1 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS AND PROCEEDINGS OK THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SECTION OF THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. VOLUME XXX, 1919 PHILIP P. CALVERT, Ph.D., Kditor. E. T. CRESSON, JR., Associate Editor. HENRY SKINNER, M. D., Sc. D., Editor Emeritus. ADVISORY COMMITTEE : EZRA T. CRESSON H. W. \VKN7KI PHILIP LAURKNT J. A. G. KhllN. PHILADELPHIA : ENTOMOLOGICAL ROOMS OK THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCKS, LOGAN SQUARE. 1919- The several numbers of the NEWS for 1919 were mailed at the Phila- delphia Post Office as follows : No. 1 — January January 4, 1919 2 — February January 31, " 3— March March 7 " 4— April April 3 " 5— May May 1 " 6-June May 29 " 7— July June 30 " 8— October October 10 9 — November November 5 The date of mailing the December, 1919, number will be announced in the issue for January, 1920. JANUARY, 1919. ENTOMOLOGIUAL NEWS Vol. XXX. No. 1. Thaddeus William Hams 1795-1856. PHILIP P. CALVERT, Ph.D., Editor. E. T. CRESSON, JR., Associate Editor. HENRY SKINNER, M.D., Sc.D., Editor Emeritus. JAN .) Description made from specimens collected on Pseudotsnga douglassi at Corvallis, and on Pinus poudcrosa.' at < irant s I ' Oregon, and from specimens sent to me by K. < >. Kssi^. 1mm California. They occur on the needles and are hidden by the sheath so that close observation is necessary to find them. Apterous ririHirotis female. General color, a palo yellowish gr< to brownish yellow with a row of small In-own dots on i-r.ch •ncnt. A short sharp spine arises from each spot. Antenna'- an.! ' dusky brown. The body is elongate with the head and thorax • rangular and the abdomen ovoid and ending in a sharp pointed cau The antennae are five-segmented and reach almost to thr of coxae. The third segment usually does not h:iv< *The drawings used in this paper were ma i Nehrlich Pickett, since deceased. l/i JAN 2 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS . [Jan., '19 some specimens one or two may be present. The fourth segment has one large, and the fifth one large and several small sensoria. The rostrum reaches slightly beyond the third pair of coxae and has a very distinctive structure. Plate I, A, fig. 6. The third and fourth segments are quadrangular, while the fifth is but a small half moon-shaped piece closely attached to the fourth segment. The nectaries have a very small, narrow, cone-shaped base. The cauda is triangular and ends in a nipple-like projection. The legs and front part of the head are set with prominent long spline-like hairs. Length of body 2.2 mm. Alatc viviparous female. General color the same as in the apterous forms, except that the thoracic shield is deep brown and the head and prothorax are dusky brown. The body is elongate and slender, and the general shape and size of the antennae, beak, abdomen, nectaries and cauda are like those of the apterous forms, except the antennal sensoria on the third segment and the legs, which are longer and more slender in this form. The third antennal segment has two or three large circular sensoria, usually widely separated. The wings are long and slender, with the median vein once forked. The base of the fork is very indistinct and in some specimens cannot be distinguished. Each branch becomes more distinct towards the distal part. Measurements. Length of body, 2.5 mm. Length of antennal seg- ments, III, 0.187 mm.; IV, o.i mm.; V, 0.145 mm.; total length, 0.62 mm. Length of wing, 2.78 mm. Length of hind tibia, 1.34 mm.; hind tarsus, o.i mm. and 0.187 mm. Length of beak, 0.92 mm. Essigella pini new species. (Plate I, B, figs. 1-6). Description made from specimens collected on Finns vir- g'mlana, by W. L. McAtee, at Plummers Island. Maryland, June 27 and 28, 1914. This species resembles very closely Essigella californica Essig, described from California, but several distinct differences are easily found. The main dif- ference is found in the length and shape of the hind tibiae and the wings. The hind tibiae of E. pini are short and stout while those of £. californica are longer and slender. The wing of the former