inermis R. Desvoipy, Myod. 718, 1. ( 9.) Tephritis trimaculata MacquaRt, Dipt. exot. IT, 226, 8. Tab. XXXI, fig. 3. Trypeta cornigera WALKER, List. Brit. Mus. IV, 1010. Trypeta cornifera WALKER, List. Brit. Mus. IV, 1011. Very variable both in size and in the color of its body and wings, yet readily recognizable. In the palest individuals the whole body is yellow, only a very small dot immediately above the base of the 5 66 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. wings and the tip of the borer being black. In darker individuals, the following markings appear successively: 1. A black double spot in the middle of the anterior border of the thorax; 2. A black spot on each side of the scutellum; 3. A broad black stripe on each side of the metanotum; 4. The black posterior portion of the lateral stripes; 5. The black anterior portion of the lateral stripes; 6. The double stripe in the middle of the thorax, abruptly ending inits centre. The head is rather bright yellow; front very prominent, face much receding; opening of the mouth not widen- ed; palpi and proboscis short, yellow, the bristle with a very short pubescence. Frontal bristles black, the superior ones considerably stout, two of them on each side in the male assume the shape of straight spines, a little incrassated at their tips; in smaller males, however, these spines are not seldom only little stouter than in the females, and of the ordinary form. The lateral border of the thorax and the superior border of the pleurze may have a pale yellow color in life; in dry specimens they are very whitish. From the pale yellow scutellum a broad pale yellow stripe extends to about the middle of the thorax. Hairs and bristles of the thorax black. Seutellum with four black bristles. Abdomen proportionately very narrow, with rather long black hairs. Borer about half as long as the abdomen, with the tip only blackened. Legs yellow, anterior femora with black bristles on the under side. Wings narrow and very long, more elongated and pointed in the males than in the females, but not always in the same degree; the brown- ish-yellow stripes and bands leave the following clear spots: 1. A space near the costal border between the transverse humeral vein and the tip of the auxiliary vein, and having usually a brownish spot in its middle; 2. An oval space immediately below the stigma between the third and fourth longitudinal veins; 3. A tri- angular space immediately beyond the tip of the first longitudinal vein, and reaching from the costal border as far as the third longi- tudinal vein; 4. An arcuated band running obliquely from the costal border between the two transverse veins as far as the fifth longitudinal vein; 5. A triangular space on the posterior border | filling up the second posterior cell, with the exception of an edge along the veins; 6. An arcuate oblique semifascia beginning on the posterior border before the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein, and running as far as the third longitudinal vein; 7. The alary appendage, the posterior angle of the wing, and a large space TRYPETIDAE. 67 adjoining it, and lying before the last longitudinal vein. The transverse humeral vein, and the space of the costa near it, are usually black as well as the space of the latter, where the costal spine is inserted. The brownish-yellow bands of the wings have narrow brown edges, and are in a greater or less extent brown near the tip and the posterior border of the wings. There are specimens in which the bands are much more extended, but those having a part of them obsolete are more common; this fading of the picture of the wings is most frequent in the neighborhood of -the posterior border. The posterior transverse vein is a little oblique; the tips of the third and fourth longitudinal veins are eurved. ‘The circumference of the wings is not always the same in the males; those the frontal bristles of which are most thickened appear to have the most prolonged and pointed wings. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation.—I have had an opportunity of examining the typical individuals of Tryp. longipennis Wied. >. TV. fratria Lorw. 9. (Tab. II, fig. 4.)—Tota lutea, thorace non vittato, alarum rivulis fasciisque luteo-fuscanis, maculam ovatam pellu- cidam in posteriore cellule discoidalis parte includentibus, vend longi- tudinali tertia setosa. Totally luteous yellow; the thorax without stripes; the wings with brown- ish-yellow rivulets and bands, including an ovate pellucid spot in the posterior part of the discal cell; the third longitudinal vein with bris- tles. Long. corp. 0.22. Long. al. 0.22. Rather dark yellow with the seutellum paler and an almost whitish-yellow, not sharply limited stripe, running from the shoulder to the base of the wing; the metanotum at each side with a dot- like black spot. Front of moderate breadth. Antenne yellow, ‘little longer than half the face, with the bristle apparently bare. ‘ Face receding only a little, and slightly excavated below the an- tenne. Proboscis short; palpi slightly projecting. Bristles of the thorax black. Hairs of the abdomen short and black. Borer very short, not flattened, concolorous with the abdomen. Legs - yellow, tibize and tarsi paler than the femora; anterior femora with some black bristles on the underside. The picture of the wings is yellowish-brown, and of the same form as that of the European Tryp. Heracle Linn. The part of it adjacent to the base of the wings reaches from the costal border as far as the dark brownish 68 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. stigma, having, however, between the transverse humeral vein and the tip of the auxiliary vein a rather large and almost hyaline space ; it includes between the third and fourth longitudinal veins an oval transparent spot near the base of the discal cell; it covers the whole of the two posterior basal cells and fills up the two first thirds of the discal cell, running then in a darker color behind the fifth longitudinal vein as far as the tip of this vein, from whence forming a band, it rises above the posterior transverse vein and is connected with the remaining picture in the neighborhood of the small transverse vein. From the latter place a band runs obliquely . to the costal border, where it seams the tip of the wing and pro- . ceeds as far as the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein; on the third longitudinal vein it emits a parallel branch running to the posterior border. The last portion of the third longitudinal vein is only slightly curved; the posterior transverse vein is slightly oblique; the small transverse vein is perpendicular and more than one and a half of its length from the posterior transverse vein. Hab. United States. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation 1.—Tryp. fratria resembles exceedingly the yellow variety of Zryp. Heraclet Linn., and agrees with it especially in the picture of the wings; but it differs from it by its shorter and pro- portionately broader wings, by the greater distance between the two transverse veins, and the curve of the last portion of the third longitudinal vein, which is less considerable. I found also the borer of the palest females of Zryp. Heraclet always black, whereas its color in Zryp. fratria agrees with that of the abdomen. Observation 2.—I have been of the opinion for some time that this species might be Zryp. varipennis Macq., but after a closer examination I find this not admissible, since in Macquart’s figure (Dipt. exot. II, 3, Tab. XXXI, f. 1) the band rising from the posterior border and seaming the posterior transverse vein includes a large clear space behind the fifth longitudinal vein, which does not exist in Zryp. fratria, and the penultimate band is united with the first near the second longitudinal vein, whereas in Zryp. fratria this union takes place at the third longitudinal vein. The state- ment of the metanotum of 7ryp. varipennis being black, whereas in my specimen of Zryp. fratria it is marked with a black dot on each side only, could not be considered as decisive for separating the two species, since the species of this group are very variable in their colors. TRYPETIDAE. 69 4. T. suspemsa Lozw. %. (Tab. II, fig. 5.)—Tota lutea, thorace non vittato, alarum fasciis fuscanis obliquis, postice divergentibus, vena longitudinali tertia setosa. Totally luteous yellow; the thorax not striped; the wings with oblique brownish bands diverging posteriorly; the third longitudinal vein with bristles. Long. corp. 0.21. Long. al. 0.22—0.23. Dark yellow. Front purer and paler yellow; frontal bristles black, rather short, and not very stout. Antenne yellowish, almost as long as the face, with the bristle very thin, and having a very delicate and short pubescence. Face a little receding, with pro- portionately rather deep furrows for the reception of the antenne. Opening of the mouth rather widened ; border of the mouth sharp. Proboscis rather thick, with the suctorial flaps a little prolonged. Palpi broad. Upper side of the thorax without stripes; its pube- scence yellow and exceedingly short, bristles black. Scutellum with four black bristles. Metanotum colored alike with the rest of the body. Hairs of the abdomen short and pale, but the bris- tles at its end black. Legs yellow; anterior femora not very stout, with some black bristles on the under side. Wings not very long; their markings are mostly yellowish-brown, and leave the following hyaline spots: 1. A small triangular one on the costal border immediately behind the tip of the first longitudinal vein, reaching as far as the third longitudinal vein, and joining there a hyaline spot which lies below the stigma between the third and fourth longitudinal veins; 2. An oblique band slightly curved, which rises on the posterior border, near the tip of the last longitudinal vein, and ascends between the transverse veins as high as the third longitudinal vein; 3. A triangular spot of the posterior border, occupying the greater part of the second posterior cell, and reach- ing with its apex to a little beyond the fourth longitudinal vein ; 4. An oblique band which begins at the posterior border, imme- diately beyond the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein, and ascends as high as the second longitudinal vein, so that the two oblique clear bands almost meet with their anterior ends. The small transverse vein is at the end of the second third of the discal cell, and, like the posterior transverse vein, has a slightly oblique posi- tion; the end of the fourth longitudinal vein is distinctly curved forwards; the posterior angle of the anal cell is drawn out into a long point. flab. Cuba. (Poey.) 70 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 5. T.umicolor Lorw. %. (Tab. Il, fig. 6.)—Flava, thoracis vittis scutelloqgue multo pallidioribus, fasciis alarum fusco-flavescentibus, pos- tice divergentibus, vend longitudinali tertid setosa. Yellow, the stripes of the thorax as well as the scutellam much paler; the brownish-yellow bands of the wings diverging posteriorly; the third longitudinal vein with bristles. Long. corp. 0.26. Long. al. 0.27. Rather pale yellow. Fronta little brighter, of moderate breadth; frontal bristles black, the superior ones rather stout. The yel- lowish antenne are nearly as long as the face, bristle very short, beset with a very short and delicate pubescence. Face a little re- ceding, the furrows for the reception of the antenne proportion- ately rather deep. Opening of the mouth rather widened, border of the mouth sharp. Proboscis rather thick, with the suctorial flaps slightly prolonged; palpi broad. ‘The upper side of the thorax, above the base of the wings, shows a stripe running from the suture to the posterior border of the thorax, and has in the described specimen rather a whitish color, which seems to have been pale yellow in the living insect; of the same color are the shoulder and the space behind it, the scutellum and a large spot above the poisers; a broad stripe of the same color seems to run from the middle of the posterior border of the thorax to nearly its middle. The dark stripes usual in other species are indicated by rows of blackish spots; they may, however, have become visible only after the drying up of the insect. The short hairs of the thorax are pale yellowish, the bristles black. Scutellum with four black bristles. Metanotum with a black stripe on each side. Abdomen with pale, very short hairs and brownish-black bristles at its end; last segment a little prolonged, with an indistinct brown longitu- dinal line on each side. Legs yellow; anterior femora with some brown bristles on their under side. Wings rather large; the bands are brownish-yellow with brown edges, entirely brown near the posterior border and the tip of the wing; the clear spaces which they leave are as follows: 1. A very oblique one, interrupted on the third longitudinal vein, with its anterior end forming a trian- gular spot, placed beyond the tip of the first longitudinal vein, and running through the base of the discal cell as far as the base of the posterior basal cell; 2. A band, having the form of an 8, rising on the posterior border, near the tip of the last longitudinal vein, and, after running between the transverse veins, ascending as high as the second longitudinal vein, from whence it turns again TRYPETIDAE. al to the posterior border, which it joins in the neighborhood of the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein; 8. A large triangular spot of the posterior border, which occupies a great portion of the second posterior cell, and with its tip reaches beyond the fourth longi- tudinal vein. The stigma is long and rather dark brownish. Transverse veins straight and steep; the fourth longitudinal vein is distinctly curved forwards at its end, asin 7ryp. parallela Wied.; the posterior angle of the anal cell is drawn out into a large point. Hab. New Granada. (Schott.) 6. T. electa Say. 9. (Tab. II, fig. 7.)—Flava, thoracis vittis scutel- logue multo pallidioribus, alis fuscano-fasciatis, vend longitudinali tertia setosa, tibiis posticis nigro-ciliatis. Yellow, the stripes of the thorax as well as the scutellum much paler; the wings with straight brownish bands; the third longitudinal vein with bristles and the upper side of the posterior tibie ciliated with black bristles. Long. corp. 0.29. Long. al. 0.29. Syn. Trypeta electa Say, Journ. Acad. Philad. VI, 185, 1. Lephritis flavonotata MacquaRt, Dipt. exot. Suppl. V, 125. Tab. VII, fig. 9. This very distinct species has in the picture of the wings a great resemblance with the European 7ryp. alternata Fall. Yel- low. Front of middling breadth; frontal bristles black, rather stout. Face slightly receding, with rather deep furrows for the reception of the antenne. Antenne yellow, reaching only a little beyond the middle of the face; the bristle bare and very thin. Opening of the mouth large, but not widened; border of the mouth rather sharp, but not projecting. Proboscis small; palpi rather broad. On the upper side of the thorax there is a pale yellow (almost ivory color in the dry specimen) stripe running from the shoulder to the base of the wing, and a second above the base of the wing running from the suture as far as the posterior border of the thorax. Another stripe of the same color runs from the middle of the posterior border to beyond the middle of the thorax, where it is gradually pointed and obliterated; the stripe lying above the base of the wing is interiorly edged with black in the described specimen. Hairs of the thorax short, pale yellowish ; bristles black. Scutellum of the color of the pale stripes of the thorax and a black spot on each side of the base of the lateral border; it has four bristles. Pleurse with a pale yellow longitudinal stripe in its middle and two black little spots above it. Abdomen yellow, 72 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. with short black hairs and black bristles on the posterior borders of the two last segments; the last segment has a dot-like black spot on each side near the base. Borer short, thick, not flattened at all, a little rounded at its end, of the color of the abdomen, and covered with black hairs. Legs yellowish; anterior femora with black bristles on their under side; the under side of the middle and posterior femora with some black bristles only near the tip, the bristles being shorter on the middle femora; the pos- terior tibiz on their whole upper side are densely fringed with rather long black bristles, which afford a very characteristic mark of this species. Wings hyaline, with brown bands. The first of these bands is the least regular, and runs from the transverse humeral vein as far as the end of the anal cell, the posterior angle of which is drawn out into a long point; this anal cell, as well as the basal cell lying before it, is brownish-yellow. The second band, beginning with the short stigma, runs over the small trans- verse vein, and, after crossing the discal cell, reaches the posterior border, on which it is connected more or less distinctly with the posterior end of the following band. The latter begins on the costal border before the tip of the second longitudinal vein, and after running over the posterior transverse vein in a straight direc- tion, reaches the posterior border of the wing. Its anterior end is perfectly connected with the last band, which seams the wing as far as a little beyond the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein. Be- tween the second and third bands there is still a yellowish-brown line drawn perpendicularly from the costal border to the third longitudinal vein. Transverse veins straight; the small transverse vein is a little beyond the middle of the discal cell. Hab. Florida. (Osten-Sacken.) 47. T. imsecta Lorw. 9. (Tab. II, fig. 8.)—Thorace nigro, capite, abdomine pedibusque luteis, alarum nigrarum incisuris marginalibus guttulisque inter venarum longitudinalium tertiam et quartam tribus vel quatuor pellucidis, vena longitudinali tertiaé nuda, setis scutelli duabus. Thorax black; head, abdomen, and legs luteous; wings black, with limpid incisions on the borders, and three or four limpid drops between the third and fourth longitudinal veins; third longitudinal vein bare ; scutellum with two bristles. Long. corp. 0.14. Long. al. 0.14. Of the group of the European 7ryp. rotundiventris Fall. Head dirty yellow. Front rather narrow, more so towards its anterior TRYPETIDAE. 13 end; frontal bristles brown; the row of rather long bristles at the posterior orbit whitish. Antenne yellowish, nearly as long as the face. Cheeks descending only a little below the eyes. Thorax and scutellum black, the neighborhood of the cox brown. Hairs of the thorax short, pale yellowish, bristles brown. Scutel- lum with two long brown bristles. Abdomen brownish-yellow ; borer not quite so long as the two last segments united, much broader at the base, broad and abrupt at the end, flattened, con- colorous with the abdomen. Legs yellow. Wings black, with pellucid spots. On the costal border there is a small spot before the transverse humeral vein; a similar spot projecting a little from the first longitudinal vein lies beyond the transverse humeral vein, and a smaller one between it and the tip of the auxiliary vein; it is followed by two triangular spots of equal size, the first of which is immediately beyond the tip of the first longitudinal vein, and touches the third longitudinal vein at its junction with the small transverse vein. On the posterior border of the wing there are six clear excisions, the two first of which coalesce with the grayish hyaline axillary angle of the wing; the third reaches the fifth longitudinal vein; the fourth lying behind the tip of the fifth longitudinal vein is more cloudy than the others, and goes a little beyond the fifth longitudinal vein; the fifth accompanies the steep posterior transverse vein at its hind side, and reaches as far as the fourth longitudinal vein; the sixth has a more inclined position and a sharper tip, with which it reaches the fifth longi- tudinal vein. In the middle of the broad first posterior cell there is a considerable hyaline drop; a much smaller drop is seen at the anterior side of the fourth longitudinal vein, in the. middle of its penultimate portion, and one or two hardly visible drops at the antepenultimate portion of this vein. The second longitudinal vein is slightly undulating, and diverges more than usually towards the end from the third longitudinal vein; the posterior angle of the anal cell is drawn out into a prolonged point. Hab. Cuba. (Poey.) 74 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 8. T. palposa Lorw. %. (Tab. II, fig. 9.)—Flava, abdomine punc- torum nigrorum seriebus quatuor picto, alis hyalinis luteo-fasciatis, vend longitudinali tertia nuda. Yellow, abdomen with four rows of black dots, wings hyaline with luteous bands and the third longitudinal vein bare. Long. corp. 0.26—0.27. Long. al. 0.26. It is nearly allied to Zryp. arctit Deg., lappe Cederli, etc. Yellow; front brighter yellow, rather broad; frontal bristles black- ish, the small bristles of the posterior orbit whitish. Antenne yellow, descending a little beyond the middle of the face, their third joint rather broad; the bristle of the antenne apparently bare, with the base slightly incrassated. Face a little receding, excavated in the middle, so that the border of the mouth is pro- jecting ; the furrows for the reception of the antenne rather flat. Opening of the mouth very wide; proboscis thick and short; palpi broad, rather large, with some small black bristles. Thorax with a large glossy black spot in the middle of its anterior side; its upper side blackish, with the exception of the lateral and posterior borders, and of a large triangular spot which rises from the poste- rior border; hairs whitish-yellow; bristles blackish; two of the latter, inserted before the scutellum, are placed on larger black dots, and two before them on smaller dots. Scutellum with four bristles, yellow, only a little blackened at the base of the lateral border. Metanotum black. Pleurz with some brown spots, and above the posterior cox with a small black spot. The third, fourth, and fifth segments of the abdomen have each at its anterior border four small black spots, the intermediate ones being more approximated; the fifth segment is much prolonged, and has, moreover, a black spot in each posterior corner. The rather coarse hairs of the abdomen are yellowish on the first segments and the anterior part of the middle ones, the remaining ones are black. Legs yellow; anterior femora with black bristles on the under side. The color of the picture of the wings is brownish-yellow in my specimen, which is apparently a little faded ; it extends on the costal border from the base to the tip of the first longitudinal vein, and, on the first portion of this extent, reaches as far as the fourth longitudinal vein, and on the second half as far as the third only. From the tip of the first longitudinal vein a band runs over the small transverse vein; a second band runs from the costal border over the posterior transverse vein; these two bands become more TRYPETIDAE. 35 obsolete towards the posterior border, and almost coalesce in its neighborhood. The first of them is also connected with a stripe which edges the fifth longitudinal vein. The edge of the tip of the wing is perfectly connected with the second baad, and reaches a little beyond the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein. The anal cell is brownish-yellow. Transverse veins steep; the small trans- verse vein a little before the last third of the discal cell. Hab. Northern Wisconsin. (Kennicott.) 9. T. suavis Lozrw. %. (Tab. II, fig. 10.)—Pallide flava, unicolor, alarum hyalinarum litura basali fasciisque tribus nigricantibus in formam litere S confluentibus, vena longitudinali tertid nuda. Pale yellow, unicolorous ; wings hyaline, with a blackish basal stripe and three blackish bands confluent in an S-shaped mark; third longitudinal vein naked. Long. corp. 0.20. Long. al. 0.21. | Of this species, very conspicuous by the peculiar picture of its wings, I unfortunately possess only one individual, much injured in carrying. It is everywhere pale yellow, and its thorax and secutellum have no trace of a paler picture. Hairs very short, whitish-yellow on the upper side of the thorax, rather blackish on the pleure; bristles all black. Scutellum with four bristles. Wings hyaline; the veins at the base of the wing yellowish; a blackish not very striking stripe runs from the tip of the basal humeral vein to the posterior angle of the anal cell, which is drawn out into a point. The remainder of the picture of the wings con- sists of three very broad, rather blackish bands; the first runs from the black stigma, widening gradually perpendicularly to near the posterior border, where it is connected with the second, which rises over the posterior transverse vein as far as the costal border, and connects there completely with the third band which seams the tip of the wing. ‘The connection of the first and second bands is somewhat interrupted by a clear incision reaching from the poste- rior border a little into the discal cell. Above the end of this incision there is another clear spot. Stigma small; none of the longitudinal veins unusually curved; the small transverse vein is somewhat before the middle of the discal cell and below the very tip of the first longitudinal vein; the posterior transverse vein is only a little arcuated; the two transverse veins are steep, not perfectly perpendicular. flab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 76. DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 10. T. cingulata Lorw. ¢. (Tab. II, fig. 11.)—Nigra, capite pedibusque luteis, thoracis margine laterali scutelloque flavis, margine segmentorum abdominalium singulorum postico albido, alarum hyali- narum fasciis quatuor punctoque apicali nigris. Black with the head and legs luteous, the lateral borders of the thorax and the scutellum yellow, the posterior borders of the abdominal seg- ments whitish; wings hyaline with four bands and an apical dot black. Long. corp. 0.22. Long. al. 0.20. It belongs to the relationship of the European Zryp. cerasi Linn. (= signata Meig.), a group which must not be confounded with that of Zryp. solstitialis Linn., closely alike in its coloring. Black. Head rather dark yellow, front brighter yellow, of middle breadth, with rather long black bristles. Antenne reaching to a little beyond the middle of the face, last joint rather narrow, and with the anterior corner rather sharp. Face straight, descending, with moderately deep furrows for the reception of the antenne ; border of the mouth by no means prominent. Proboscis and palpi short. Thorax black; the humeral callosity and a longitudinal stripe running from the latter to the base of the wing are bright yellow. The bristles of the thorax and the four bristles of the yellow scutellum black; the base and greatest part of the lateral border of the latter black. Metanotum and abdomen glossy black, the latter with broad whitish (perhaps more yellow in life) edges of the posterior borders and black hairs. Borer exceedingly short. Legs dark yellow; femora a little brownish at the base ; the anterior femora with small brown bristles on the under side; the two posterior tibia with short black bristles on the upper side. Wings somewhat broad, especially in the neighborhood of the base, with four black bands and a little black spot at the tip. The first band runs from the basal humeral vein to the posterior angle of the anal cell, which is drawn out into a point. The second is broadest, running from the black stigma beyond the fifth longi- tudinal vein, and ending abruptly in the middle between this vein and the border of the wing. The third, which runs over the pos- terior transverse vein, is also rather perpendicular, and completely reaches the posterior border of the wing. The fourth band is perfectly united with the third on the costal border, and reaches the posterior border behind the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein, so that it has a rather oblique position. The small apical spot TRYPETIDAE. Ut includes the tip of the third longitudinal vein. Both transverse veins are straight and perpendicular. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken. ) i. VT. pokita Lorw. 9. (Tab. II, fig. 12.)—Atra, nitida, capite pedibusque flavis, scutello tumido, alarum albido-hyalinarum macula basali atra fasciisque tribus latissimis fusco-nigris. Deep black, shining; head and legs yellow, scutellum inflated; wings whitish-hyaline with a basal black spot and three very broad brownish- black bands. Long. corp. 0.25. Long. al. 0.17—0.18. Belongs to the relationship of the European Tryp. Wiedemanni - Meig., the species of which chiefly agree in their inflated scutellum and short wings, while they differ among each other much in the structure of their face. Front bright yellow, beautifully yellowish- brown above, considerably broad; frontal bristles black. Antennse yellowish, descending to the middle of the face, and having a black bristle, the pubescence of which is exceedingly short and hardly visible. Face whitish-yellow, a little receding, its middle rather flat; border of the mouth not prominent at all; opening of the mouth rather small; proboscis and palpi short. The inferior part of the occiput is whitish-yellow, the superior blackish. Thorax rather convex, altogether glossy black, bare, but the broad lateral stripes are bordered everywhere with a row of yellowish short hairs, and the broad middle stripe is divided by a longitudinal row of such hairs. Bristles black. Scutellum shining black, very con- vex, as if inflated. Metanotum black, with an indistinct whitish reflection. Pleurze shining black, with a few stiff yellowish hairs and some black bristles. Abdomen black; the hairs rather stiff, whitish on the posterior part of the first segment; on the second and third segments they are black, except the hindmost ones of the posterior border, which are whitish; on the two last segments they all are whitish. Borer shining black, flattened, pointed, abundantly as long as the abdomen, with very short black hairs. Legs dirty fuscous-yellow; femora not much incrassated, the anterior ones with a few black hairs on the under side. Wings short and rather broad, having the transverse veins very approximated and perfectly perpendicular ; they are rather whitish, with very broad brownish- black bands. Their innermost base is yellowish, then follows a large triangular rather deep black spot, which reaches from the costal border as far as the axillary incision of the wing, and only 78 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. little exceeds the basal cells. The two first black or brownish- black bands are united on the costal border, so as to form an inverted V; the second of them runs from the stigma over the transverse veins, and has a more inclined position than the first ; the isolated third band has a position similar to that of the second, and seams the tip of the wing some distance beyond the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein, without coalescing anywhere completely with the border of the wing. Hab. Mississippi. (Schaum.) Washington. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation.—The Brazilian Urophora connexa Macq. (Dipt. exot. Suppl. III, 64, Tab. VII, fig. 10) has the picture of the wings rather similar to those of Zryp. polita. But being greenish- black, and having the last band of the wings completely connected with the preceding, and running straight on with the costal border, but not reaching the tip of the third longitudinal vein, it is evi- dently different from Zryp. polita. 12. VT. sparsa Wiep. % and 9. (Tab. I, fig. 13.)—Fusca, alis latis- simis, rotundatis, nigris, albido-guttulatis et margine apicali albo ornatis. Brown; wings very broad and rounded, black with small drops, and the apical border whitish. Long. corp. 0.27—0.30. Long. al. 0.26. Syy. Zrypeta sparsa WiEpEMANN, Auss. Zweifl. II, 492. Trypeta caliptera Say, Journ. Acad. Phil. VI, 187, 3. Platystoma latipennis Macquanrt, Dipt. exot. II, 3,200. Tab. XXVI, fig. 8. Acinia noveboracensis Fircu, First Rep. etc. 67. Of a brownish-red, sometimes more brown color. Front broad, brownish-yellow, frontal bristles black; the bristles of the poste- rior orbit whitish-yellow. Antenne descending below the middle of the face, their bristles with a short, but distinct pubescence. Face excavated in the middle, and marked with two large deep black dots; another small deep black spot is between the antenna and the anterior angle of the eye. Eyes with three very distinct transverse bands. Palpi dark brown, usually blackish at the tip ; suctorial flaps a little prolonged. On the upper side of the thorax there are usually two or three darker longitudinal lines, and a broad dark-brown edge of the lateral border. The short hairs of the thorax and scutellum are whitish-yellow, the bristles of both black. Of the four bristles placed in the middle of the thorax, the two first are near the transverse suture. Pleura above with whit- TRYPETIDAE. 19 ish-yellow, below with black hairs, the bristles mixed among them black. The abdomen usually bears two rows of large blackish spots, of a rather quadrangular form, leaving between them a brown middle streak, and not completely reaching the posterior borders of the single segments; sometimes they extend so much, that only the posterior borders of the segments retain a paler color, whereas the whole surface is blackish. Borer blackish-brown, sometimes with a red spot on each side, a little pointed, rather flat ; its first segment is a little longer than the two last segments of the abdomen taken together. The hairs of the abdomen are mostly black, a few light ones being among them. Legs paler reddish- brown, the anterior femora often partly blackened, with some black bristles on the upper and under sides. Wings exceedingly broad, with the uninterrupted whitish seam of the tip forming a narrow crescent; on their surface there are numerons clear drops rather equally scattered, but totally wanting in that part of the black color which adjoins the white crescent, as well as before the first longitudinal vein. At the tip of the first longitudinal vein, a small, clear, but little distinct stripe is seen. The small transverse vein straight and perpendicular, the posterior one a little curved and steep. Hab. Northern Wisconsin. (Kennicott.) Observation.—I possess a specimen, which is distinguished by its much paler, almost dull testaceous color, its less enlarged wings and the somewhat larger size of the clear drops, but as to the other characters agrees so perfectly with the ordinary specimens of Z7ryp. sparsa Wied. that I do not venture to declare it a different species. 13. VT. rotundipemmis Lorw. 4%. (Tab. Il, fig. 14.)—Fusca, alis latissimis, rotundatis, nigris, albido-guttulatis et in marginibus ante- riore et apicali maculas minutas albidas gerentibus. Brown; wings broad and rounded, black, with very small whitish drops in the middle, and small whitish spots on the costal and apical borders. Long. corp. 0.28. Long. al. 0.26. Of this species I have only one specimen, which is unfortunately so much injured in the journey as to prevent me from giving a full description. However, as it is very nearly related to Tryp. sparsa Wied., it will be recognized even from my incomplete de- scription. ‘The color is the same; the wings are still shorter and broader, especially the cell which lies before the first longitudinal 80 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA, vein is much broader; the third longitudinal vein is much more undulated, and the last portion of the fourth longitudinal vein is shorter than the posterior transverse vein, whereas it is a little longer in Zryp. sparsa. None of the drops on the wings of Zryp. sparsa is of a more considerable size than the others, whereas Tryp. rotundipennis has such a drop between the third and fourth longitudinal veins, opposite to the base of the discal cell; the drops are in general equally distributed in Zryp. sparsa, they are much more irregularly grouped in Zryp. rotundipennis ; the size and number of the drops diminishes a little from the base towards the apex in Zryp. sparsa; their number only, not their size diminishes in Zryp. rotundipennis ; their size increasing towards the posterior border in Zryp. sparsa, this is not the case in Zryp. rotundipennis. In Tryp. sparsa the white crescent seaming the apex of the wing is entire, in Zryp. rotundipennts it is dissolved into several spots. Finally, the anterior border of the wings of Tryp. rotundipennis bears a row of small clear spots, whereas Tryp. sparsa has no trace of them. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 14. T. clathrata Lorw. 9. (Tab. I, fig. 15.)—Cana, capite pedi- busque flavis, femoribus litur4 nigra signatis, alis rare reticulatis, stig- mate atro albo-guttato, peristomio modice producto, proboscide breviter geniculata. Whitish-gray; head and legs yellow; wings with a diffuse reticulation, and the black stigma including a limpid drop; oral border moderately prolonged, proboscis shortly geniculated. Long. corp. 0.12 Long. al. 0.13. Head yellowish; the lateral borders of the front, the face, and the much descending cheeks whitish. The bristles on the front black, on the sides of the vertex and posterior orbit white. The face with rather deep subantennal furrows prolonged to the oral border, which is not very projecting. Antenne fulvous, rather | short; the anterior corner of the third joint a little acute; the second joint with very short black hairs; antennal bristle black and moderately long, with the pubescence scarcely visible. Tho- rax and scutellum whitish gray, with short pubescence and black bristles. The scutellum bears four bristles, the two apical ones being much shorter and less stout than the lateral ones; its tip is sometimes yellow. The whitish-gray abdomen has two rows of very TRYPETIDAE. 81 distinct black spots. The hair and even the bristles on the hind border of the last segment are white. The flat ovipositor is glossy- black, as long as the two last segments of the abdomen and mode- rately tapering towards the tip. The legs and anterior coxe are dark yellow, with white hairs; the thighs with a blackish stripe somewhat covered with whitish dust. “Wings not very narrow, hya- line, with the base very slightly yellowish; their black reticulation is not very dense and not very delicate, extending towards the base of the wing as far as the base of the discal cell, and dissolving towards the axillary angle into some scattered spots ; stigma black, with a whitish dot; the middle and posterior transverse veins rather approximate. _ Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken. ) Observation.—The proboscis of this species being short with the suctorial flaps but moderately prolonged, attention is to be paid to its true place, which is among the species with a geniculated pro- boscis. 15. 7. humilis Lorw. %. (Tab. II, fig. 17.)—Cinerea, capite pedi- busque flavis, femoribus nigris, alis rare reticulatis, stigmate atro non guttato, peristomio valde producto, proboscide geniculata. Cinereous; head and legs yellow, with the femora black; reticulation of the wings diffuse, and the black stigma including no limpid drop; oral border much prolonged ; proboscis geniculated. Long. corp. 0.09. Long. al. 0.1. Among the kindred of the Kuropean 7ryp. elongatula Loew, but in its habit more resembling Tryp. absinthit Fabr. Head yellow, considerably prolonged anteriorly. Front yellow, dis- tinctly margined with white at the orbit; frontal bristles black. Face excavated with the anterior border of the mouth much pro- longed. Antenne bright yellow, proportionately large and broad, reaching as far as the prolonged border of the mouth; the ante- rior corner of the third joint a little pointed ; the second joint with very short black hairs; antennal bristles very long, black, with a very short and hardly visible pubescence. Thorax and scutellum yellowish ashy-gray with short whitish-yellow hairs and black bristles. In the middle of the thorax there are four bristles, the two foremost being very near the suture. Scutellum with only two long bristles rather distant from the tip and not close by its lateral border. Metanotum black with grayish pollen. Abdomen ashy- 6 82 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. gray with two rows of rather large blackish spots. Its hairs are whitish yellow; some black bristles on the posterior border of the prolonged last segment. ‘Tip of the first joint and the second joint of the coxe rather dark yellow. Femora brownish-black, with dark yellow tips. Tibiz and tarsi dark yellow. Wings pro- portionately rather long and narrow. Their reticulation is black, rather diffuse and coarse; the base of the wing as far as the base of the discal cell has no reticulation. The black-stigma includes no clear dot. Moreover, the reticulation of the wings is somewhat variable. 'Tgansverse veins rather near each other. Hab. Cuba, (Poey.) Observation.—I have a female likewise captured in Cuba, which, I think, belongs to the present species. It resembles the male in everything but the femora, which are darkened to a much smaller extent, and not with black, but brown. The borer is black, flat, about as long as the two last segments of the abdomen taken together. 16. T. solidaginis Fircu. 4% and 9. (Tab. II, fig. 16.)—Rufo ferruginea, capite pedibusque flavioribus, fronte latissima, setis scutelli valde convexi duabus, alis fusco-reticulatis, incisuris una anteriore, duabus posterioribus apiceque hyalinis, parcissime fusco-maculatis. Brownish-ferruginous with the head and legs more yellow; front very broad; scutellum very convex with two bristles. Wings reticulated with fuscous having one limpid space at the costa and two at the posterior border scarcely dotted with fuscous. Long. corp. 0.26. Long. al. 0.26. Syn. Acinia solidaginis Fircu. First Rep. 66. This remarkable species, which, according to Mr. Fitch, produces round galls on the stems of Solidago, has no near relations among the European Zrypete. In consequence of the extraordinary breadth of its front, the breadth and convexity of its thorax, and the in- flation of its large scutellum, it has the appearance of a large Lipara. It is brownish ferruginous. Head more yellow, face almost whitish. The bristles of the unusually broad front are black, smaller and weaker than in most other species, so that one might easily be tempted to refer the species to the Ortalide, if the structure of the auxiliary vein did not prove that it belongs here. Face deepened in the middle, prominent again underneath. . P. caeruleiventris Lorw. %.