species normally has but a simple median vein, while the latter has normally two or more or less connected branches. Specimens in balsam. Types in writer's collection. Apterous viviparous female. .General color a light yellowish green, with a series of rows of small brown spots on the abdomen. The fore part of the body is quadrangular, while the abdomen tapers to a point. The antennae are five-segmented and of a peculiar shape, as shown in the accompanying drawing. The rostrum of this species and of H. californica are also quite distinct and are unlike that of any other Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 3 known species. The nectaries are small and without the large cone- shaped base found in most species of Lachnids. Length of body, 1.5 mm. Alatc viviparous female. The antennae are five-segmented, as shown in Plate I, B, fig. 6. General color, yellowish green, the thorax being brownish (?). The abdomen is marked with a series of brown spots which occur in longitudinal rows. The antennae are short and have five segments; distal half of the third and the fourth and fifth seg- ments brown. The fifth segment is longer than the fourth, and the fourth and fifth together are slightly longer than the third; third seg- ment with three and sometimes four roundish sensoria ; fourth with one large one at the distal end, and the fifth with one large and several small ones near the tip. The head is set with coarse spines, six of which are set in front. Similar spines are found on the body. The antennae have a few inconspicuous spines widely set apart. The legs are distinctly spiny, but not as much so as in Essigella calif oniica. The rostrum is short with the third and fourth segments quadrangular and the terminal segment half moon-shaped and not acutely pointed as in other species of Lacluiiuac. Wings long and narrow, front wing usually with the median vein simple. The tibiae are short and rather stout, while in E. calif oniica they are longer and more slender. The nectaries are but openings with thickened edges. The cauda is angu- lar with the tip elongated into a sharp nipple-like projection. Measurements. Length of body, 1.55 mm. Length of antennal seg- ments, III, 0.21 mm.; IV, o.i mm.; V, 0.145 mm. Total length, 0.6 mm. Length of wing, 2.33 mm.; width, 0.9 mm. Length of beak, 0.64 mm. Length of hind tibia, 0.85 mm.; hind tarsus, o.i mm. and 0.145 mm. Eulachnus thunbergii new species. (Plate II, D, figs. 1-8.) Descriptions made from one male and six oviparous females mounted on slides in balsam. This material was secured for study through the kindness of Dr. L. O. Howard and Mr. A. C. Baker, of the United States Bureau of Entomology. Original notes made by Mr. Theo. Pergande are as follows, "Pergande ace. 12127." "March, 1906. Received from Dr. T. S. Kuwana, of the Imperial Agricultural Experiment Sta- tion, Hishigahara, Tokio. Japan, alcoholic specimens of a Lachnid, marked 267, with the following note: On the twigs of Sciadof>\tis irrticillnta and Pinns t1iunber P:irl. Tabata. Tokio, Nov. 25, 1905, winged form ; II, head and antennae black, eyes red, Prothorax dark yellowish green, dorsal aspect of meso-metathorax, black; abdomen yellowish green. Ilmuv tubes black; wingless form II, body yellowish green, long and narrow; head black; eyes reddish purple. Antennae dark yel- 4 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 low, but the tips black ; honey tubes black. Mounted them in balsam. This appears to be a new species, near L. agilis Kal- tenbach." I have not seen specimens of Eulachnus agilis Kaltenbach which may or may not be the same as Eulachnus rileyi Wil- liams, but I find this species to be distinctly different from Wil- liams' species. Types in U. S. Bureau of Entomology collec- tion. The main differences are shown in the following comparisons between the two. Oviparous Female Eulachnus rileyi Eulachnus thutibcrgii Hairs Coarse, spinelike Fine, semi-setaceous Antenna 1.22 mm. long 1.02 mm. long Hind Tibia 1.78 mm. long i.n mm. long Alate male Eulachnus rileyi Eulachnus thunbcrgii Antenna 2 mm. long 1.53 mm. long Hind Tibia 2.05 mm. long 1.33 mm. long S e n s o