—Capite thoraceque cinereis opacis, abdomine chalybeo nitido, antennis palpisque flavis, pedibus nigris, tarsis posterioribus rufis, alis hyalinis vitta latissima atra, mar- gini antico contigua, pictis. Head and thorax opaque ashy-gray, abdomen shining steel-blue ; antenna and palpi yellow; legs black, posterior tarsi red; wings hyaline, with an exceedingly broad, deep black longitudinal stripe on the costa. Long. corp. 0.15. Long. al. 0.16. Front ashy-gray. Antenne reddish-yellow. Face whitish-gray, slightly convex, with rather slender small bristles on the sides; oral cavity small; clypeus projecting a little beyond the border of the oral margin. Palpi pale yellowish, a little broader than usual. Upper side of the thorax ashy-gray without any gloss. Pleuree thinly dusted with grayish, and consequently blacker and rather glossy. Scutellum dusted with brown, shining black at the tip. Abdomen shining steel-blue ; the first segment but little shortened, the second as long as the first, the three following longer; even the narrow sixth segment is distinctly visible. Legs black, the foremost with dark brown knees; middle and hind tarsi yel- lowish-red with blackish-brown tip; the fore tarsi have only DISCOCERINA. 145 the base brownish-red. At the costal margin of the wing there is a broad, deep-black band, running from the base to the tip of the third longitudinal vein; its posterior limit runs from the base of the wing along the middle of the discoidal cell to nearly the pos- terior transverse vein, recedes from it suddenly almost to the third longitudinal vein, follows this vein first at a little, then gradually at a greater distance, and lastly turns to its tip; the posterior part of the wing is rather dull glassy, and almost grayish at the axillary angle; the veins in the latter are brownish, those in the blackish parts of the wing black. The place of this species in the system is very deceptive; for at a superficial view the thickened costal vein seems to reach only the third longitudinal vein; but this deception arises from its color being black as far as the third longitudinal vein, and very pale between this and the fourth. Hab. Cuba. (Poey.) Gen. VI. DISCOCERINA Maca. The second joint of the antennz has a distinct spine, the third is rounded ; the bristle pectinated. The face on its upper part is distinctly keeled, in the middle more or less inflated, receding again towards the border of the mouth. Clypeus projecting very little beyond the border of the mouth or entirely concealed ; cheeks moderately descending beneath the eyes. The costal vein attains the fourth longitudinal vein. Upper side of the inter- mediate tibice without stout bristles. Dzscocerina stands between the genera Pszlopa Fall. and Hecamede Hal., being distinguished from Psilopa by the more rounded form of the third joint of the antennee and the keel on the upper part of the face; from Heca- mede chiefly by the cheeks descending much less beneath the eyes. I can describe only two North American species of this genus, yet - four are known to me as occurring in Europe. [Three more species, reproduced below, have been published by Mr. Loew since. —O. 8. ] i. D. lacteipemmis Lorw. 4 .—Cinerascens, opaca, antennis, geni- bus, tibiarum apice tarsisque flavis, alis albidis, vena costali atra. Opaque, ashy gray; antennez, knees, tibie at the tips and tarsi yellow; wings whitish with deep black costal vein. Long. corp. 0.11. Long. al. 0.12. Very similar to the European Hecamede costata Loew, but easily 10 ; 146 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. distinguished by its cheeks descending much less beneath the eyes. Front with yellowish-gray dust. Antenne reddish-yellow, the third joint a little infuscated on its apical margin; bristle with a few rays. Face a little more yellowish than the front, distinctly keeled on its upper half, then moderately convex, and receding a little towards the border of the mouth. LEye-rings downwards rather broad ; the uppermost of the bristles, inserted near the eye-rings, is more removed towards the middle of the face. Cheeks remarkably de- scending beneath the eyes for a Discocerina. Palpi pale yellowish. Upper side of the thorax and scutellum rather light ashy-gray. Pleure more whitish-gray. Abdomen light ashy-gray, appearing, on account of the shortness of the first segment, to consist of four segments, the last of which is at least as long again as the penulti- mate. Femora and tibiz black, the former with the extreme tips, the latter with the base and tip yellowish to a greater extent. Tarsi yellowish with blackish tips. Halteres whitish. Wings whitish, especially if viewed in an oblique direction. Costal vein black, the other veins remarkably paler; the second segment of the costal vein is about half as long again as the third. Hab. Washington. (Osten-Sacken). 2, D. parva Lorw. 9.—Obscure cinerea, opaca, abdomine nigricante ; antennis, genibus, tibiarum apice tarsisque flavis, alis cinereo-hyalinis. Dark ashy gray, opaque, abdomen rather black; antenna, knees, tibie at their tips and tarsi yellow; wings grayish-hyaline. Long. corp. 0.07. Long. al. 0.09. Though similar to Discoc. lacteipennis, it is easily distinguished by its much smaller size, nearly black abdomen and grayish-hyaline wings not showing any trace of whitish color. Antennz brownish- yellow, second and third joints brownish on the upper margin ; bristle with four or five long rays. Face dusted with whitish-gray, very distinctly keeled on its upper half, farther beneath rather con- vex, and receding a little again towards the border of the mouth ; in proportion to the size of the insect, it is narrower than in Dis- coc. lacteipennis. Eye-rings exceedingly narrow, not becoming broader downwards. Among the bristles standing in its neighbor- hood, the uppermost is a little more advanced towards the middle of the face. Cheeks descending only a little beneath the eyes. Palpi brownish-yellow. Upper side of the thorax and scutellum blackish ashy gray, opaque; the pleure likewise. Abdomen gray- - DISCOCERINA. 147 ish-black, opaque, almost pure black and shining towards the end; first segment not strikingly shortened. Femora and tibiz black ; knees, tibie at their tips and tarsi yellowish. Halteres white. Wings grayish-hyaline, with blackish-brown veins; the second seg- ment of the costal vein is at least half as long again as the third. Hab. Washington. (Osten-Sacken.) 3. D. orbitalis Lorw. %. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 354, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Cinerea, opaca, colore thoracis magis in ochraceum, abdominis in nigrum vergente, antennis rufis, oculorum orbita candida, alis hyalinis, segmento costali secundo tertii longitudi- nem modice superante. Cinereous, opaque, color of the thorax merging in ochraceous, that of the abdomen in black, antenne rufous, orbit of the eyes shining white, wings hyaline, second costal segment a little longer than the third. Long. corp. 0.065. Long. al. 0.07. | Head obscure cinereous, opaque, orbit of the eyes rather broad, not dilated below the eyes, shining white. Face rather broad, the npper half distinctly keeled, the lower half convex, about six small bristles each side, which are more distant from the orbite than is generally the case in this genus. Cheeks moderately narrow. Antenne rufescent, third joint rather obscure. On the upper side of the thorax and on the scutel the .cinereous color merges in ochraceous ; pleurze somewhat hoary. Abdomen darker than the rest of the body, black towards the apex, very slightly glossy. Femora black, hoary, with a whitish pollen; tibiz and tarsi yel- lowish, the former with a broad brown ring, the latter with the tip brown. Halteres white. Wings pure hyaline; second segment of the costa a little longer than the third. Hab. Washington. (Osten-Sacken.) 4, BD. simaplex Loew. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr., p. 355, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Cinerea, opaca, antennis nigris, setis faciei utrinque duabus, genis latioribus, tarsis flavescentibus, apicem versus nigris, alis hyalinis. Cinereous, opaque, antenne black, two bristles each side of the face, cheeks rather broad, tarsi flavescent, black towards the apex, wings hyaline. Long. corp. 0.07. Long. al. 0.09. Very like D. lacteipennis, but easily distinguished by its. black 148 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. antenne, the smaller number of facial bristles and their different position, finally, by its hardly whitish wings. Cinereous, opaque. Front rather broad, a little darker than the remainder of the body, with an impressed longitudinal line on each side; frontal lunule very narrow, whitish pollinose. Antenne black, a whitish polli- nose dot on the upper edge of the second joint, bristle pectinated with four or five long hairs. Face moderately broad, gibbous, its upper half distinctly keeled, the lower one convex, receding at the aperture of the mouth. Two bristles on each side of the face, approximated to the eyes. The very narrow orbit of the eyes becomes broader on their under side. Cheeks broader than in most Discocerine. The cinereous color merges into yellowish on the thorax ; on the upper side of the abdomen, especially towards the apex, it becomes more distinctly hoary. Feet concolorous to the rest of the body, hoary with a whitish pollen; anterior tarsi yellowish, blackish towards the tip; hind tarsi entirely obscure. Halteres white. Wings hyaline, slightly tinged with an impure whitish, costal vein not incrassated. Hab. Maryland. (Osten-Sacken.) 5. D. leucoprocta Lorw. 9. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 355, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Cinerea, abdominis atri segmento ultimo niveo, alis hyalinis. Cinereous, abdomen black, its last segment snow white, wings hyaline. Long. corp. 0.064. Long. al. 0.07. Front brownish-cinereous, opaque. Antenne rufous, third joint fuscous, bristle pectinated with five or six long hairs. Face yel- lowish-white, its upper half keeled, the lower one convex, furnished on each side with three strong bristles. The narrow cheeks, as well as the whole orbit of the eyes, are whitish. Upper side of the thorax blackish-cinereous, opaque, with short black hairs. Pleure whitish pollinose. Scutellum concolorous with the thorax. Ab- domen black, opaque, last segment rather short, shining white. Fore coxe black, with a white reflection, yellowish at the tip; trochanters yellow; femora black, cinerascent with a whitish pollen, tip yellow; fore and hind tibia black, yellow at basis and apex; the intermediate ones entirely flavescent ; all with a whitish re- flection on the upper side; tarsi yellow, last joint blackish. Wings hyaline, the third segment of the costa is equal to two-thirds of the length of the second. Hab, Maryland. (Osten-Sacken. ) HYDRELLINA., 149 Il. HYDRELLINA. The tribe of Hydrellina is characterized by the hairy eyes, the absence of a spine on the second joint of the antenne, and the absence of long bristles on the upper side of the middle tibiae. The eyes in some genera are covered with very short, close hairs ; in other genera these hairs are only scattered, but much longer. Haliday restricts the Hydrellina to the genera Glenanthe, Hydrel- lia, and Atissa. It seems that some other genera, as Philygria, Hyadina, and Azysta can by no means be separated from the Hydrellina, to which they are much more closely related than to the Hphydrina by their whole organization, and chiefly by the structure of the head. The hairs on the eyes of some species of the three last named genera being very sparingly scattered, and therefore difficult to observe, perhaps it will not be superfluous to remark that in the Hydrellina the eyes are always longer and the face is narrowest beneath the eyes, whereas in all Lphydrina the eyes are rounder, the horizontal diameter being sometimes even longer than the vertical, so that the antenne stand where the eyes are most approximated, and the face increases much in breadth immediately below them. Moreover, in the Hydrellina the hole of the mouth is never strikingly widened, and the face downwards never projects much, whereas the great width of the oral cavity and the great projection of the inferior part of the face is a most striking character for the Hphydrina, excepting only the genera Pelina and Ochthera. A confusion between the two last named genera with any genus of the AHydrellina is sufficiently prevented by the entire bareness of their eyes. | The genera of Hydrellina may be arranged as follows:— Division 1. Eyes with exceedingly close hair. Antennal bristle with a short pubescence. GLENANTHE Hal. t Antennal bristle pectinated. 2 { Face convex. Hypreuuia Desv. Face impressed. AtissA Hal. Division 2. Eyes with scattered hair. 1 | Face with bristles on both sides. PHILYGRIA Stenh. Face almost bare. 2 ( Costal vein running to the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein. Hyapina Hal. i Costal vein running to the tip of the third longitudinal vein. t Axysta Hal. 150 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. North American species of the genera Hydrellia and Philygria only are known to me. Gen. Il. HWYDRELLIA BR. Desv. The species of Hydrellia are very easily recognized by the very short but exceedingly close pubescence of the eyes, and by the pectinations of the antennal bristle. The other characters are: Second joint of the antenne not unguiculated ; face rather narrow and perpendicular, slightly convex, receding a little towards the border of the mouth; opening of the mouth not widened; cheeks descending very little beneath the eyes. Legs rather slender; middle tibiz on their upper side without bristles ; costal vein ex- tending to the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein. Synopsis of the Species.* 1 { Anterior cox yellow. 1 ischiaca, n. sp. Anterior coxze blackish. 2 2 | Face snowy white. 2 hypoleuca, n. sp. Face not white. 3 3 | Face brownish-black, opaque. 3 obscuripes, n. sp. Face yellow. + Face pale yellow, rather broad, but little widened below. {re dark yellow, narrow, much dilated below. 4 scapularis, n. sp. 4 5 valida, n. sp. 1. H. ischiaca Lorw. 9.—Subenescenti-fusca, antennis nigris, facie punctoque frontali albis, thoracis margine antico pleurisque canis, pedi- bus ex fusco nigris, coxis anticis, genibus, tibiarum apice tarsorumque basi ex rufo flavis. Somewhat brassy brown, antennz black, face and frontal dot white; ante- rior border of the thorax and pleure whitish-gray, legs brownish-black, anterior cox, knees, tips of the tibie and base of the tarsi reddish- yellow. Long. corp. 0.1. Long. al. 0.11. Face of medium breadth, slightly dilated below, without keel; the ground color in the middle is more pronounced, giving it rather a brownish aspect; on each side of the face there are four little bristles, one above the other. Palpi yellow, cheeks a little de- scending. Antenne entirely black; the bristle in the described specimen has seven rays. Front proportionately broad, dusted with brown; the dot immediately above the antennee white. Upper * The species No. 6 has not been included in this synopsis.—O. 8. HYDRELLINA. 151 side of the thorax dusted with brown; its anterior border, shoul- ders, lateral border and pleure grayish-white with white dust. Scutellum like the upper side of the thorax, only a little more glossy. Abdomen almost blackish-brown, not very shining, but also little dusted. Legs brownish-black; fore coxe yellow, some- what infuscated at the base; all the knees brownish-yellow; end of the foremost tibiz for a little distance and the end of the mid- dle and hindmost as far as the middle, reddish-yellow; fore tarsi only at the base, middle tarsi as far as the middle, the hind tarsi as far as the end of the fourth joint, reddish-yellow. Poisers yellow. Wings a little grayish; second segment of the costal vein nearly half as long again as the third. Aydrell. ischiaca is rather similar to the European species: fulviceps Stenh., pilitars’s Stenh., and laticeps Stenh.; from the first it is sufficiently distinguished by its broader face being dusted with whitish; from peltarsis like- wise by its broader and whitish-dusted face, and moreover by the pure white color of the frontal dot, the much whiter dust on the shoulders, anterior and lateral borders of the thorax and pleure, and finally by the much more extensive pale color of the legs; from daticeps by the rather less breadth of the front and face, by the wings showing no whitish appearance in any direction, and by the less extensive pale color of the legs. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 2. H. hypoleuca Lozw. ¢$.—Subenescenti-fusca, antennis nigris, facie punctoque frontali candidis, thoracis margine antico et margine laterali, pleuris ventreque albo-pollinosis, pedibus nigris, metatarsis posticis rufis. Somewhat brassy-brown, antenne black, face and frontal dot pure white ; anterior and lateral borders of the thorax, pleurz, and the whole under side of the abdomen dusted with white; legs black, first joint of the hind tarsi red. Long. corp. 0.11. Long. al. 0.12. Very similar to the Huropean H. incana Hal., which Mr. Haliday thinks to be the same as H. ranunculi, previously de- scribed by him. Face snowy white, not very narrow, underneath broader, slightly keeled in its whole length, beset on each side with three small bristles. Palpi yellow. Cheeks descending but little below the eyes. Antenne black; antennal bristle in the described specimen with five rays. Front dusted with brown, opaque; anterior “border, but especially the shoulder and lateral 152 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. border dusted with whitish ; the foremost beginning of a grayish- white middle line is indistinctly indicated. Pleure dusted with whitish. Scutellum dusted with brown and opaque. Upper side of the abdomen only a little dusted, and therefore a little greener and less opaque. ‘The under side and the part of the upper ab- dominal plates which is turned downwards, covered with white dust; this dust extends to the upper side of the abdomen on the poste- rior part of each segment. Legs black; first joint of the middle and hind tarsi yellowish-red; first joint of the fore tarsi brown at the base. Poisers yellow. Wings hyaline, rather grayish; the second segment of the costal vein distinctly half as long again as the third. This species differs from H. éncana by the pure white dust on the anterior and lateral borders of the thorax, as well as on the pleure. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) >. H. obscuriceps Lozw. 4 .—Subenescenti-fusca, abdomine magis virescente, antennis nigris, facie brunneo-nigra, puncto frontali albido, pleuris cinereis, pedibus ex fusco nigris, tarsis posterioribus in basi nigris. Brassy brown, abdomen more greenish, antenne black; face brownish- black with a whitish frontal dot; pleure ashy gray ; legs brownish-black, base of the middle and hind tarsired. Long. corp. 0.1. Long. al. 0.1. Face rather narrow above, a little widening underneath, not keeled, of a brownish-black velvety color; on each side there are three small bristles, one above the other. Palpi yellow. Cheeks descending very little below the eyes. Antenne black, in some directions with a whitish reflection; antennal bristle in the described specimen with six rays. The dot immediately above the antenne dusted with whitish, but not strikingly so. Front and upper side of the thorax dusted with brown, opaque; anterior and lateral borders of the thorax as well the shoulder without pale dust. Pleure pale ashy gray, more brown above. Scutellum of the same color as the upper side of the thorax. Abdomen brownish metal- lic-green, somewhat glossy ; first segment much shortened, second and third of equal ‘length, fourth a little longer, fifth as long as the second and third together, rather broadly truncate at its end, somewhat convex. Legs brownish-black; first joint of the pos- terior tarsi yellowish-red; the first joint of the foremost tarsi brownish-red only at the base. Poisers yellow. Wings hyaline, a HYDRELLINA. 153 little grayish; the second segment of the costal vein scarcely half as long again as the third. Not possessing any of the few Hu- ropean Hydrellig with dark colored faces, I cannot point out how H, obscuriceps differs from them. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken. ) 4, HW. scapularis Lozw. 9.—Subznescenti-fusca, antennis nigris, facie ochracea, puncto frontali pallidius flavo, interdum albido, thoracis margine antico, humeris pleurisque albo-pollinosis, pedibus nigris, me- tatarsis posticis rufis. Brassy-brown; antennz black, face ochraceous, frontal dot paler yellow, sometimes whitish, anterior border of the thorax, shoulders, and pleure dusted with white; legs black, first joint of the hind tarsired. Long. corp. 0.1. Long. al. 0.12. Very similar to . hypoleuca, notwithstanding the different color of its face, but certainly not a variation in color of that species. Face a little narrower above than in the latter, quite as broad underneath, thus appearing more dilated below, likewise keeled on its whole length, but more distinctly and a little less obtusely; on each side of it there are three small bristles; its color is dark ochraceous. Antenne black; bristle with five or six rays. Front dusted with brown, opaque, narrower than in ZH. hypoleuca; the dot immediately above the antennee is dusted with paler yellow or whitish. ‘Thorax dusted with brown, opaque, the dust not being so thick as to prevent its color from inclining a little to greenish; its outermost anterior border and the shoulders are dusted with whitish; the dust of the pleure is of the same color. Upper side of the abdomen greener than that of the thorax, slightly dusted, but also slightly glossy; its under side and the part of the upper abdominal plates which is turned downward, are but thinly dusted with whitish. Legs black; first joint of the posterior tarsi yellow- ish-red ; first joint of the anterior tarsi brown at the base. Poisers yellow. Wings glassy, rather grayish; the second segment of the costal vein more than half as long again as the third. flab. United States. (Schaum.) & HI. walida Lozrw. ¢.—Inter majores sui generis; glauco-cinerea, tota opaca, facie latiuscula pallide ochracea, antennis pedibusque nigris, basi tarsorum omnium rufa. Belonging to the largest species of this genus; greenish-gray, opaque every- 154 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. where; face rather broad, pale ochraceous; antenne and legs black; base of all the tarsi red. Long. corp. 0.12. Long. al. 0.15. Face rather broad, becoming a little broader upwards, only slightly keeled above, ochraceous, with three small bristles on each side. Palpi yellow. Cheeks slightly descending. Antenne black; antennal bristle in the described specimen with five rays. Front greenish-gray and opaque in consequence of its grayish dust; the dot above the antenne has a still duller yellow color than the face and is not conspicuous. Upper side of the thorax and scutellum greenish-gray and opaque from its whitish-gray dust. Pleure a little paler greenish-gray. Abdomen grayish-green, opaque, with the fifth segment considerably longer than the fourth. Legs black; tarsi yellowish-red as far as the end of the first joint; also the knees, chiefly those of the hind legs, are of this color. Poisers yellow. Wings relatively to the length of the body, large, hyaline; the veins in the neighborhood of the base pale ochraceous ; the second segment of the costal vein about twice as long as the third; the posterior transverse vein does not stand quite perpen- dicularly to the longitudinal axis of the wing, but is slightly oblique. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 6G. Hi. formosa Lorw. 9. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 355, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Atra, thoracis dorso, abdominis apice marginibusque nitidis, fronte, thoracis macula laterali permagna scutel- loque aterrimis, opacis, facie, puncto frontali, pleurarumque vitta supe- riore, candidis, femoribus nigris, tibiis tarsisque pallidis, alis cinereo- hyalinis. Dark, thorax above, tip of the abdomen and its borders shining; front, a large spot on the side of the thorax and scutellum deep black, opaque; the face, a dot on the front and a band on the upper side of the pleurze shining white, femora black, tibie and tarsi pale, wings cinereous-hya- line. Long. corp. 0.057. Long. al. 0.064. Face moderately convex, not keeled, bright shining white. Cheeks very narrow, black. Front and superior part of occiput deep black, velvety, with a striking shining white frontal mark. Antenne black, third joint rufous, margined with black above, bristle pectinated with scattered black hairs. Thorax very shining above, on each side a large, deep black, velvety lateral spot. HYDRELLINA. 155 Scutellum deep black, opaque, with a narrow subcinereous border. Pleure black, with a broad, shining white band above. Abdomen black, opaque, the apical half as well as the lateral borders shining. Femora black; tibize and tarsi pale yellowish, the upper edge of the former with a white reflection, terminal joint of the latter black. Halteres pale lemon-yellow. Wings cinereous-hyaline, second segment of the costa somewhat longer than the third ; third longitudinal vein ending at the very tip of the wing; posterior transverse vein occupying the middle between the basis and the tip of the wing. Hab, Pennsylvania. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation.—This species, although very much like Philhygria ptcta Fall. and the allied species, proves to be a true Hydrellia on account of the short and very dense pubescence of its eyes. Gen. Il. PHEULWGRIA Srenu. Haliday has employed for this genus the name Hydrina, given by Rob. Desvoidy; but as this name, being derived from Hydra, is also used in the family of Polypt, it seems more advisable to adopt for it the name Philygria of Stenhammar; otherwise this name would not be used at all, the two other genera, which joined with the present, form the genus Phzlygria of Stenhammar, being already possessed of their authorized names, Hyadina and Axysta. The genus Philygria, taken in the present sense, may be character- ized in the following manner: Second joint of the antenne not unguiculated; antennal bristle with a short pubescence. Hyes dis- tinctly hairy, rather rounded, but higher than broad, slightly pro- minent. Face descending obliquely, narrowed upwards, receding a little towards the mouth, the anterior border of which is a little pointed; on both sides there are distinct bristles. Clypeus unde- veloped; mentum rather thickened; cheeks slightly descending. The costal vein attains the fourth longitudinal vein; the posterior transverse vein is rather distant from the border of the wing. i. P. fuscicormis Loznw. Fusco-cinerea, abdomine nigricante, facie flavescente, pedibus nigris, tarsis rufis, in apice fuscis, alis cinerascen- tibus, cellula discoidali et gutta pone venam transversam posteriorem limpidioribus, venis transversis fusco-limbatis. Brownish-gray ; abdomen blackish, face yellowish; wings gray with the discoidal cell and a drop behind the posterior transverse vein more hya- 156 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. line ; transverse veins margined with blackish-brown. Long. corp. 0.9. Long. al. 0.11. It has a certain resemblance with Philygr. femorata Stenh. and interrupta Hal., namely, the form of its face is almost as in the latter, and likewise more yellowish on the middle, whitish on the lateral borders and towards the cheeks. Antenne blackish, ap- pearing whitish-gray in certain directions, brownish on the inferior border only, when held against the light. Thorax grayish-brown, on its anterior border dusted with whitish-gray; its darker stripes are obsolete, but more visible in the neighborhood of the anterior border, where they extend a little into the brighter gray color. Scutellum as the upper side of the thorax. Pleure gray. Ab- domen grayish-black, more black towards the end, not glossy. Legs black, tarsi yellowish-red as far as the fourth joint. Wings grayish with a hyaline spot behind the posterior transverse vein and with a rather clearer discoidal cell; the clearer color of the latter is only seen if the light shines through the wing and the wing is looked at in an oblique direction, while the clear spot be- hind the posterior transverse vein is distinetly seen in every direc- tion. The two transverse veins have only a very narrow and ill-defined dark margin, and the posterior transverse vein is a little less distant from the posterior border of the wing than is usual in this genus; the second longitudinal vein being very long, the second segment of the costal vein is more than twice as long as the third. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 2. FP. opposita Lorw. %. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 356, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Ex cinereo fusca, abdomine atro nitido, alarum venis longitudinalibus secunda, tertiaé et quarta nigro- punctatis, venis transversis late nigro-limbatis. Cinereous-brown, abdomen black, shining, the second, third and fourth longitudinal veins of the wings spotted with black, transverse veins broadly clouded with black. Long. corp. 0.07—0.09. Long. al. 0.095. Cinereous-brown, opaque. Ocellar triangle large, concolorous, rather indistinctly separated from the remainder of the front. Two basal joints of the antenne black, the third black, with the bases and the apical half impurely rufous. Face narrow, black, with a HYDRELLINA. 157 whitish pollen, its middle portion flavescent below. Facial orbite of the eyes narrow, with a white reflection. Thorax obscure, cinereous brown above, with very narrow, obsolete darker lines. Pleure dark cinereous. Scutellum concolorous with the thorax. Abdomen black, very glossy, a large obscurely cinereous opaque basal spot, not attaining the posterior margin of the second seg- ment. Legs yellowish ferruginous, last joint of tarsi black, base of femora sometimes fuscous. Wings cinereous hyaline, veins black; short stumps of veins clouded with black, proceed from the second, third, and fourth longitudinal veins; the third vein emits four such stumps, all of which, except the last, are opposed to similar stumps on the second vein; the last segment of the fourth vein generally emits two stumps; the ordinary transverse veins are broadly clouded with black. The second segment of the costa is almost twice as long as the third. Hab. Pennsylvania. Washington. (Osten-Sacken. ) Observation.—Phil. opposita is very like P. punctato-nervosa Fall., but distinguished by a more brown color, a more narrowed face, darker legs and antenne, a larger portion of the abdomen colored with black and by a smaller number of dots on the wings. The facial orbite of the eyes, which are much narrowed in P. opposita, evidently prove it to be a distinct species. Note.—Some specimens have five stumps on the third vein, opposed to four cn the second, and more than two stumps on the last segment of the fourth vein. 02:5. 3S. P. debilis Lorw. 4. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 356, by R. Osten-Sacken. )—Nigro-cinerea, opaca, antennis totis nigris, fronte atra opaca, triangulo ocellari maximo, nigro-cinereo, ultimo abdo- minis segmento atro, nitido, pedibus obscuris, genibus, tibiarum anteri- orum apice, tarsisque flavescentibus, horum apice nigro, alis cinereo- hyalinis, circa venas transversales infuscatas limpidioribus. Blackish-cinereous, opaque, antennez entirely black, front black, opaque, ocellar triangle very large, blackish-cinereous, last segment of the ab- domen black, shining, feet obscure, knees, tip of the anterior tibie and tarsi yellowish, tip of the latter black, wings cinereous-hyaline, with clearer spaces round the infuscated transverse veins. Long. corp. 0.05. Long. al. 0.064. Blackish-cinereous, opaque. Front black, with a very narrow white marginal line on each side and the rather large ocellar 158 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. triangle, blackish-cinereous. Antenne entirely black. Face yel- Jlowish, orbits narrow, whitish. Thorax above with very narrow almost obsolete lines. Abdomen a little darker and less opaque than the thorax, last segment black, smooth. Legs blackish, knees and tip of the anterior tibiz yellowish, hind tibie either alto- gether blackish, or marked with a narrow, very obsolete pale ring, tarsi yellowish, their last joints blackish. Halteres impure white, knob somewhat darker. Wings cinereo-hyaline, with clearer spaces round the infuscated transverse veins, second costal seg- ment almost twice as long as the third. ; Hab. Pennsylvania. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation.—This species is very like Philygr. femorata Stenh., but distinguished by entirely black antennz, by a less obtuse an- terior angle of the ocellar triangle and by a conspicuously longer second costal segment. III. EPHYDRINA. The Ephydrina are well characterized by their quite naked, prom- inent, and usually much rounded eyes, by the second joint of their antenne not unguiculated, and by the middle tibiz without spinous bristles on their upper side. By the genus Pelina they are nearest related to the latter genera of Hydrellina. The mentum is much enlarged and swollen in almost all the genera, the oral cavity generally of large width. The genera with less widely opened mouth, as Pelina and Ochthera, so manifestly bear the chief cha- racters of Hphydrina, that no doubt can arise about their systema- tic position. The genera of Hphydrina hitherto established may be arranged as follows :— Division 1. Clypeus prominent. | The small basal cells of the wings complete. Canace Hal. The small basal cells of the wings wanting. 2 2f Oral cavity proportionally narrow. 3 Oral cavity exceedingly wide. 4 9 { Fore femora not thickened. Perna Hal. Fore femora much thickened. OcutuERA Latr. Costal vein attaining the third longitudinal vein. 4 BracHyDEvTERA Loew. Costal vein attaining the fourth longitudinal vein. 5 EPHYDRINA. 159 (Face on each side with a long bristle; lateral border of the mouth | without bristles. ParypDRA Stenh. Face on each side with several long bristles; lateral border of the | mouth with bristles. Hatmopota Hal. Division 2. Clypeus retracted in the oral cavity. Claws almost straight, puivilli indistinct. Eppypra Fall. { Claws curved, pulvilli distinct. 2 Oral border quite bare. InytHEA Hal. { Oral border with bristles. 3 { Antennal bristle bare. TichomyzA Jacq. Antennal bristle not bare. 4 | Antennal bristle pubescent. ScaTetta R. Desv. Antennal bristle pectinated. , Cania R&R. Desv. The North American Hphydrina known to me belong to the five genera: Ochthera, Brachydeutera, Parydra, Ephydra, and Scatella. Gen. l. OCHTHERA Later. One of the most distinct genera of Ephydrina. Front very broad; antennal bristle above, with three rays. Face above moderately broad, with two furrow-like longitudinal impressions approaching each other very much on the middle, then diverging from each other as they descend, and finally continued in a direc- tion parallel to the lateral border of the mouth; on the surface of the face there are some fine and short hairs, but no bristles at all. The face and cheeks descend very deep beneath the large promi- nent eyes, but are again contracted sensibly towards the opening of the mouth, rendering it smaller than in any of the other genera of Ephydrina. Clypeus having the form of a small flat lamella, projecting beyond the anterior border of the mouth. ‘The fore coxe a little prolonged; the fore femora exceedingly swollen, furrowed on their under side for the reception of the curved tibia, which terminate in a spine, and beset with a few small bristles; the first joint of the hind tarsi more or less thickened. The costal vein of the wings reaches to the fourth longitudinal vein; the second segment of the costa is proportionally very long; the pos- terior transverse vein is very oblique; the third and fourth longi- tudinal veins converge rather remarkably towards their ends. Observation.—Th. Say has described a fly as Ochthera empitfor- mis; but on a closer consideration of his observations on the an- terior femora, the color of the insect, and its small size, it becomes 160 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. indubitable that he has been deceived relatively to the true charac- ters of the genus Ochthera, and it is to be supposed that his Ochthera emptformis is an insect belonging to the Zachydromide. Synopsis of the Species. { Face with deep black furrows and dots. 1 exsculpta, n. sp. Face without black furrows and dots. 2 9 { First joint of the hind tarsi but little swollen. 2 mantis Deg. First joint of the hind tarsi much swollen. 3 3 { Tarsi black, face broad. 3 rapax, 0. sp. Tarsi red, face narrow. 4 tuberculata, n. sp. 1. O. exsculpta Lorw. %4.—Facies angustissima, lineis punctisque exsculptis ornata; tibie antice rufe. Face exceedingly narrow, with shining-black furrows and impressed black dots; fore tibie red. Long. corp. 0.16. Long. al. 0.15. A readily distinguished species, not quite equalling the three following in size. Fr8nt narrower than in all the other known species, almost entirely covered with a large shining spot having the form of a regular trapezium, near which the color is velvety- black at the borders of the eyes and brownish on the anterior cor- ners of the front. Eyes larger and longer than in the other spe- cies. Face unusually narrow, dusted with yellow; a shining black furrow runs from the tubercle placed in the middle of the face to the border of the mouth, and has on each side a similar furrow, the under part of which is laterally continued in a parallel direction to the border of the mouth; the lateral parts of the face have some impressed, rather coarse, dots. Clypeus sensibly smaller than in the other species. The fore femora black; the fore tibie and tarsi red, the first joint of the latter a little longer and a little less pear-shaped than in the other species. The middle and the hind legs black; the tips of the knees and the tibie on their first third red ; the first joint of the middle tarsi red as far as the tip, the following joints being so only at the base; the first joint of the hind tarsi is very little swollen, the second and following joints red at the base. Hab, Cuba. (Poey.) OCHTHERA. 161 2. O. mantis Dec. § and 9.—Pedes nigri, tibiis intermediis non dilatatis, tarsorum intermediorum basi rufa, metatarso postico modice incrassato. Legs black; middle tibiz not enlarged, middle tarsi red at the base, first joint of the hind tarsi only little swollen. Long. corp. 0.24—0.25. Long. al. 0.2. I am quite unable to distinguish this species, so common in the Middle States of the Union, from the European Ochth. mantis. It is true, indeed, that in most American specimens the eyes are a little more distant from each other than in the EKuropean; but this difference in some cases disappears entirely; nor do the Huropean specimens altogether agree in this respect. The color of the face is likewise as variable as in the European specimens. As mark- ings, distinguishing this species from the two next ones, which resemble it very much, the following may be noted: The ground color of the legs, in well-colored specimens, is black, only the mid- dle tarsi being red from their base for a very variable extent. The middle tibiz are considerably narrower than in Ochth. rapax and tuberculata, and entirely dusted on their anterior side; the first joint of the hind tarsi is very little swollen and rather long. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) >. O. tuberculata Lotw. ~.—Pedes nigri, tibiis intermediis subdila- tatis, tarsis omnibus obscure rufis, metatarso postico nigro, valde incras- sato. Legs black; middle tibie a little enlarged; all the tarsi dark red, the first joint of the hind tarsi black and very much swollen. Long. corp. 0.18. Long. al. 0.17. Very similar to Ochth. mantis, but its face is considerably nar- rower in its upper part, and the elevation in the middle of it forms more distinctly a small double knob. The middle tibiz are broader, on their outer edge sharper, and polished on a great part of its anterior side; the knees of the hind legs and all the tarsi brown- ish-red, the last joint of the latter more brownish; the first joint of the hindmost tarsi black, mueh swollen. Hab. Illinois. (Schaum. ) 11 162 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. A. O. rapax Loew. %.—Pedes nigri, tibiis intermediis subdilatatis, tarsorum intermediorum basi rufa, metatarso postico valde incrassato. Legs black, middle tibie a little enlarged, middle tarsi red at the base, first joint of the hind tarsi much swollen. Long. corp. 0.16. Long, al. 0.17. Very similar to Ochth. tuberculata in the form of the legs, only the middle tibize are of a less equal breadth, but become sensibly broader towards their end. It is also very easily distinguished from Ochth. tuberculata by its broader and shorter face showing only an exceedingly flat elevation in the middle. Legs entirely black, only at the base of the first joint of the middle tarsi there is a slight red tinge; the first joint of the hindmost tarsi is still a little shorter and thicker than in Ochth. mantis. The wings have rather a more distinct blackish-gray clouding than in the other species. It differs from Ochth. mantis by its shorter face, the flat- ter elevation in the middle of it, and the much shorter and thicker basal joint of its posterior tarsi. Hab, Carolina. (Zimmermann.) Gen. II BRACHYDEUTERA Loew. Eyes naked, proportionately rather large. Front exceedingly broad. Second joint of the antenne not unguiculated, as large as the third, the latter rounded; antennal bristle with unusually long rays. Upper part of the face deeply impressed on both sides, and with a keel, resembling a nose, in the middle; the lower part of it is very prominent. The anterior end of the oral margin very much ascending and allowing the convex clypeus to appear. Be- sides, the whole face is quite bare, with the cheeks descending but very little beneath the eyes. Legs quite bare, rather slender and long; anterior tarsi elongated and exceedingly slender; claws small and delicate, pulvilli rather ‘indistinct. Costal vein of the wing reaching only to the tip of the third longitudinal vein; second longitudinal vein exceedingly short and curved towards the costa like an arch, so that the third segment of the costa is several times longer than the second; the small transverse vein is unusually dis- tant from the base of the wing; the posterior transverse vein is at a little distance from the border of the wing and has a nearly per- pendicular position; the last segment of the fourth longitudinal vein is much attenuated, BRACHYDEUTERA. ~ 6S I. B. dimidiata Lozw. 9.