r i a Numerous, small Numerous, larger than in E. rileyi Apterous oviparous female. Specimens in balsam appear to have about the same color and characteristics as E. rileyi? Color grayish brown. Antennae and legs dusky brown. Body elongate and furnished with long semi-spinelike hairs. Similar hairs occur on the antennae and legs. Beak short and extending to the hind coxae. The last seg- ment is a narrow black piece without length and is hardly separated from the preceding segment. Antennae reaching slightly beyond the base of the hind coxae. Third antennal segment approximately as long as the fourth and fifth. The fifth slightly longer than fourth or sixth, the latter two being about equal. The fourth and fifth segments each bear a single sensorium near the distal end. Cornicles with the base hardly more than a millimeter in depth. Cauda short and broadly rounded. Hind tibia somewhat stout and with numerous small sen- soria along the basal two-thirds. Measurements. Length of body, 2.34 mm. Length of antennal seg- ments, III, 0.378 mm.; TV, 0.16 mm.; V, 0.2 mm.; VI, 0.16 mm. Total length, 1.53 mm. Length of hind tibia, i.ii mm. Alate Male. General color, head and thorax black. Antennae and legs, except the middle parts of the first and second tibiae, deep brown. Genital plates dusky black. Cauda light colored. Hairs on antennae, legs and body as in the apterous forms. Body long and slender, an- tennae reaching beyond the hind coxae. Vol. XXX] ENTM.MoLor.ICAI. NF.YVS 5 Antennae coarse and with numerous circular sensoria of irregular size. The fourth and fifth segments are about equal in length and are shorter than the third and longer than the sixth. Nectaries as in the apterous forms. \Yings long and narrow with median vein having but a single fork. Angle between branches wider and shorter than in Eitlacliiius ri/e\i. Mesurements. Length of body a little more than 2 mm. Length of antennal segments not definite because of a deformity in the only available specimen. Ill, 0.56 mm.; IV, 0.34 mm.; V, 0.34 mm.; VI, 0.26 mm. Length of hind tibia, 1.33 mm. Eulachnus rileyi Williams. (Plate II, E, figs. 1-6.) Description made from specimens sent to me by J. J. Davis, and from specimens collected at St. Louis, Missouri ; Chicago, Illinois, and Madison, Wisconsin. . Iptcrons viviparous female. General color, orange brown to green- ish black; the color is caused to vary more or less by a grayish pul- verulence covering the body. \Yhen placed in balsam four rows of black spots are visible on the body, and from each one there arises a long spine-like hair. Antennae light at the base and shading to black at the tip. Antennae long and slender and quite spiny. The third segment is not quite as long as four and five together, segments four and six approximately equal. The rostrum is short, not quite reaching the hind coxae. The nectaries are small with a narrow cone-shaped base. Entire body covered with long spine-like hairs. Length of body, 2.4 mm. Length of antennal segments, III, 0.45 mm.; IV, 0.24 mm.; V. 0.31 mm.; VI, 0.24 mm. Total length, 1.4 mm. Length of hind tibia, 1.6 mm.; hind tarsi, 0.12 mmm. and .22 mm. Alatc viviparous female. General color dark green or brown, cov- ered with white waxy powder or threads. When mounted in balsam the head and thorax are brownish and the abdomen greenish brown. Antennae and hind pair of legs black, the tibia of the front pair of legs light colored except at the ends of the segment. Antennae long and slender and set with long black spine-like hairs. The third segment without sensoria, fourth and fifth with one each. Other characters as in apterous form. Measurements. Length of body 2 mm. Length of antennal seg- ments, III, 0.44 mm.; IV, 0.25 mm.; V, 0.26 mm.; VI, o.i<> nun. Total length, 1.3 mm. Length of hind tibia, 1.6 mm. Length of hind tarsus, 0.12 mm. and .22 mm. UNILACHNUS new genus. The characters upon which this s 6 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 trum. In the true genus Lachmts the terminal segment is long and tapering. Type of genus LacJmits pamis Wilson. Unilachnus parvus (Wilson). (Plate I, C, figs. 1-5). This species is included