—Superius brunnea, inferius tota can- dida. On the upper side brown, on the whole under side white. Long. corp. 0.13—0.14. Long. al. 0.14—17. Dark brown and entirely opaque on the whole upper side. In well preserved specimens there are, on the upper side of the thorax, two somewhat grayish-brown, approximated, longitudinal lines, which commence at the anterior end of the thorax and stop before reaching the posterior end; between them there is the trace of a fine pale middle line, which becomes more distinct at the posterior end of the thorax and is continued through the scutellum; there are besides two other longitudinal lines, which, being nearer the lateral border and interrupted in the neighborhood of the suture, are not truncated posteriorly and continue indistinctly on the lateral borders of the scutellum. Some specimens show very faint traces of these markings of the thorax. The keel, resembling a nose, on the upper part of the face is dark brown; the remainder of the face together with the cheeks, and the inferior half of the occiput, breast, and pleure, as well as the part of the upper abdominal plates which are much turned downwards, are almost silvery white; this color on the last abdominal segments ascends a little to the upper side of the posterior borders. Legs in well-colored indi- viduals blackish-brown, only the apical third of the femora and the first half of the posterior tibiz being more or less reddish-brown; in less distinctly colored specimens often only the tips of the tibiz and the tarsi are blackish-brown, all the remainder being brownish- yellow. Wings hyaline with brownish-black veins, sometimes more clouded with grayish in the neighborhood of the costa; the third segment of the costa is twice and a half or three times longer than the second. : Habs Washington. (Osten-Sacken.) Observation.—A female sent by Poey from Cuba differs from those received from Baron Osten-Sacken by its brown wing-veins and clay-yellow legs, the tarsi only being of a dark-brown color; but it is only a paler colored specimen of brachyd. dimidiata, which became still paler in the course of time. 164 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Gen. II. PARYWDRA STEnz. Form of the body short and stout. Thorax and scutellum very convex. Front very broad. Antennal bristle on the upper side with a short pubescence, which in some species is difficult to perceive; bare towards the end. Face very broad, not so much vaulted as in the true Hphydre, but with a convexity descending more obliquely, on each side with a very characteristic, long, curved, hair-like bristle, beneath which are some shorter hairs, hardly per- ceptible in some species. Clypeus prominent. Cheeks descend- ing beneath the eyes. Lateral borders of the mouth quite bare. Mentum exceedingly thickened. Legs short and rather clumsy. The small transverse vein of the wings is behind the middle of the discoidal cell, consequently proportionately far from the base of the wing; the posterior transverse vein is not very near the border of the wing, and has a more or less oblique position; the alula is strikingly large. The species of this genus may be divided into two sections, the first of which comprises thickly hairy species with very convex faces. In North America only naked species, belonging to the second section, have been as yet discovered ; they are very similar to the European species of this section; however, they appear to have more plastic differences than these, and to be consequently more easily distinguished from each other. This can be said at least of the four species known to me, none of which is provided with the small appendage of the second longitudinal vein distinguishing some of the European species. Synopsis of the Species.* ( Scutellum with conical warts. 2 \Scutellum without conical warts. 3 Lier an with two warts. 1 bituberculata, n. sp. Scutellum with four warts. 2 quadrituberculata, n. sp. Face nearly perpendicular. 3 breviceps, n. sp. Face descending obliquely. 4 paullula, n. sp. * The species No. 5 has not been included in this synopsis.—O. 8. PARYDRA. 165 1. P. bituberculata Lozw. % and 9.—Ex brunneo enescens, alis cinereo-hyalinis, venis transversis nigro-limbatis, scutello bituber- culato. Brassy-brown, wings grayish with black margins of the transverse veins ; scutellum with two warts. Long. corp. 0.17—0.18. Long. al. 0.17. Very similar to Parydra aquila Fall. in size, form, and color. Face proportionally not very prominent, dusted with brown; the characteristic bristle on each side proportionally slender ; upwards near it, but a little more towards the middle of the face, is a rather distinct, impressed spot; the shorter hairs inserted beneath it are hardly perceptible. Orbitee and cheeks very broad; clypeus very prominent. Antenne black; antennal bristle hair-like and bare towards the end, stouter about the middle, and with a short pubes- cence on the upper side. Upper side of the thorax with rather indistinct stripes ; the rows of fine punctures, including the stripes, a little more distinct than in the other species. Scutellum at the tip with two not approximated warts, bearing at the end the two usual small bristles of the scutellum. Legs dark, with only the tarsi usually red with black tips; there are individuals with much darker tarsi; the white reflection at the base and tip of the tibic not very striking. Wings clouded with grayish, having brownish- black veins and black margins of the transverse veins, in the neighborhood of which the surface of the wings is more distinctly hyaline ; the second segment of the costa is nearly twice as long as the third; the ends of the third and fourth longitudinal veins parallel. There are some specimens, the faces of which are dusted with dull whitish ; but these certainly belong to the same species. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken. ) 2. P. quadrituberculata Lorw. 4% and 9.—Nigro-enea, alis hyalinis, venis transversis interdum nigro-limbatis, scutello quadritu- berculato. Brassy-black, wings hyaline, transverse veins sometimes margined with blackish ; scutellum with four warts. Long. corp. 0.17. Long. al. 0.17. Similar to the preceding species in color, but a little blacker, not quite equalling it in size. Face generally dusted with white, the dust less frequently quite yellowish on the upper part; the under part of the face projects somewhat less than in Parydra bitu- berculata; the characteristic bristle on each side is very slender and 166 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA, rather short; no impressed spot in its neighborhood; the short small hairs beneath it are scarcely visible; eye-rings and cheeks very broad, but the latter a little narrower than in Parydr. bitu- berculata, Antenne black; the bristle towards its end excessively slender, being stouter to about its middle, and provided on its upper side with a hardly distinguishable pubescence. Thorax rather indistinctly striped; the two longitudinal lines formed by fine scarcely visible punctures. Scutellum on its tip with two very approximated conical warts, on the tips of which are the two small bristles usually inserted at the end of the scutellum ; on each side there is a similar tubercle, ending likewise ina small bristle. Tibiz and tarsi usually brownish-red, with blackened tips; but there are specimens with the tibize quite black and the tarsi brown only at the base, the remainder being quite black; only in recently devel- oped specimens the anterior side of the tibize is dusted with white on their whole length; this white dust is generally interrupted behind the middle of the tibiz. Wings proportionally a little longer than in the other species; the second segment of the costa is about one-half longer than the third; the last segment of the fourth longitudinal vein is unusually long, showing the trace of a slight convergency towards the third longitudinal vein; the fifth longitudinal vein is truncated immediately behind the posterior transverse vein; otherwise the wings are hyaline with a very faint grayish tinge; the veins are brownish-black as far as the base, or frequently brown or brownish-yellow in the neighborhood of the base; sometimes this brownish-yellow color on the costal vein ex- tends to far beyond the middle of the wing; the transverse veins in most specimens are not margined, or show only a trace of black- ish-gray clouding ; but sometimes they have rather broad blackish margins, the surface of the wing being clearer in their neighborhood; these margins are found particularly in specimens which have a blacker coloration and almost entirely black legs. The deviations are more remarkable than those occurring in the other species of Parydra; but there are various transitions between them, which make it improbable that there is more than one species. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) PARYDRA. 167 3. P. breviceps Lozrw. 9.—Nigro-xnea, facie subperpendiculari, scu- tello mutico, venis alarum transversis obscure limbatis. Blackish-aeneous, face rather perpendicular, scutellum without warts ; transverse veins of the wing margined with obscure. Long. corp. 0.16. Long. al. 0.16. Blackish-aeneous. Face dusted with brown, less projecting than in any other Parydra known to me, consequently almost quite perpendicular. Orbite excessively narrow ; the characteris- tic small bristle on each side of the face is of moderate length and rather slender; beneath it there are a few shorter distinctly visible hairs. Clypeus very narrow; cheeks broad. Antenne black; the bristle rather slender even at its basal half, hair-like towards its end, with a short but distinct pubescence on its upper side: reaching beyond the middle. Thorax rather indistinctly striped ; ~ seutellum without tubercles, as is the case in the Huropean species. Femora black. Tibie reddish-brown, with a little white reflection at the base and tip, but in the specimen now before me it is too rubbed off to afford any certainty about its extent and nature. Abdomen rather shining, almost with a band of whitish-gray hoar on the posterior border of each segment. Wings rather tinged with grayish, having blackish margins on the transverse veins, the surface of the wings being more hyaline in their neighborhood. The second longitudinal vein is considerably shorter than in the two preceding species, in consequence of which the second segment of the costa is but little longer than the third; the ends of the third and fourth longitudinal veins are parallel’; the fifth longitu- dinal vein curves a little posteriorly at the second half of the dis- coidal cell. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 4. P. paullula Lozrw. 9.—Omnium minutissima, facie proclivi, genis angustis. Very small; face projecting obliquely, cheeks very narrow. Long. corp. 0.06—0.07. Long. al. 0.06—0.07. A very small species, of which I have only a single somewhat immature specimen, so that I am unable to say more of its colors than that they appear to differ little from those of the other species. Face descending obliquely, and therefore rather projecting with its lower parts; the characteristic bristle on each side rather long 168 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. and unusually near the border of the mouth. Clypeus and cheeks excessively narrow. Antenne black, the bristle with fine pubes- cence to beyond the middle. Scutellum without marginal tuber- cles; the two small bristles on its tip rather distant from each other. Wings in better colored individuals undoubtedly with much gray clouding and blackish margins of the transverse veins, in the neighborhood of which the surface of the wings is more glossy; the second segment of the costa is only a fifth longer than the third; the ends of the third and fourth longitudinal veins with a trace of a slight divergency ; the fifth longitudinal vein extends to the border of the wing. This species is very similar to Parydra pusilla Meig. >. P. abbreviata Lorw. 4%. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p. 357, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Minuta, antennis tibiisque ferru- gineis; ale infuscate guttis aliquot hyalinis distinctissimis ornate, segmento cost tertio secundi longitudinem paulo excedente, venis lon- gitudinalibus tertia et quarta distincte divergentibus. Small, antenne and tibie ferruginous; wings infuscated, with several hya'ine, very distinct dots, third segment of the costa somewhat exceed- ing the second in length, third and fourth longitudinal veins distinctly diverging. Long. corp. 0.07. Long. al. 0.07. Olivaceous. Antenne obscure ferruginous, the two first seg- ments and the upper edge of the third, black; the whole bristle has a short pubescence above. Face moderately sloping, the or- dinary bristle on each side is not more approximated to the peri- stoma than in most of the congeners. Cheeks narrow. Scutellum not tuberculated. Legs black, knees, tibize and base of tarsi fer- ruginous; the whitish pollen, generally extant on the tibie of the | allied species, is wanting here. Wings rather short, distinctly infuscated, marked with seven rather large hyaline spots; second longitudinal vein with a very short, hardly perceptible appendage ; third and fourth veins diverging near the apex; second costal segment almost equal in length to the third. Hab. Pennsylvania. (Osten-Sacken.) EPHYDRA. 169 Gen. IV. EPHWDRA Fatt. The hairy, exceedingly vaulted, and very projecting face, the very large opening of the mouth with ciliated border, the con- cealed clypeus, the nearly straight and rather long claws, and the indistinct pulvilli, characterize the genus Hphydra. The bris- tle of the antennz is usually pubescent, sometimes almost pecti- nated with short rays. The genera nearest related to Ephydra are Cenia and Scatella, the claws of which are curved and the pulvilli distinct. The genus 7ichomyza is not so near to the genus Ephydra and may be easily distinguished from it by its unusually large pulvilli. 1. E. atro-virems Lozw. 4% and 2.—Obscure viridis, nitida brun- neo-pollinosa, antennarum articulo tertio unipili, seta brevissime pube- rula; % quinto abdominis segmento precedente breviore, hypopygio brevi, marginem segmenti quarti posteriorem non attingente. Dark green, glossy, dusted with brown; third joint of the antenne with a hair, the terminal bristle with very short pubescence; 4, fifth segment of the abdomen shorter than the fourth, hypopygium short, not reach- ing the posterior border of the fourth ventral segment. Long. corp. 0.17 —0.18. Long. al. 0.17—0.18. Exceedingly similar to the European Lphydra micans Hal., so that I am unable to distinguish the female of the two species, but the much shorter hypopygium of the male characterizes the species as a distinct one. Dark metallic green, very shining, but with brown hoar on the front, thorax, and abdomen, which, distinctly appearing on an oblique inspection of these parts of the body, makes them appear brown and opaque; this brown color is least visible on the abdomen. Antenne black; third joint on its outer side near the base with a single bristle-shaped hair, which is longer than the joint itself; antennal bristle only with very short pubes- cence. The front and the sloping space extended between the antennee and the highest elevation of the face are shining green or bluish-green. Face dusted with white, which, according to the observations made in the allied species, may not be a constant marking; border of the mouth in both sexes with short and rather fine cilia, quite as in Hphydr. micans Hal. The ground color of the legs is greenish-black, covered with dust, shining blackish- green on the rubbed parts. Wings clouded with blackish-gray. Hab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 170 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA, Gen. V. SCATELLA Bos. Desv. This genus contains only smaller and generally not metallic species. Front and face very broad; eyes rounded; face usually very convex, hairy and bristled; border of the mouth ciliated ; opening of the mouth wide; clypeus concealed; cheeks moderately broad; mentum swollen. Second joint of the antenne not ungui- culated ; antennal bristle with fine, usually very short pubescence. Claws curved, pulvilli distinct. Costal vein of the wings reaching to the tip of the fourth longitudinal vein; the small transverse vein generally almost exactly beneath the tip of the first longitudi- nal vein; the posterior transverse vein not approaching the border of the wing. The nearest genus is Cenia, differing, however, from Scatella by the pectinated bristle of its antenne. 1. 8S. favillacea Lorw. 9.—Cinerea, facie alba, alis cinereo-hyalinis, obsolete quadriguttatis. Ashy-gray; face white; wings grayish-hyaline with four indistinct clear drops. Long. corp. 0.12—0.13. Long. al. 0.13. This species resembles most the European S. sorbillans Hal., which is identical with S. argyrostoma Stenh., but differs from it by its more considerable size, more roughly haired face and gray color of the dust on the posterior part of the cheeks, on the infe- rior part of the occiput, on the pleurs and under side of the abdo- men, on all which parts it is whitish in that species; S. favillacea wants also the clear drop lying beyond the posterior transverse vein in S. argyrostoma, The upper side of the whole body is covered with grayish-brown dust, which on the middle of the tho- rax and on the scutellum does not conceal the shining of the ground color; the large spot lying on the middle of the front is shining greenish. Face very convex, dusted with snowy white, with rather rough hair and the usual row of curved upwards bristles. Open- ing of the mouth wide, with distinct black cilia on the borders. Antenne black; the pubescence of the bristle is a little longer and more distinct than in most species of this genus. Upper side of the thorax not distinctly striped. Pleurz dusted with yellowish- gray, on their superior border with rather brown dust. Under side of the abdomen, femora, and upper side of the tibiz with gray dust. Wings clouded with grayish, having black veins; of the five clear drops, peculiar to so many species of this genus, that SCATELLA. 1 rg. lying beyond the posterior transverse vein is entirely wanting, and the remaining are rather indistinct; the second segment of the costa is at least four times as long as the third; the third and fourth longitudinal veins are parallel towards their ends. flab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken.) 2. 8S. Hugems Lorw. 4% and 2.—Nigra; ale nigricantes, guttis hyali- nis quinque in disco duabusque obsoletioribus in apice pict. Black ; wings blackish with five clear drops in the middle and two more indistinct ones towards the tip. Long. corp. 0.11. Long. al. 0.13. It differs from the European Scat. stagnalis only by somewhat more acute wings, its somewhat less convex face, and the stripes of the thorax being a little more distinct; perhaps on examining a larger number of specimens it may prove to be only a variety of it. Black; face with brownish-gray dust, rather convex, only a little impressed beneath each antenna, hairy and bristled, with distinct black cilia on the border of the mouth. Antenne black ; the bristle with an excessively short, but yet distinct pubescence. Cheeks exceedingly narrow. Front dusted with grayish-brown, the spot on the middle of it a little glittering. Upper side of the thorax likewise dusted with brown, but not without all gloss, with two distinct whitish-gray longitudinal stripes, but little distant from each other and beginning on the anterior border, but not reaching nearly to the posterior border; besides there are two short lateral stripes of the same color, beginning at the shoulder- corner. Scutellum of the color of the upper side of the thorax, only a little more glossy. Abdomen black, rather glossy towards the end: the fifth abdominal segment of the male is almost twice as long as the fourth. Legs entirely black. Wings clouded with black, having five glassy drops on the middle, in the usual position ; besides there is an obsolete spot, forming an indistinct clear drop near the border of the wing between the tip of the second and third longitudinal veins, and another still less perceptible spot in the cloudy color beyond the tip of the third longitudinal vein. fab. Middle States. (Osten-Sacken). : 172 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 3. S. obsoleta Lorw. 9. (Translated from Berl. Entom. Zeitschr. 1861, p- 358, by R. Osten-Sacken.)