in this paper to illustrate the genus and also to show the distinction between this and other species which have a simple or once forked median vein. A complete description will be found in Volume 41 of the Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 1915, p. 104. It occurs on the needles of Pinus rirginiona and P. rigida and the type locality is the District of Columbia. Alatc viviparous female. Body elongate and slender, antennae and legs medium slender and thickly covered with long slender hairs. An- tennae reaching to the third pair of coxae and the beak reaching to the second pair ; beak broad and blunt at the tip. The third antennal segment bears about eight small sensoria, the fourth two and the fifth a single large one near the distal end ; sixth with the usual large one near the base of the antennal spur. Wings hyaline and the median vein but a very indistinct single piece as indicated in the accompany- ing figure. Nectaries small and more or less bell-shaped. The opening rather large for the base. Cauda bluntly angled. Measurements. Length of body, 1.48 mm.; width, 0.6 mm. Length of antennal segments, III, 0.32 mm.; IV, 0.154 mm.; V, 0.176 mm.; VI, 0.154 mm. Length of wing, 2.5 mm. Length of hind tibia, 0.92 mm. Length of hind tarsus, 0.066 mm. and 0.3 mm. Length of beak, 0.49 mm. Lachnus juniperivora new species. (Plate II, F, figs. 1-5.) From material collected by W. L. McAtee on Plummers Island, Maryland, July 5, 1914, on Juniperini&s virginiana. Types in writer's collection. Alate viviparous female. Specimens in balsam show no distinct coloration of antennae and legs, these parts appearing to be light dusky throughout. Third antennal segment approximately equal in length to the fourth and fifth segments, fourth segment shorter than the fifth, fifth and sixth about equal. Third segment with about six round sen- soria of irregular size and not in alignment ; fourth segment with two and fifth with two. Beak extending to the tip of the abdomen. The antennae are quite distinct from those of the other species in this genus and the nectaries are much broader at the base than those of Lachnus tomcntosus. The wing venation is shown in Plate IT, F, fig. i. Nectaries with a wide sloping base. Cauda rounded, anal plate ENT. NEWS, Vol. XXX. Plate II. LACHNIDS-WILSON. D, EULACHNUSTHUNBERGII; E, EU. RILEYI; F, LACHNUS JUNIPERIVORA. Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 7 angular. Antennae, legs and body with a moderate number of short medium hairs. Measurements. Length of body, 1.8 mm. Length of antennal seg- ments, III, 0.37 mm.; IV, 0.166 mm.; V, 0.187 mm.; VI, 0.187 mm- Total length, 1.02 mm. Beak, III, 0.21 mm.; IV, 6.21 mm.; V, 0.07 mm. Total length, 1.82 mm. Length of hind tibia, 1.36 mm.; hind tarsus, 0.083 mm. and 0.21 mm. EXPLANATION OF PLATES I AND II. PLATE I. — A. Essigella calif arnica, alate viviparous female ; i. wings; 2. cornicle; 3. head; 4. hind leg; 5. antenna; 6. rostrum. B. Essigella pini, n. sp., alate viviparous female; I, wings; 2. cor- nicle ; 3. head ; 4. hind leg ; 5. rostrum ; 6. antenna. C. Unilachnus parnis, alate viviparous female; I. wings; 2. cor- nicle ; 3. rostrum ; 4. antenna ; 5. hind leg. PLATE II. — D. Eulachnus tlntnbcr. Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS II COENAGRIONIDAE. Lestes congener Hagen. Uncommon; Willow pond (Carlisle) and adjacent ponds, August 19 to October 9. Lestes disjunctus Selys. Rare; Willow pond region, August 14 to September 18. Lestes eurinus Say. Rare; upper Spencer brook valley. Flaxdam pond (Wayland), June 5 to July 20. Lestes forcipatus Ramb. Rather uncommon; Willow pond region, August 13 to September 7. Lestes rectangularis Say. Uncommon; June 21 to September 18. Lestes uncatus Kirby. Commor ; John Brown farm ponds, May 30 to June 27. Lestes unguiculatus Hagen. Ver> common; ponds, brooks, etc., August 9 to September 5. Lestes vigilax Hagen. Rather uncommon; Bateman's, Willow pond region, Sudbury river, August 5 to September 5. Argia moesta (Hagen). Rare; Walden pond, June 16 to August 20. Argia violacea (Hagen). Common; Fairhaven bay, Willow, Bateman's, Walden ponds, May to September 