—Opaca, capite toto, scutello pleurisque ex flavo, pectore et abdomine ex cano cinereis, antennis pedibusque nigris ; alz hyaline, dilute cinerascentes, guttis limpidioribus quinque obsoletis- Simis. Opaque, the whole head, scutellum and pleure yellowish-cinereous, pectus and abdomen hoary-cinereous, antenne and feet black ; wings hyaline, with a pale cinereous tinge; five almost obsolete clear spots. Long. corp. 0.07. Long. al. 0.09. Head altogether yellowish-cinereous, antenne black, face very vaulted,* peristoma ciliated with moderate hairs. Thorax conco- lorous with the head, pectus subglaucous., Scutellum yellowish- cinereous. Abdomen hoary-cinereous, subglaucous, opaque. Legs altogether black, slightly pollinose with white. Halteres impure yellow, stem brown. Wings hyaline, tinged with very pale cine- reous, marked with five clear very obsolete spots; transverse veins not infuscated ; second costal segment more than thrice longer than the third. Hab. Washington. (Osten-Sacken. ) * The original has fornicatus, which means forming a rounded arch with an empty space below.—0O. §. v. ON THE NORTH AMERICAN CECIDOMYIDAE. BY BARON R. OSTEN-SACKEN. It is a peculiarity of the family of Cecidomyide that its natural history has always been studied in close connection with its classi-* fication. This is owing chiefly to the fact that the gall, the produce of the insect in its first stage of life, is generally a more striking object in nature than the insect itself. The latter small, tiny, dif- ficult to preserve on account of their extreme delicacy, still more difficult to distinguish from their congeners on account of the uni- formity of their appearance and coloring, would afford a very un- satisfactory object of study, unless in connection with the varied deformations which their larve produce on plants. The study of this family, different in this respect from most of the other families of insects, cannot be prosecuted apart from the observation of living nature, and for this very reason will always be a monopoly of the naturalist so situated as to afford such observations. The aim of the present paper is to direct the attention of American entomologists to this most interesting subject, by giving an account of the observations already made on the North Ameri- ean Oecidomyide, as well as a general introduction to the study of the habits and the classification of this family. The latter has been extracted chiefly from the two following admirable monographs :— Lozw, Dr. H. Dipterologische Beitrage, Part fourth, Posen, 1850, with a plate. (Contains a monograph of the European Cecidomyidz.) WinveErtz, J. Beitrag zu einer Monographie der Gallmiicken. In the Lin- nea entomologica, Vol. VIII, Berlin, 1853, with four plates. I. On the classification of the CECIDOMYIDZ. In the sketch of a systematical distribution of the Diptera, given by Prof. H. Loew in this volume, he has mentioned the difficulties attending a sharp definition of this family, and has shown that it may be naturally divided in two sections. The species embraced in the first section, which he calls Oectdo- myina, have four longitudinal veins on the wings, the last two of 174 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. which often coalesce in the beginning of their course, forming a more or less distinct fork. They have no ocelli, and the first joint of their tarsi is much shortened. The second section, which Prof. Loew calls Anaretina, has one longitudinal vein more, which is inserted between the second and third veins of the first section; this supplementary vein is simple in Campylomyza and fureate in all the other genera. The first tarsal joint is not shortened, and in all the genera, with the excep- tion of Cectdogona, there are distinct ocelli. The first section, which contains all the gall-producing Cecido- myide at present known, comprises two genera of Meigen and a third genus, discovered by Mr. Winnertz, and of which but a sin- gle species is described. These three genera are easily distin- guished by the neuration of their wings, which are always pubes- cent, and may be characterized as follows :— Cecidomyia Meig. Three or four longitudinal veins; in the first case the third vein is forked, thus representing the third and fourth veins, which are coalescent in the greater part of their extent (figs. 1, 2, and 4; in some rare cases a branch of this fork or the whole Fig. 1. Cecidouiyia. Diplosis Fig. 3. Fig. 4. Colpodia. ; Epidosis. Fig. 5. fork becomes obsolete, as in fig. 3); in the second case all the four veins are simple (fig. 5). Surface of the wings hairy; margins with long cilia. Antenne long, moniliform or cylin- drieal, generally verticillate, seldom without verticils, from 13 to 36-jointed. Asynapta, CECIDOMYIA. 175 Spaniocera Winn. Three longitudinal veins, which are all sim- ple (not forked); the first close by the costa, the second at some distance from it, but reaching the margin of the wing before its tip (fig. 6). Hairs on the surface of the wing scaly. Antenne filiform, 13-jointed, joints elongated, cylindrical, with a short pubescence and without verticils. Lasioptera Meig. Three longitudinal veins, the first and second of which run very near the costa and are so closely approximated as to be hardly discernible (fig. 7). Wings rather short and broad. An- tenne from 16 to 26-jointed; joints subglobular, sessile, with short verticils. (The sub-genus Clinorhyncha Lw. has been formed of the Lasvoptere, having Maeenrera the mouth prolonged in a rostrum. ) The considerable number of species contained in the genus Cect- domyia Meig. and the great variety of their structure have made a subdivision necessary. The following tabular arrangement of the sub-genera now adopted has been extracted, with a few modi- fications, from Mr. Winnertz’s work, although the subdivision itself is chiefly due to Mr. Loew. Fig. 6. Spaaiocera. Fig. 7. CECIDOMYWIA Metc. I. Wings with three longitudinal veins, the third either forming a fork (figs. 1,2, and 4), or becoming more or less obsolete towards the tip (fig. 3).* A. Cross-vein placed between the root and the tip of the first longitudinal vein, as in figs. 1—3: (in this section the cross-vein is frequently almost obsolete.) Cecidomyia Loew. The second longitudinal vein reaches the mar- gin of the wing a little before its tip (although in most cases this distance is very short, as in fig. 1). Generally the same number of joints in the antenne of the § and 9; joints either * In examining the wings of the Cecidomyiz, care must be taken not to mistake for a vein a longitudinal fold which generally exists between the second and third longitudinal veins. ; 176 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. pedicelled or sessile (sometimes pedicelled in the ¢ and sessile in the 2; sometimes of the same structure, pedicelled or ses- sile, in both sexes). Diplosis Loew. The second longitudinal vein reaches the margin of the wing at or beyond its tip (fig. 2). Antenne of the male 26 (2 + 24) jornted, sometimes with one rudimental joint more; joints pedicelled, simple joints alternating with double ones (Tab. I, f. 11 and 12), seldom all joints simple. Antenne of the 2 14 (2 + 12) jointed, sometimes with one rudimental joint more; joints pedicelled, cylindrical. Asphondylia Lw. The second longitudinal vein reaches the margin of the wing a little beyond its tip (as in fig. 2). Antenne of both sexes with the same number of joints; the latter cylin- drical, sessile, with a short pubescence and without verticils. (A single European species is known. ) Hormomyia Lw. The second longitudinal vein reaches the margin of the wing either at or beyond the tip. Thorax more or less gibbose, frequently extending over the head in the form of a hood. Joints of the ¢ antenne pedicelled; those of the 9 pedicelled or sessile. Oolpodia Winn. The second longitudinal vein forms a curve before the cross-vein and joins the margin a little beyond the tip of the wing (fig. 3). Cross-vein rather large, oblique. (A single European species is known in the female sex only; the joints of its antenne are pedicelled. This sub-genus, which is un- known to me, must be very difficult to distinguish from “pz- dosis.) : B. Cross-vein very oblique, originating at the root of the first longitudinal vein (fig. 4).* Dirliza iw. Second longitudinal vein hardly undulating before the cross-vein; joints of the antenne sessile or almost sessile in both sexes. (A single species is known.) * The sections A and B, as defined by MM. Loew and Winnertz, seem to be somewhat difficult to distinguish. According to the latter, the cross vein in the section B almost assumes the appearance of an intercalary longitudinal vein; it begins at the root of the first longitudinal vein, runs, although very indistinct, alongside of it and then turns obliquely towards the second longitudinal vein, which thus almost appears to be its continu- ation, or, in other words, to have two roots. CECIDOMYIA. . 1 i Hipidosis Lw. Second longitudinal vein sinuose before the cross- vein (fig. 4); joints of the antenne pedicelled in both sexes ; their number variable. II. Wings with four longitudinal veins (fig. 5). Asynapta Lw. The cross-vein is sometimes like that in section A, and then the second longitudinal vein is not sinuated; some- times as in section B; then the second longitudinal vein is sinuated, like in Hpidosis (fig. 5); in this case also the collare is a little prolonged. The classification of the section Anaretina Loew, is very imper- fect; almost nothing is known about their habits, and even their position in the system is doubtful. Mr. Loew considers them, at least provisionally, as a sub-section of the Cecidomyide, whereas Mr. Winnertz prefers to isolate them as a distinct family, placed between the Cectdomyide and the Mycetephilide, and having many points of relationship to both. Following the authority of Mr. Loew in this volume (p. 7), I will confine myself to the enumeration of the genera which he refers to this section, adding only short sketches of their characters as I find them in the former writers. I. Ocelli extant; Wings bare or almost bare; third longitudinal vein forked, the two following veins simple. Antenne 16-jointed; % verticillate, joints pedicelled; 9 pubes- cent, joints sessile; branches of the fork of the 3d longitudinal vein very arcuated at base (fig. 8, wing). ZYGONEURA Meig. Antenne 9-jointed, short, slightly pubescent; joints subsessile, sub- globose (fig. 9, wing). ANARETE Hal. Wings pubescent ; Third longitudinal vein forked. The upper branch of the fork forms a double curve, almost in the shape of an §; (see Plate I, fig. 13.) Tritozyea Lw. The upper branch of the fork forms a single smooth curve; 4 antennez 16-jointed, verticillate, joints pedicelled; 9 antenne 10-jointed, pilose, joints moniliform (fig. 10, wing). Carocua, Hal. 178 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Foarth longitudinal vein forked ; antennez 11-20-jointed ; =, moni- liform, pilose ; joints pedicelled; 9 submoniliform, joints sessile, pubescent (fig. 11, wing). Campytomyza Meig. IH. Ocelli wanting; third longitudinal vein forked; first longitudinal vein very short; wings pubescent; antenne % moniliform, verticillate ; 2 submoniliform, pubescent. Antenne 16-jointed (fig. 12, wing). LestREMIA Jacq. Antenne 11-jointed. Crecipocona Lw. Fig. 8. Fig. 9. Fig. 10. Zygoneura. Anarete. Catocha, u Fig. 11. Fig. 12. ———, *Campylomyza. Lestremia. For further details as well as for the references, see Walker, Diptera Britannica, Vol. III, which also contains beautiful figures of all the genera. As to the new genus Tvritozyga Lw., formed on an American species, Mr. Loew thus characterizes it in a manuscript note of his :— ‘‘The whole strueture of its body shows the nearest relation to Campylomyza ; the form of the legs and wings is as in that genus; the wings (Tab. I, fig. 13) have the same short pubescence and cilia, and the three ocelli are just as distinct. The differences are the following. 1. The vein, which in the second section of Cectdomyide is added to the number of the veins of the first section, is not simple, but forked, in the’ new genus, and therefore approaches in some measure the genus Anarete; 2. The very thick longitudinal vein is not forked as in Oampylomyza, but simple. The new genus cannot be confounded with Anarete, the species of which have a much more slender structure, a very elongated first joint of the tarsi and the third longitudinal vein of the wing bipartite as far as the base. From Lestremia and Cecidogona it differs in quite a similar manner, and besides by the presence of ocelli, which are wanting in both genera. The antenne are mutilated in the single specimen which I have before me (a male from the District of Columbia), therefore I can say nothing of the number of their joints; their CECIDOMYIA. 179 structure is as in most Campylomyze. The number of the joints of the antenne being of a higher value, among the Gall-gnats, for the distinction of species than for that of genera, since almost every genus comprises species with very different numbers of joints of the antenne, I abstain from giving a name to the species known to me so incompletely; as to the genus, which can never be mis- taken, I propose for it the name of Zritozyya.” Il. On the habits of the CEcIDOMYIDA. The food of the larve of Cecidomyva is of a vegetable character. A few apparent exceptions will be mentioned below. They furthermore seem to live in preference on (ving plants; neverthe- less several species of the subgenera Hpzidosis and Diplosis, have been reared by Mr. Winnertz from decaying wood; Cee. fuscicollis Meig. (?) has been reared by Bouché from decaying bulbs of tulips and hyacinths. (Instances like that of Cec. bicolor Bouché, found in dung during winter, must be received with caution, as the larve may have gone there for transformation only.) Although the majority of these larvee attack the soft and green parts of plants, some of them live under the bark of trees, in the cones of pines (Cec. strobt Kalt.) or in fungi (Diplosis polyport Wz., Asynapta lugubris Wz., etc.) Again, most of the larve are monophagous, that is, each species lives exclusively on a certain species of plant, or, at least on closely allied plants; Mr. Winnertz remarks that even those found under the bark of trees follow the same rule. Hxceptions are Cee. sisymbrit Sehr., which, according to Mr. Winnertz, inhabits in May and June a gall on Berberis vulgaris, and from June till No- vember a somewhat different gall on Nasturtium sylvestre (Winn. l. ce. p. 209 and 231); Cecid. arcuata Wz., has been found in the pappus of different syngenesists, in decaying wood and fungi. Besides these, there is a class of larvee which live as guests or parasites in galls formed by other Cecidomyte (Cec. acrophila Wz. and pavida Wz. live socially in the deformed buds of Fraxinus excelsior ; Diplosis socialis Wz. inhabits the gall of ZLas/optera rubi; Dipl. tibialis Wz., has been reared from the same gall with Cec. salicina Schr., etc.); or by Acart (Cec. peregrina Wz., and similar cases, observed by Loew.) Some even live in the society of Aphides. According to Mr. Winnertz the larve of the sub- genus Dplosis principally, share these parasitical habits; even 180 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. those living under the bark of trees or in fungi are seldom found alone, but for the most part in the society of other larve (Winn. l. ec. p. 206). Thus, the larva of a species of Dzplosis has been found in a stem of Sarothrium scoparium, together with larve of Hylesinus and Apion. Among the larve with an exceptional mode of life, those should be mentioned which live on the surface of the plant, as that, ob- served by Mr. Loew on the leaves of Veronica Deccabunga, or those of Diplosis ceomatis Wz., and D. coniophaga Wz. found on the leaves of a rose-bush overgrown with the fungus Ceoma miniatum, on which they feed. The American species, probably also a Dip- losts, which J have called Cece. glutinosa, and which will be described below, has a similar mode of existence on the surface of hickory leaves. The greater number of larve penetrate inside of the plant, so as to be concealed from view during their development. Their presence is generally indicated on the outside of the plant by some deformation. Every part of the plant, from the root to the flower and the fruit, is liable to such attacks. But each species of Cee?- domyva always attacks the same part of the plant, and deforms it in the same way. (Exceptions seem to be rare; Cec. tremule Wz. has been reared from two galls of different shape, both found on the poplar; the insects differed only in size). The deformations thus produced are very numerous, and several unsuccessful attempts have been made to classify them according to the nature of their origin and their shape. At one extreme of the series is the true gall, a vegetable growth of constant and de- finite form, attached to the plant by a very small portion of its surface and not otherwise deforming that part of the plant (of this class are, for instance, the numerous galls, described below, on the leaves of the hickories) ; at the other extreme is the simple defor- mation, folding of a leaf, swelling of a leaf-rib, arrest of the growth of a bud or a stalk, ete. The egg of Cectdomyia is elongated, rounded at both ends, orange-yellow, or whitish. The time within which the larva is hatched is very different, and depends on the state of the weather; in a great heat, the hatching sometimes takes place within a few hours ; generally afew days are required. Mr. Loew supposes, however, that the species having but one yearly generation remain much longer in the state of eggs. CECIDOMYIA. 18] When first hatched, the larva is colorless, transparent, with a translucent green, yellowish or red stomach; later in life it assumes different shades of red (orange, pinkish, cochenille-red) or becomes yellow or whitish; the color of the same species may also some- what change with age. All these larve have the extraordinary number of fourteen joints, thus affording an apparent exception from all other larvee of insects, which, as a general rule, have thirteen joints. The supernumerary fourteenth joint is placed between the head and the first thoracic (stigma-bearing) segment. It may be considered either as a part of the head, cr as a prolongation of the first thoracic segment. Number and position of the stigmata are normal; one pair on the first thoracic segment, and eight pairs on the first eight abdominal segments, so that the ninth or last segment bears none. Sometimes the last pair of stigmata is removed from its usual lateral position, more towards the middle of the segment. In one case (Cec. pint Deg. and the American C. pint mopis) this last pair is placed apparently on the dast segment; but this segment is in reality the eighth, the ninth segment being in this larva unusually small and eoncealed under the eighth. The _ stigmata are horny, more or less nipple-shaped projections. The skin of most larve appears finely chagreened under a strong magnifying power; in some cases it is perfectly smooth. The dorsal segments of Cec. sarothamnt Lw., C. geniste Lw., etc. are uneven; those of C. cracce Lw., C. quercus Lw., C. fuscicollis Bouché, ete. are furnished with bristles or sparse hairs; those of ©. entomophila Perris with hairs arranged in regular rows; those of Cecid. pint Degeer, and of two larve which I found in this country (Cec. pint tnopts O. 8. and Cec. glutinosa, nov. sp.), have rows of fleshy, setiferous caruncles along the back. (it is to be noticed here that both Degeer and Dufour, in describing such larve, mistook the back for the venter, and deseribed these carun- eles as pseudopods. See Deg. Mém. VI, Tab. XXVI, fig. 9—19, and Dufour, Ann. Soc. Ent. de Fr., 1838, p. 293). The last abdominal segment is smooth and rounded, or furnished with two setiferous tubercles (Cec. pind), sometimes uneven and bristly, or excavated, or armed with a pair of horny processes, frequently curved upwards. Dufour saw a larva use these pro- cesses for leaping. The structure of the head and of the organs of the mouth is bot imperfectly known. What Mr. Ratzeburg saw (see his paper 182 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. in Wiegmann’s Archiv, vol. vil. p. 283, with a plate) and what I have found confirmed by my own observations, may be reduced to the following: The horny parts of the head consist of a ring with two processes extended backwards; a soft, fleshy swelling which protrudes through this ring is taken by Ratzeburg for the labium ; two openings in the upper part of the ring emit a pair of two- jointed organs which this author and L. Dufour believed to be palpi, but which I would rather consider as rudimental antenne, especially on account of their position on the upper side of the head. (Uaboulbéne and Perris entertained the same view. ) On the under side of the body, ‘at the juncture of the first thoracic segment with the supernumerary (14th) segment, there is a horny, more or less elongated piece, projecting with its anterior part, whereas its posterior end is concealed under the skin of the first thoracic segment, and more or less translucent. This organ, the use or the homology of which is unknown, is peculiar to the ‘larvee of Cectdomyva, and seems to be seldom wanting. (I found under the bark of a tree a full-grown larva which, for its strueture I believe to be a Cectdomya, although it showed no trace of this breastbone.) It may be that this organ is used for locomotion, although I hardly would consider it as homologous to the pseudo- pods of the larve of Chironomus and Ceratopogon. If the sup- plementary (14th) segment be considered as a part of the head, this breastbone might be taken for the mentum, in analogy to the horny mentum of the larvee of the Tipularie. The form of this organ is variable in different species; sometimes it ends anteriorly in two points, with an excavation between them; sometimes in one elongated point; or it is serrated, ete. The remaining part of the under side of the body sometimes shows other organs of locomotion. The larva of Cee. entomophila, according to Perris, has three slender, elongated, pointed, sub- cornecus, approximated projections in the middle of every ventral | segment. Cec. fuscicollis Bouché (Bouché, Naturg. der Ins. p. 95), has a pair of elongated, pointed pseudopods under each thoracic segment, and three such pseudopods under each abdomi- nal segment. Bouche’s figure of the latter closely resembles Perry’s figure of the pseudopods of Cee. entomophila. The motions of the larvez, except those few, living on the surface of the leaves, are generally slow; but those which change their abode before assuming the pupa state become very active about CECIDOMYIA. 183 that period. Winnertz observed an extraordinary activity in some such larve after a thunder storm ; they left their hiding-places un- der ground, and crawled about restlessly for some time; they did the same after every thunder storm, some of them even two months after having left their galls. The larvee of several species, for instance, Cec. lote, Cec. pisi, and Cecid. rumicis, have the pewer of leaping. Mr. Loew remarks that all such larve belong to the sub-genus Diplosis. Cec. populi Duf. performed its leaps by straining the horny hooks at the tip of its abdomen against the under side of the thoracic segments. (Dufour, Ann. Sc. Nat., 2e sér. XVI, p. 257.) “The want of horny organs of mastication,” says Mr. Winnertz, ‘“‘authorizes the supposition that a lesion of the plant does not take place; it is much more probable that the larva has the power of producing in the plant some peculiar irritation, which causes an overflow of the sap necessary for its food. How little the larva requires for its support is evident from the circumstance that it attains its full growth and development in a gall just large enough to inclose it, a gall apparently hermetically closed, for the most part with hard walls, which de not show the least sign of internal lesion. It seems even as if a certain amount of moisture alone was sufficient to sustain these larve, especially when a great num- ber of them live socially in the same gall (from ten to fifteen larve in the pea-sized bud .of Cardamine pratensis; from fifty to sixty in another kind of gall, ete.). Another proof of the small quan- tity of nourishment required by these larve is, that no excrements are to be found in their place of abode.” ‘‘The only exception known to me of this extreme frugality,” says the same author, ‘‘are the larve of two species which live on the leaves of the white rose, attacked by the fungus Ceoma minia- tum. These larve not only lick the sap exuding at the bottom of the heaps of spores, but they also greedily consume the spores themselves, and their intestinal canal is always filled with them.” The observation of Vallot (Mém. de Dijon, 1827, p. 95), that a larva of Cecidomyta (C. acarivora) found on the surface of the leaves of Chelidonium feeds by sucking Acar?, as yet requires con- firmation. Winnertz saw Cectdomyia-larve living as guests in deformations produced by Acart, greedily lick their hosts, but he never found in such galls an empty skin of an Acarus. As to the larve of Cecidemyta inhabiting galls, produced by other species 184 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. of the same genus, it is a question, according to Winnertz, whether they take the same food with their hosts, or live on their excre- ments. Perris (Mém. de Lille, X, p. 274, with figures) found Cecid. entomophila in an insect-box, living on the excrements of the minute Acarz abounding in such boxes; he compares them, apparently with good reason, with the larve of Cecidomyta found under the bark of trees, among the excrements of the xylophagous insects. These larve underwent their transformation in the cor- ners of the box. It is very probable that the larvae of Cecidomyia, like most of the dipterous larve, do not undergo several moultings. I do not find any mention about it in the authors. Only Dr. Harris states that ©. tiritict casts off its skin before going under ground for transformation. Before assuming the pupa state, some larvee of Cecidomyia leave their galls and abscond themselves under ground, under dry leaves or moss, or under the bark of trees. Other larve, on the contrary, undergo their transformation within their gall.* In both eases the pupe are frequently, although not’always, inclosed in a cocoon. Winnertz positively denies that the larve spin this cocoon ; ae- cording to his observation, the latter is, so to say, exuded by the larva. He found that larve which had fastened themselves to a leaf, were eneircled within twenty-four hours by a white halo, eon- sisting of tiny thread-like partieles, which seemed to grow some- what like erystal-needles; the larva during this time remained perfectly motionless. The cocoon is perfected within a few days, and even then, under a strong magnifying power, no genuine thread is perceptible. . The mode in whieh the pupa state is assamed has been de- scribed by Dr. Harris in a posthumous paper published in the Proceedings of the Boston Soe. of Nat. Hist., 1860, p. 179. ““The approaching change is marked by an alteration of the eolor of the anterior segments of the larva, which (in the ease of Ceeid. salicis Fitch) from orange become red and shining, as if distended by blood. Soon afterwards, rudimentary legs, wings, and antennz begin, as it were, to bud and put forth, and rapidly grow to their full pupal dimensions, and thus the transformation to the pupa is * The larva of Cecid. terminalis Lw., according to Winnertz, varies in its habits. It sometimes goes under ground, and sometimes transforms within the willow leaves deformed by it. CECIDOMYIA. 185 completed.” The peculiarity of this process is, that the transforma- tion is undergone without shedding the larva skin, and, as the same observation has been repeated by Dr. Harris on the larve of @. destructor Say and C. tritiet Kirby, it is very probable that it ap- plies to all the larve of the genus. Ido not find this fact men- ne tioned in the European authors. Instead of a cocoon, the pupa of Cec. destructor Say is inclosed in an oblong, brown case, which is nothing but its own hardened pupa-skin. ‘The larva of this insect, says Dr. Harris (/. c.), when it has come to its growth, remains fixed and motionless on the culm of the wheat. Its body contracts and soon takes the form and color of a flax-seed. While this change is going on externally, the body of the insect gradually cleaves from its outer dry and brownish skin. When this is carefully opened, the included insect will be seen to be still in the larva state. It does not change its condition until a few days before it discloses the winged insect,” ete. Cecid. graminicola Kalt. and another Cecidomyiu, mentioned by Dr. Fitch as forming an imbricated gall on Agrostis laterifiora, undergo a similar kind of transformation, their pupse being inclosed in the dry larva-skin. However different the mode of transformation of Cecid. pini Deg., C. pint maritime Duf., and Cec. pint inopis O. S. may ap- pear, the pupz of which are inclosed within a cocoon of resin, it is in perfect analogy with the preceding instances. "The process by which the cocoon is formed is exactly the same as that described above by Dr. Harris. The larva of the American species C. pind inopis O. S. observed by me in the environs of Washington, fastens itself to a pine leaf and remains motionless until the resinous sub- stance which it exudes abundantly, begins to harden; the larva then gradually frees itself from the contact of the cocoon-like case thus formed. It is very probable that this cocoon is nothing but the outer larva-skin, saturated with resin. The pupex of Cecidomyie show a close resemblance to those of the Tipule fungicole, especially those of Sciara. As in the latter genus, the bases of the antenne are often produced in points; these frontal projections are sometimes long, approximated, and resemble horns (Cec. sarothamnt, see Winnertz, 1. c.:Tab. I, f. 6, or Cee. verbasci Dufour, Ann. Se. Nat., 8e sér., Vol. IV, p. 5-24, with figures, 1845); in other cases they are smaller and at some 186 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. distance from each other (Cee. salicina, C. veronice, etc., see Wz., l. c. f. 3, 4). Behind these horns, two pairs of bristle-like pro- cesses.may be observed in most pupe. The first pair is also on the head, close by the horns, the second on the thorax. Both vary in size and strength in different species. The second, tho- racic pair, has been taken by some authors for a spiracle. These projections and horns, especially the frontal ones, aid the pupa in working its way through the gall or from underground, before entering its last stage of existence. The dorsal segments of the abdomen are, for the same purpose, frequently rough with spines. The tip of the abdomen is sometimes smooth; in other instances it bears a few bristles. After the exclusion of the perfect insect, the pupa-skin remains frequently hanging on the outside of the gall. Some species of Cecidomyia have only one, others more than one yearly generation. The summer generation of the latter kind remain but a short time in the pupa state; the winter generation much longer. The larvee of Lastoptera resemble those of Cectdomyia in their structure as well as in their habits. They frequently have the same reddish color and the peculiar breast-bone. JZ. rudbi Heeger and the N. American ZL, vitis O. S. produce swellings in the stem of the plants which they inhabit. JZ. pusilla Heeger forms galls on the leaves of Sonchus, LZ. cerris Kollar on those of the oak (Quercus cerris). III. On the North American CectpoMy1A hitherto observed and their galls, The species of N. A. Cecidomyie at present known, may be distributed into three categories, according to the extent of our knowledge concerning them. About the species of the first cate- gory, nothing but the description of the perfect insect is extant, its habits remaining unknown; as to those of the second category we are acquainted with the first stages of their existence, especially with the deformations they produce, without knowing the perfect insect; finally, to the third category belong those, the habits of which, as well as the perfect insect, are described. The following is a synopsis of the species recorded by previous authors, as well as of those mentioned in this paper:— CECIDOMYIA. 187 I. Perfect insect described, habits unknown. . ornata Say, Long’s Exped. App. p. 357. Wied. Auss. Zw. I, 22, 2. . caliptera Fitch. ) eco es t Dr. A. Fitch, Essay on the Wheat-fly, etc. . tergata Fitch. | . thoracica Fitch. J . spongivora Walk. List of Dipt. Brit. Mus. I, 30. Campylomyza scutellata Say, Journ. Acad. Phil. III, 17,1. Wied. Auss. Zw. I, 22, 1. Tritozyga, sp. Lw. (see p. 178). Diplosis maceus Lw. The following note on this new species was furnished by Mr. Loew :— KOO SS o> “ Gall-gnats cannot be recognizably described from single dried specimens, unless they are distinguished by some striking peculiar- ities. I feel no temptation at all to describe species which have no such peculiarities, and allow myself an exception only with the following Dzplosis on account of its remarkable beauty. D. maccus Lozrw. % and 9. (Tab. I, figs. 11 and 12.)—Flavida, thorace fusco-vittato, antennarum articulis nigris et pallidis alternanti- bus, alis violaceo-maculatis, tibiis tarsisque nigro-annulatis. Yellowish, thorax with fuscescent stripes ; the joints of the antenne alter- nately black and whitish; wings with violet-blue spots; tibie and tarsi annulated with black. Long. corp. 0.08. Long. al. 0.11. Yellowish; the joints of the antenne alternately black and yellowish-white, the simple joints being black, the double joints yellowish-white; also the hairs of the black joints are black, and those of the light ones light. Thorax with three brown longitu- dinal stripes coalescing anteriorly, the intermediate one reaching only to the middle of the thorax, the lateral ones running as far as its posterior margin. Abdomen without dark bands. Coxe yel- lowish. Fore and middle femora black on the upper side and tips, the outermost extremity of the tip being yellowish; hind femora with a black line not reaching far beyond the middle, and with the tips black. Tibiz black; anterior ones with a very broad yellowish ring beyond the middle, the hind ones with such a ring at their base and a second ring beyond the middle. Anterior tarsi black on the first, short joint, at the base of the second and at the tips of the second, third and fourth joints; the hind tarsi have the same markings with the exception of the base of the second 188 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. joint, which is not black. Poisers yellowish, the base of the knob blackish. Wings yellowish, appearing almost golden yellow in an oblique direction, with bright spots of a violet reflection. Before the second longitudinal vein there are two such spots, the first immediately beyond the tip of the first longitudinal vein, the second between the first and the tip of the second longitudinal vein. Between the second and third longitudinal veins there are three violet spots, the first of which is the largest; it is situated under the first costal spot and runs far towards the base of the wing in the form of a wedge without sharp limitation; the second is the smallest, and is placed below the yellowish space between the two costal spots; the third is a double spot almost S shaped, and united to the second costal spot with its anterior end. Behind the third longitudinal vein the violet color prevails to such an extent as to leave only two golden spots, one of which is placed behind the anterior branch and the other immediately behind the posterior branch of the third longitudinal vejn. The cilia of the wings are quite pale yellowish, but blackish where the violet spots reach the margin of the wing. Hab. Washington. (Osten-Sacken.) This species resembles very much the European Diplosis pavo- nina Loew, but is easily distinguished from it by the smaller ex- tent of the violet color of the wings, the smaller extent of the black color of the legs, and the sharper limitation of both colors. Whether the male of Diplosis pavonina has likewise the joints of the antenne alternately dark-colored I do not know, as I did not succeed in discovering it; judging, however, by the appearance of the antenne of the female, this does not seem to be the case.” II. Galls or larve known, perfect insect unknown. (The descrip- tion of these galls and larve is given below, under the indi- cated numbers. ) On hickories, Carya, of different kinds, seven species, besides one belonging to the third category. (Nos. 1—8.) On the golden-rod, Solidago, of different kinds, two species, besides other two belonging to the third category. (Nos. 9—12.) On Vaccinium (or Gaylussacia ?), one species. (No. 13.) On the scrub pine (Pinus inops), two species. (Nos. 14 and 15.) On the red maple (Acer rubrum), one species. (No. 17.) On the ash (Frarinus americana), one species. (No. 18.) On the oaks of different kinds ( Quercus), foursspecies.. (Nos. 19—22.) CECIDOMYIA. 189 On the wild grape (Vitis), one species (No. 24), besides another belonging to the third category. On the hornbeam (Carpinus americana) one species. (No. 25.) On the tulip-tree (Liriodendron tulipiferum), two species. (Nos. 26 and 27.) On the willow (Salix), one species (No. 28), besides one belonging to the third category. On Impatiens fulva, one species. (No. 30.) On the blackberry (Rubus villosus), one species. (No. 31.) On Agrostis lateriflora (?), one species. (No. 32.) III. Perfect insect described, and its habits known. On the cereals (wheat, rye, etc.). { About the habits of these well-known insects, see CO. destructor Say. Dr. Harris’s Treatise, etc., and Dr. Fitch’s papers: C. tritict Kirby. | The Hessian Fly (Trans. N. Y. State Agric. Soc., Ll vol. VI), and The Wheat Fly (ibid. vol. V). C. culmicola Morris. See Dr. Harris’s Treatise, p. 465. On the locust (Robinia pseudoacacia). C. robinie Hald. Amer. Journ. Agric. and Sc., vol. VI, 193. Harris, Treatise, etc., p. 452. (Haldeman’s paper is also reproduced in the Proc. Boston Soc. of Nat. Hist., vol. VI, January, 1859.) The larva lives upon the leaves, the margins of which it deforms into a roll. It is evident, from Mr. H.’s description of the perfect insect, that it belongs to the sub-genus Diplosis. (See also Fitch, Reports, vol. II, No. 332.) C. pseudoacaciz Fitch, Reports, vol. II, No. 331. The larve injure the tender young leaflets near the tip of the stem, causing them to be folded like a little pod (in July and August). They transform under ground. On the gooseberry (Ribes uva crispa). C. grossulariz Fitch, Reports, vol. I, p. 176, and vol. II, No. 150. The berries turning red prematurely and becoming putrid, contain the bright yellow larve. Dr. Loew thinks that the perfect insect be- longs to the sub-genus Asphondylia. (See p. 7.) On the willow (Salix rigida and S. lucida). C. salicis Fitch, Am. Quart. Journ. Agric. and Science, vol. I, p. 263. (See also Dr. Harris’s paper in Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. V1I, January, 1860.) The gall is a woody tumor, surrounded by the dry and brittle terminal bud, at the tips of the twigs. It contains but a single larva. The name of the species must be changed, as there is already a European C. salicis. Y propose to call it C. ri gid. On the alder (Alnus serrulata). C. serrulate O. 8. (See below, No. 16.) On the hickory (Carya). Diplosis carye O. 8S. (See No. 1.) On the wild grape. 190 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. Lasioptera vitis O. S. (See No. 23.) On the golden rod (Solidago). C. solidaginis Lw. (See No. 9.) C. hirtipes O. S. (See No. 10.) On Chrysopsis mariana. C. chrysopsidis Lw. (See No. 29.) In comparing this list with similar enumerations existing for European Cecidomyie, but few cases of analogy will be found. Such cases are, for instance, the habits of C. pint inopis, nov. sp., which correspond exactly to the European C. pint Degeer ; the gall of CO. strobiloides, nov. sp., on the willow, which is repre- sented in Europe by @. strobilana Bremi; the analogy between the gall on Fraxinus americana (No. 18) and that of C. botularia Wz. of the European ash, is more doubtful; likewise that between the deformation of CO. erwbescens, nov. sp. (No. 20) on the oak leaves, and a similar deformation described by Mr. Loew (OC. quereus Lw.) Two galls occur on the American wild grape, whereas none has been discovered on the European grape; likewise, although eight galls are already known to occur on the hickory (Carya), none is recorded as belonging to the European walnut (/uglans). Al- though galls have been found on the European maple, alder, and blackberry, they are different from those recorded below on the American species of these trees and shrubs. Robinia, Lirioden- dron, and in some degree Solidago, being peculiar to America, their galls could not, of course, be expected to be found in Europe. I will proceed now to give a condensed description of the ob- servations which I had occasion to make on Ceetdomytie during my residence in this country. These observations were made in the environs of Washington, unless otherwise mentioned. I have followed a practice adopted in Europe, in giving names to species known only on account of the deformations they produce, the per- fect insect not having as yet been reared. This affords the advan- tage of being able to designate each described gall by a fixed name. In order, however, to distinguish such species from those the gall-fly of which has been reared and described, the first are simply put down as new species (n. sp.), whereas the names of the authors have been mentioned after the specific names of the latter (Lw. or O S.) CECIDOMYIA. 191 © 1-8. On hickories (Carya) of different kinds. The numerous galls of Cectdomyieé occurring on the hickory are found indifferently on the various species of this tree. I have noticed also that whenever a spot is found where one of the galls occurs in abundance, some of the other kinds are sure to be found. Thus the galls of Cec. holotricha and those of Diplosis carye, or those of the latter with the galls of Cec. tubccola are frequently met with on the same leaflet. These galls may be distributed as follows (the pu dais from 1 to 8 corresponding to those of the descriptions given below): A. True galls, fastened to the under side of the leaf and breaking off easily. a. Bare. 1. Subglobular, with a small nipple at the tip, diam.. 0.05 to 0.1. 2. Hlongated onion shaped, a little larger than the preceding. 3. Conical, contracted at base, blood red or purplish. 4. Cylindrical, erect, inserted in a cylindrical socket. 