10. Argia sedula (Hagen). Two tenerals taken on June 24, 1916, were of doubtful determination by Mr. E. B. Williamson. Enallagma aspersum (Hagen). Rare; Willow, Bateman's, Goose ponds, August 13 to September 5. Enallagma calverti Morse. Not uncommon; Fairhaven bay, Goose ponds, Spencer brook, May 19 to June 15. Enallagma civile (Hagen). Common; river and ponds, May to September 10. Enallagma ebrium (Hagen). Common; Fairyland, Willow, Bate- man's ponds, May 26 to August 30. Enallagma geminatum Kell. Common; Bateman's pond, July 20 to October 2. Taken by Mr. L. W. Swett in Bedford. Enallagma hageni (Walsh). Rare; Spencer brook, June 8. Taken by Mr. L. W. Swett in Bedford. Enallagma laterale Morse. Common; Bateman's pond, May to July 7. Enallagma divagans Selys. Rare; Walden pond, June 19. Taken by Mr. Swett in Bedford. Enallagma pollutum (Hagen). Common; Bateman's pond, June 23 to September 10. Taken by Mr. Swett in Bedford. Enallagma signatum (Hagen). Common; Concord river, Bate- man's pond, May 26 to September 5. Enallagma traviatum Selys. Rather rare; Bateman's pond, August 1 to 20. Nehalennia irene (Hagen). Rare; Willow, Strawberry Hill. \Val- den ponds, June 8 to September 7. 12 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 Chromagrion conditum (Hagen). Uncommon; Fairyland, Bate- man's, Walden ponds, June 4 to 23. Ischnura posita (Hagen). Very rare; June 16 to September 3. Ischnura verticalis (Say). Common; Willow and Goose ponds, May 29 to October 9. Anomalagrion hastatum (Say). Rare; Goose, Strawberry Hill and Willow ponds, August 13 to 19. ANISOPTERA. AESHNIDAE. Cordulegaster diastatops (Selys). Uncommon; Bateman's, John Brown farm brooks, May 28 to June 18. Cordulegaster maculatus Selys. Uncommon; Spencer, John Brown farm brook, June 8 to 28. Hagenius brevistylus Selys. Rare; Walden, Bateman's, Willow ponds, August 16 to September 3. Ophiogomphus aspersus Morse. Rare; Bateman's pond, Spencer brook, May 26 to June 11. Gomphus borealis Needh. One female, Bateman's pond, May, 1915, collected by Peirson. Gomphus exilis Selys. Common; Bateman's, Walden ponds, Spen- cer brook, May 30 to August 8. Gomphus spicatus Hagen. Common; Bateman's, Walden ponds, May 13 to June 23. Gomphus spiniceps (Walsh). One specimen recorded by Peirson. Gomphus furcifer Hagen. Rare; Strawberry Hill pond, June 9 to 11. Taken by Dr. N. Banks at Lexington, June, 1917. Dromogomphus spinosus Selys. Uncommon; Bateman's, Willow ponds, July to September 8. Boyeria vinosa (Say). Uncommon; Spencer brook, John Brown farm brook, August 23 to September 15. Basiaeschna Janata (Say). Common; Spencer brook, Bateman's, Walden ponds, May 17 to June 24. Gomphaeschna furcillata (Say). Rare; Bateman's pond, June 7-8. Recorded by Peirson in May. Anax junius (Drury). Common; Goose, John Brown farm, Bate- man's, Willow ponds, May 18 to September 19. Aeshna canadensis Walk. Common; Bateman's, Willow ponds, August 8 to September 27. Aeshna clepsydra Say. Common; Concord river, Willow pond, August 19 to October 9. Aeshna constricta Say. Uncommon; Willow, Bateman's ponds, August 19 to September 26. Aeshna eremita Scud. Concord, October 1. Aeshna tuberculifera Walk. Rare; Strawberry Hill pond. August 1] to September 6. Vol. XXX ] KNTO.MllLOCK \l. NKWS I ^ Aeshna umbrosa Walk. Common; August 15 to October 20. Aeshna verticalis Hagen. Common; August 15 to October 2. Epiaeschna heros (Fabr.). Rare; Bateman's pond. June 7. Re- corded by Peirson in May. LlBELLULIDAE. Didymops transversa (Say). Common; Bateman's, Willow, Wai- den ponds, May 17 to June 23. Epicordulia princeps (Hagen). Common; Bateman's pond, May 25 to August 29. Helocordulia uhleri (Selys). Rare; Willow, Bateman's pond, Spen- cer brook, May 17 to June 18. Tetragoneuria cynosura (Say). Abundant; May 3 to June 20. Tetragoneuria cynosura var. simulans Mutt. Uncommon; Bate- man's pond, May 28 to June 23. Tetragoneuria morio Mutt. Rare; Bateman's pond, May 20 to 29. Tetragoneuria spinigera Selys. Uncommon; Bateman's pond, May 19 to June 18. Dorocordulia libera (Selys). Rare; Bateman's pond, June 8-9. Dorocordulia lepida (Hagen). Rare; Bateman's pond, August 9 to 13. Williamsonia lintneri (Hagen). Rare; Bateman's and Willow pond. May 16 to June 1. Recorded by Peirson. Cordulia shurtleffi Scud. Rare; Bateman's pond, June 9-27, and Flaxdam pond, Wayland. Somatochlora kennedyi E. M. Walker. Common; Bateman's pond, upper Spencer brook, June ?> to 24. Somatochlora tenebrosa (Say). Rare; Bateman's pond, Septem- ber 8. Somatochlora walshii (Scudder). Rare; a male found floating on the Assabet River on September 15, 1918, by H. M. I\ yes. Libellula cyanea Fabr. Uncommon; Willow and Bateman's pond, June 4 to September 4. Libellula exusta (Say). Common; May 19 to July. Libellula flavida Ramb. Rare; Fairyland, August 14. Libellula incesta Hagen. Abundant; June G to September 17. Libellula luctuosa Burm. Common; Bateman's, Fairyland ponds. June 16 to August 19. Libellula pulchella Drury. Abundant; June fi to Septen Libellula quadrimaculata I. inn. Common; Walden, Goose. Bate- man's, Strawberry Hill ponds, May 19 to August 19, Libellula semifasciata Burm. Rare; John Brown farm. Strawberry Hill pond, June 9 to August 22. Plathemis lydia (Drury). Common: May 27 to SepU'inlxT Perithemis domitia var. tenera (Say). Common; Bateman's, John Brown farm ponds, July to September 5, I4 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [jail. ,'19 Erythemis simplicicollis (Say). Uncommon; Concord river, July to September 3. Sympetrum costiferum (Hagen). Rare; Willow, Bateman's pond, August 15 to September 26. Sympetrum rubicundulum (Say). Abundant; June 9 to Septem- ber 30. Sympetrum rubicunduium var. obtrusum (Hagen). Rare; Septem- ber 5 to October 5. Sympetrum semicinctum (Say). Common; Bateman's, Willow ponds, July 25 to September 18. Sympetrum vicinum (Hagen). Common; August 14 to November 7. Pachydiplax longipennis Burm. Common; Bateman's, Willow ponds, Fairhaven bay, July 28 to September 9. Leucorrhinia frigida Hagen. Rare; Willow, Strawberry Hill ponds, June 8 to August 19. Leucorrhinia glacialis Hagen. Uncommon; Fairyland, Willow, Walden, Goose, Strawberry Hill ponds, May 19 to June 21. Leucorrhinia intacta Hagen. Common; May 17 to June 28. Celithemis elisa (Hagen). Common; Willow, Walden ponds, Spen- cer brook, May 19 to June 18. Celithemis eponina (Drury). Common; Bateman's, John Brown farm ponds, July to September 3. Tramea Carolina (Linn.). Rare; Strawberry Hill pond, June 8 to 11. On the Early Stages of Catocala titania Dodge, and a Description of Three New Varieties of Catocala (Lep.). By ERNST SCHWARZ, St. Louis, Missouri. Catocala titania. Ovum. — Glossy emerald green, changing in about ten days to liver brown; rather flat, concave ventrally; 42 to 48 ribs, many crossribs. Micropyle area rather large, granulated with many hexagonal eleva- tions ; micropyle slightly raised. Shortly before hatching the color changes to transparent blue. Larva, Stage i. — Head large; sides of head light brown. Body tapering to the sixth segment, from there enlarging; body color trans- parent bluish. Setae on first four segments only, whitish ; three rows of dark brown tubercles on dorsal portion, each bearing a black spine. Ventral faintly pinkish with the usual blotches dark brown. Stage 2. — Head smaller than in stage i ; brown. First and second segments a shade lighter than the rest of the body, which is a watery green color ; two lateral lines a shade darker than body color. Dorsal Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 15 bears three rows of brownish tubercles, each set with a single spine ; the saddle is faintly marked, with no elevation. Ventral as in stage I. Stage 3. — Head bilobed, ashen color ; a black band below crest. Crest reddish, a black longitudinal dash in inverted "V" space. Body color faintly pinkish, thickly dotted with black, so that the general aspect is brownish gray. There is a faint middorsal line; the three rows of tubercles are tipped with orange, as is also the blunt elevation on saddle above third pair of prolegs. Spiracles black surrounded by the body color. Setae pinkish, short and are not present between segments nine and ten. Ventral light pinkish, with blotches of light blue. Stage 4. — Head is body size ; color and markings as in stage 