6. Pubes- cent. 5. Subglobular, with a nipple at tip (or short onion shaped), pubescent with ferruginous. 6. Subglobular, without nipple at tip, finely downy. B. Other deformations. 7. Swelling of the midrib at the base of the leaf. 8. Yellow spots on the leaves; larva living on the leaf, not within it. 1. Diplosis carye O. 8. Gall subglobular, smooth, seedlike, 0.05 to 0.1 in diameter, with a small nipple at the tip. In sum- mer they are yellowish-green and their shell is soft; in winter they become brownish, and the shell, although thin, is hard and woody. They begin to growin June. I gathered them in October, when the larva was full grown. Hach gall contains a single larva; it is white, and stouter in proportion to its length than most larve of Cecidomyia. The breast-bone has two sharp points anteriorly, with an excavation between them; the tip of the last abdominal segment has no horny processes. It undergoes the transformation within the gall. The pupa resembles, by the structure of its head, that of © sarothamnt Wz., figured by Mr. Winnertz in his monograph (J. ec. tab. I, f. 6); namely, the pointed projections at the basis of the antenne are closely approximated and not remote, as in other species. After having kept these galls on moist sand all winter,-I ob- tained the flyin April. (Description drawn from a fresh specimen.) D. caryeO. 8. ¢ and 9.—Antenne pale; ¢ 26-jointed; alternate joints a little larger than the intermediate ones; verticils 192 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. moderate; pedicels between the joints rather short; 2 14-jointed, joints subsessile; front and mouth pale; collare with a blackish edge posteriorly, ending on both sides in a short, black streak on the pleure; thorax pale, with three broad, almost contiguous blackish or grayish stripes; the intermediate one is subcuneiform and slightly capillary towards its posterior end, which, for this reason, appears slightly bifid; it does not reach the scutellum; the lateral ones are rounded anteriorly, narrowed posteriorly, and end just before the scutellum in a short, black streak, communicating with a brown triangle on the side of the scutellum, so that the latter, being pale itself, is inclosed on both sides by the black streaks and the brown triangles; a couple of black dots are visible on the pleure ; a pale brown spot on the pectus, between the first and the second pair of cox; a brown spot at the basis of the halteres, which are pale; abdomen reddish, hardly darker laterally, and with a tuft of hair on each side, near the posterior margins of the segments; legs pale, with a minute, appressed black pubes- cence, which makes them appear blackish; wings immaculate; the second longitudinal vein joins the costal at the apex of the wing or immediately beyond it; cross-vein indistinct or none. 2. C. caryecola, n. sp. Gall somewhat larger than the preced- ing, elongated onion-shaped, with the tip prolonged in a point, pale green. Found through the summer either in separate clusters, or mixed with other galls, for instance that of C. holotricha. 3. CO. sanguinolenta, n. sp. Gall conical, narrowed at the basis, blood red or purplish, about 0.15 high and 0.12 broad. I found them for the first time about the middle of July. At this time they were solid inside, except a narrow hollow near the basis which contained the small, somewhat yellowish larva, with a distinct, pointed, spear-shaped breast bone. ‘These galls occur in nume- rous clusters on the same leaflet. 4. ©. tubicola,.n. sp. Gall narrow-cylindrical, erect, about 0.15 or more long. They break off easily, being inserted in a small protuberance on the leaf, with a sharp-edged socket in the centre, in which the cylinder fits exactly. Their color, when ripe, is more or less brownish, pale greenish at base. They are hollow inside and contain in October a whitish larva with a breast bone ending uuteriorly in a single, elongated point. They generally occur in clusters. Some of these galls are found covered with a viscous fluid. CECIDOMYIA. 193 Karly in summer I frequently found a gall of the same form, but smaller, generally reddish at the tip and easily distinguished by the absence of the basal piece in which the other is inserted; it is simply fastened to the leaf by a minute pedicel. Besides, it occurs always singly, frequently on the edges of the leaves, whereas the other gall is for the most part found in clusters. Is it the same species ? 5. C. holotricha, n. sp. Subglobular, pubescent, onion-shaped galls. Diam. up to 0.1 or a little more. They resemble the galls of D. carye in shape, but are somewhat larger and covered with a pubescence which is pale when the gall is young and growing, and becomes rust-colored in the stage of ripeness. I have observed two modes of occurrence of these galls; either they are scattered in numbers, as many as a hundred on the same leaflet, or they grow in a row along the mid-rib of the leaflet ; in the latter case they are generally larger, and being packed close together, assume an irregular shape. It is very probable that these two forms belong to two different species, and in this case I would retain the above name to the first form. Galls of the first form begin to’ grow in June; in September and October I found the white larva apparently full grown. The breast-bone has one elon- gated point anteriorly and two projections on both sides, about the middle. At the same time I find in my diary that in some of these galls (it is not distinctly stated which), I had found a pale orange, apparently full grown larva, with the breast-bone ending anteriorly in two triangular points with a rectangular excision between them. 6. C. persicoides, n. sp. Gall round, 0.1 to 0.2 in diameter, smooth, without nipple-shaped tip, yellowish or red, clothed with a delicate down like that of peach, and looking somewhat like a diminutive fruit of this kind. I found these galls more seldom than the others. T. CO. cynipsea, n. sp. Rounded, irregular, hard swelling on the under side of the hickory-leaf, on the midrib, near the base of the leaf, about half an inch long. When I found it (in July) it was pale yellowish, and contained, in several small hollows, minute whitish larvee, with a breast-bone narrowed anteriorly and ending in a point. 8. C. glutinosa, n. sp. The small yellowish-orange larva forms no gall, but lives in the open air on the under-side of the leaf, to which it is attached by a viscous substance probably secreted by 13 194 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. the leaf. The presence of the larva is indicated on the other side of the leaf by a round yellow spot. The structure of the larva is peculiar: it has rows of fleshy, pointed tubercles along its back, like the larva of C. pint tnopis (described below), with which it agrees in some respects in its habit of fastening itself to the sur- face of the leaf by means of a viscous substance. 9. C. solidaginis Lw. Gall on Solidago produced by the arrest of the growth of the stalk, which causes the leaves to accumulate round the same spot and thus to produce a large imbricated de- formation. It begins to appear already in July, but the flies escape only late in the fall. The following description of gall and fly have been prepared by Mr. Loew :— “The gall (Tab. I, fig. 8) represents a globular head of the size of 14 to 2 inches formed by hundreds of leaves, the exterior ones being only little altered, the interior ones becoming more and more narrow; on a closer examination we easily perceive that this structure results from the coalescence of several deformations at the tips.of abortive twigs; in a specimen which I dissected I counted five such shortened twigs. At the top of each twig there is a single gall, without compartment, somewhat of the shape of a very small seed, and having in its interior a cavity widened a little underneath. The tip of one of them (Tab. I, fig. 10) showed at its end three small convergent lobes, giving it the appearance of being produced by three coalescent leaves.* I could not discover this structure in the others; I found only a rounded, rather irre- gular opening at the tip. The insect which produces this defor- mation likewise belongs to the genus Cectdomyia in the restricted sense. C. solidaginis Lorw. % and 9. (Tab. I, fig. 4—7.)—Fusca, ab- domine fasciis rufis et nigris picto; antennarum flagellum in mare arti- culis 20 vel 21, in foemina circiter 18; ale pilose, nigricantes, venula transversa nulla; terebra foemine modice elongata. Fuscous, abdomen with black and red bands; flagellum of the antenne with 20 or 21 joints in the male, with about 18 in the female; wings hairy, blackish, without transverse veinlet; borer of the female mode- rately long. Long. corp. % 0.16, 9 0.17. Long. al. § and 9 0.16— 0.17. Thorax with the pleuree sometimes brown, sometimes dark fus- cous, with black hairs. Abdomen of the female with distinct CECIDOMYIA. 195 black and red transverse bands, the latter less distinct in the male; hairs of the abdomen blackish with a lighter reflection. Antenne of the male with 20 or 21 brown flagellar joints with rather long peduncles, the uppermost being much smaller than the preceding; the verticillate hairs very long and rather light. The female has generally some flagellar joints less, and its joints are round, with shorter hairs and without any peduncle. The female ovipositor has a very moderate length and is little pointed. . Legs of the female black without white reflection. Legs of the male much longer and more slender than those of the female; hind tibize and tarsi everywhere with a white reflection, which, on the fore and middle tibiz and tarsi, is chiefly seen on the under side. Poisers black. Wings blackish on account of their close and long hairs; between the first and second longitudinal veins no transverse vein is visible; the second longitudinal vein towards its end is very little curved exteriorly ; the anterior branch of the third longitudinal vein is distinct and nearly straight.” (Descrip- tion drawn from dry specimens. ) 10. O. hirtipes O. S. Rounded gall at the tip of stunted stalks of Solidago, sometimes nearly an inch in diameter, smooth, brown- ish on the outside, solid inside, containing several larve in different compartments. I found them in August, and obtained the fly on the 17th of September. C. hirtipes 0. 8. ?.—Antenne reddish-black, 22-jointed, joints short, subcylindrical, almost subglobular, gradually decreasing in size towards the tip, separated by pedicels which are shorter than the joints, verticillate-pilose ; head dark reddish with black hairs on the vertex; eyes contiguous on the front; thorax blood-red, its back blackish, the usual three stripes being almost coalescent and separated by rows of erect black hairs; collare blackish above; pleure blood-red, with indistinct black dots; scutellum and meta- thorax red, the first with black hairs; halteres reddish at base, the club deep black ; abdomen red, upper side of the segments with a blackish, apressed, rather sparse pubescence; cox reddish, feet deep black; wings with a dense, blackish pubescence; costa black, especially along its middle portion; second longitudinal vein reaches the margin at or close by the tip of the wing ; cross-vein indistinct. (Description drawn from a fresh specimen. ) 11. C. carbonifera, n. sp. Pale, circular spots, surrounded by 196 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. a purplish-black ring, on the leaves of Solidago; under each spot, inside of the leaf, several larve. I found them commonly in Au- gust, and observed that the hollow space within the leaf was fre- quently filled with a hard, black substance, not unlike charcoal. 12. C. racemicola, n. sp. Bud-shaped gall among the racemes of Solidago. It has about 0.1 in diameter, is green, and looks exactly like a bud, but is easily distinguished from the buds of Solidago by its stout, rounded form. Each gall contains a single reddish larva. Not rare in September. 13. C. vaceinii, n. sp. Gall on the leaf of Vaccinium (or Gay- lussacia ?), in the shape of a cock’s comb. I found near Wash- ington, in October, one single leaf with two galls of this kind, arising from the central rib. The largest of the galls was about 0.15 high and 0.2 broad about the middle. They were green, and resembled pretty much a cock’s comb, or, still better, an oyster, fastened by its hinge. After having been kept for some time on moist sand, both burst open exactly like the valves of a shell, and a reddish larva escaped from each. Both wandered for some days in the bottle in which I kept them, and inclosed themselves after- wards in delicate semitransparent cocoons, formed above the sur- face of the sand, between some chips of paper which I had provided for them. Unfortunately, both died without undergoing their final transformation. 14. C. pint inopis, n. sp. Resinous cocoon on the leaves of the scrub pine (Pinus tnops). Similar cocoons have been observed on the European pine, and described a century ago by Degeer. Ratzeburg, in his /orst-Jnsecten, describes and figures the same cocoon, as well as the larva and the perfect insect, C. pint Deg.* Dufour (in the Ann. Soc. Entomol. de France, 1838, p. 293) gives an account of a Cectdomyia with precisely similar habits, which he observed on the South European pine (Pinus maritima), and which he called C. pint maritime. The larva producing these cocoons is remarkable for two rows of oblong, pointed, fleshy protuberances along its back, and a similar row on each side. (See Ratzeburg, Forst-Insecten, IIT, Tab, x, f. 14, L.) Early in April I saw some of these larvx emerge from a small hollow between two terminal buds, where they had probably spent the winter, and crawl along the leaves, * See the same figures of cocoon and larva in Wiegm. Archiv, etc., vol. VII, p. 233. CECIDOMYIA. 197 aided in this by a resinous substance which they exuded abund- antly. Having reached a certain height on the leaf, they stop and remain quiet till the resinous substance covering them becomes hard and assumes the shape of an oblong, whitish, semi-transparent cocoon. Then the larva may be seen moving to and fro inside of this cocoon. I did not succeed to rear the fly from the cocoons which I brought home, and when I returned to the same spot in the woods about a month later, the cocoons were already empty. According to Ratzeburg’s statement the European species spends the winter in the cocoon. The American species, as just shown, forms its cocoon only in the spring. As, nevertheless, it may be identical, or at least closely allied to C. pint Degeer, I subjoin here the description of the latter, translated from Mr. Winnertz’s mo- nograph. (Compare also Ratzeb. |. ec. III, p. 159.) C. (Diplosis) pint Degeer. ¢ Antenne somewhat longer than the body, brown, basal joints yellow, verticils snow-white ; joints strong, stout, on short pedicels, double joints three times as long as the pedicel, the last joint with a very small, nipple-shaped pro- jection; hypostoma and front pale reddish or brown; palpi reddish- yellow; thorax brownish-black or black, with two rows of white hairs from the collare to the scutellum, and one row from the shoul- der to the origin of the wing; pectus blackish; pleure reddish- brown; halteres white; abdomen reddish-brown, with white hair, forceps blackish; feet brown with white articulations, under side silvery-white; posterior feet with a silvery-white reflection when viewed in a certain light; wings milky white, with a white pubes- cence, the costal and the two first longitudinal veins brown, the third longitudinal vein pale; transverse vein pale, but distinct, very oblique, situated a very short distance beyond the middle of the first longitudinal vein; third longitudinal vein straight, turning towards the posterior margin in an obtuse, rounded angle; the second longitudinal meets the costal immediately beyond the tip of the wing. 2 Antenne a little more than half as long as the body, brown with gray verticils, basal joints yellow; joints of the flagellum about five times as long as the pedicel, last joint ending in a small _ bud-shaped appendage; hypostoma reddish-yellow; front reddish- brown; palpi and thorax as in ¢; halteres brown; abdomen red- dish-brown, with short whitish hairs, more dense and with a silvery reflection laterally ; ovipositor short, yellow, with two small oval 198 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. lamels; femora and tibiz and the anterior pair of tarsi superiorly black or black-brown; inferiorly white with a silvery reflection ; the posterior tarsi have the two basal joints black or black-brown superiorly, silvery white inferiorly; the three last joints are silvery white, sometimes with blackish articulations; wings gray, irides- cent with a dense, blackish-brown pubescence and brown veins; cross-vein distinct, very oblique, situated a little before the middle of the first longitudinal vein; second longitudinal as in ¢, the third likewise, although almost perpendicular to the posterior mar- gin. Length ¢ ? 0.1 to 0.15. 15. CO. brachynteroides, n. sp. Swelling at the basis of the leaves of the scrub pine (Pinus tnops). In consequence of this swelling the pairy leaves diverge, their bases coalesce, and the sheath at the basis of the bunch bursts. In July these swellings contain several small reddish larve; in winter I found them empty, but having observed some larve hanging on cobwebs near these galls, I conclude that they undergo their transformation under ground, and were caught in these cobwebs in the attempt to leave the gall. The habits of this Cecidomyia seem to be very like those of C. brachyntera Schwigr. living at the base of the pairy leaves of the European Pinus sylvestris. Still, the latter produces no gall or swelling whatever, and causes the leaves only to wither; it also goes under ground for transformation. (See Ratzeburg, Forst-In- secten, Vol. III, p. 160.) 16. C. serrulate O. 8. Deformed terminal buds of the common alder (Alnus serrulata). The buds appear enlarged, rounded, pointed at the tip, having from three to five lines in diameter. In autumn they are greenish ; in winter withered, brown, and frequently covered with a whitish efflorescence. Each gall contained in October from two to six red- dish larvee, lodged in the same compartment. In winter the galls are found empty, as the larve go under ground. By keeping some of these galls, gathered in October, on moist earth, I obtained the fly in the following April. It belongs to the sub-genus Cecidomyta Loew. The description has been drawn from fresh specimens. C. serrulatze 0.8. ¢ and ?.—Head and antenne brownish; — mouth and palpi paler; antenne 18-jointed in both sexes; joints verticillate and on moderately long pedicels ({); subcylindrical, subsessile (2); thorax blackish superiorly, the usual three stripes CECIDOMYIA. 199 being coalescent; their intervals are indicated only by longitudinal | crests of erect hairs; a reddish spot before the scutellum; the lat- ter brownish with two black streaks at the basis; sternum brown- ish; the rest of the thorax, as well as the abdomen, are of a bright red, especially in the 2, where this red color is more apparent, the abdomen being so much more distended; dorsal segments of the abdomen brown (which color is produced by numerous and exceed- ingly minute scales, appressed to the body); stem of halteres pale, knob obscurer; basal half of femora pale; their apical half, tibiz and tarsi brownish; wings margined with a brown pubescence anteriorly and round the apex, especially in the ?; cross-vein not apparent; the second longitudinal vein reaches the margin a short distance before the apex. 17. C. ocellaris, n. sp. Ocelliform, red spots on the leaves of the red maple (Acer rubrum). They have about 0.3 in diameter ; the margin is bright cherry red, and there is a round patch of the same kind in the centre. The interval between them is pale. They appear brighter on the upper side of the leaf; on the under side in the centre is a small depression occupied by a small, transpa- rent, colorless larva. I found them in this state at the beginning of June. Later in the season I observed that the spots had lost their fresh color, and that the larva had disappeared ; I suppose it drops to the ground to undergo its transformation. 18. C. pellex, n. sp. Rounded oblong, succulent, subpellucid galls on the ribs of the leaves of the ash (raxinus americana). Diameter, 0.15 to 0.2. They are pale green, and the more ripe ones are slightly colored with brownish. The principal convexity is on the upper side of the leaf; on the under side the leaf-rib appears swollen, pale green in the middle, and whitish on both sides. Hach gall contains a whitish larva; some of these galls were double. There were one or more (as many as six) galls on the same leaf. Towards the end of June I found many of these galls shrivelled and dry, and suppose therefore that the larve had gone under ground. a aha Sayer! vmort pyrsictieas yn We ee elias jag Pay rae tT Ansel liao F sivPy we iipeetetal FF itiin “styl ie sc J sith Sant? ‘ainlowits hee ade phe iparhonae aby VUxr aL et t oe 1 Xt? Wie beget eel sila ett Pesce were Pore pee ae. ; Ja Khaw oD Wed attiat HAs | P 3 cari at f fet, PN ive f ry pat mos, t tt hy Sale we Ow fener odivitnargt ot) Wnt » pet. ir ee = POR, ‘ i) AM ay. Pewys. 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