3. Hump above third pair of prolegs is more prominent; setae pinkish, short and stout. Stage 5. — Head strongly bilobed ; posterior part brown, darkest at cleft; sides marbled with liver color; two black transverse bands in inverted "V" space. Crest orange, from which protrudes a tubercle of light orange set with a black spine. Body color greenish ashen sprin- kled with many minute black dots; no distinct lines; all tubercles tipped with orange. Hump on saddle is prominent, brown tipped with reddish, and of a very fine texture; a second hump about half the size of the first and inclined toward it is on the same segment: dark brown, setae pinkish, stout. Ventral pinkish, with blotches of dark blue. Pupa has no distinctive features from the Catncala type. The larvae of C. titania can be collected until May 19, by bush beating night or day, as they do not leave the top of the tree for resting. When grown, the larva is easily recognized by the double horn above the third pair of prolegs ; the posterior one is much the smaller, about half the size of the anterior. The behavior of the larva of C. titania varies but little from that of other species of the genus. During the first stage they do not leave the margin of the leaf upon which they feed ; in the second stage they rest on the lower surface of the midrib of the leaf; in the third stage they rest on a twig just a little larger in diameter than the body, and continue so during the remaining stages. They seem to be comfortable only when resting on a branch a little thicker than themseK o. in either an upright or a horizontal position. Pupation occurs in most instances amid the thick foliage of a tree. In every stage the caterpillar mimics the color of its rot- l6 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., "iQ ing-place : this gives the organism almost certain protection. In a previous article* on the habits of C. titania, I have men- tioned that the imago rests in its similarly-colored environ- ment in perfect confidence of safety and cannot easily be alarmed. Thus we see that throughout all the stages of its life cycle, this species is protectively colored. Catocala titania Dodge, n. var. distincta. Primaries. — Ground color whitish gray, sprinkled with brown spots of various shades ; lines all prominent. T. a. line doubled, the anterior part faint, the posterior prominent throughout its entire length, but most conspicuous on costal region; median shade prominent, joins anteriorly the reniform. T. p. line very much in evidence, mostly so at "M" and sinus at vein I. Reniform concolorous with subterminal line; subreniform closed, a shade lighter than ground color. Subter- minal space dark brown, merging costally in the ground color ; subter- minal whitish and prominent ; terminal line brownish but faint. In all other respects as in the type. Expanse 39 mm. Types : One male and one female in collection of the author. Paratypc : One male in collection of R. Lange. Habi- tat : St. Louis, Missouri. In general aspect, this variety resembles C. alabarna. ex- cept that the forewings of the former are much the narrower. Catocala minuta Edwards, n. var. eureka. 9 . — Thorax silvery gray; body yellow, concolorous with hind wings; basal portion to b. h. line concolorous with thorax ; from this point to subterminal line the primaries are blackish brown; all markings in this space very obscure ; subterminal space very prominent, silvery white ; terminal space light gray; lunula blackish, centered with silvery dots; fringes concolorous with terminal space. Expanse 38 mm. $ . — The terminal space not so prominent as in the female ; in all other respects as in the female. Habitat: St. Louis, Missouri. Types: One male and one female in author's collection. Paratypes: One male and one female in collection of Fred. T. Naumann, of St. Louis, Mo. The females and one male bred by Mr. F. Naumann ; the other male taken by the writer. Eureka is to minuta what the variety gisela is to micro - nympha, and scintillans is to innubens. *Ent. News, 27:68. Vol. XXXJ ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS I/ t Catocala minuta Edwards, n. var. obliterata. $ and $ .— Forewings so heavily overlaid with blackish scales as almost to obscure the ground color and markings, except the ring sur- rounding the black reniform center, which is light brown, and subter- minal line at costa, which is also light brown. Hind wings as in minuta, with the exception of the absence of the yellow apical patch. Expanse 40 n,m. Habitat: St. Louis, Missouri. T\[>es : Collection of the author. This variety bears the same relation to minuta as agatha to unijuga, and Ivdia to faustina, and souunis to Iticiana. A New Genus of Bees from Peru (Hym.). By T. D. A. COCKERELL, Boulder. Colorado. Among the Old World Halictine bees is a very singular genus, Thrinchostoma of Saussure ; first described from Mada- gascar, but now known to be widely distributed in tropical Africa and Asia.* The species have the mouth region pro- longed and more or less snout-like, the malar space large. The wings are hairy, and in the males there is a patch of black hair situated on the second transverso-cubital nervure. There is a hyaline fold or spurious vein extending from the base of the stigma obliquely across the first submarginal cell and across the lower part of the second. The abdomen is subclavate, es- pecially in the males. The tongue is long and slender. At Huascaray, Peru, September 21, 1911, Prof. C. H. T. Townsend collected a very peculiar bee, having the aspect of a male Thrinchostoma, but with slender simple hind legs, and no patch of black hair on the second transverso-cubital nervure. Closer inspection shows it to be a female, and as it is wholly without pollen- collecting apparatus it must be a parasitic in- sect. It is thus quite distinct from Thrinchostoma and it is an interesting question whether it represents an isolated group of an old Thrinchostomine stock, or an independent evolution of parallel characteristics. It represents in any event a gnms new to our classification, though it has in fact been provided * See Canadian Entomologist, Feb., 1913, p. 35; July. 1915, p. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., Dec., 1914, p. 452. l8 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 with a generic name. Vachal, in Miscellanea Entomologica, xii (1904), p. 127, described a species Halictits chlerogas, from a female taken at Callanga, Peru. It is considerably smaller than our species, and metallic green but it is evidently con- generic. Vachal, struck by its peculiar characters, surmises that it may represent a new parasitic genus and adds that if this should prove to be the case the genus might be named Chlerogas, and the species C. latitans. According to the rules, however, it will be Chlerogas chlerogas (Vachal). CHLEROGAS Vachal. Halictine bees without pollen-collecting apparatus in the female, the abdomen of this sex clavate, truncate and hirsute at apex, without any caudal rima ; hind legs of female long and slender, the tarsus much longer than tibia or femur; no hind patella ; hind spur with three long teeth ; head prolonged beyond the eyes, snout-like, malar space very large ; inner or- bital margins deeply emarginate ; ocelli ordinary ; antennae long for a female ; scutellum binodose ; wings conspicuously hairy ; basal nervure falling short of transverso-median ; second sub- marginal cell nearly square, first recurrent nervure meeting second transverso-cubital on entering extreme base of the large third submarginal cell ; stigma large. Type C. chlerogas, but also includes : Chlerogas hirsutipennis n. sp. 9 . — Length about 12 mm., anterior wing nearly n; face prolonged about 1.3 mm. beyond eyes; head and thorax black, not metallic; lab- rum, mandibles and apical margin of clypeus dull yellow ; clypeus dull with sparse very feeble punctures ; antennae black, flagellum and apex of scape obscure, reddish beneath ; face, vertex, mesothorax and scu- tellum with thin black hair; hair of metathorax thin, erect, ochreous ; mesothorax dull, without evident punctures ; area of metathorax with extremely fine oblique striae ; posterior truncation of metathorax long, oblique, narrow, with a median sulcus, only the lower end defined on each side by a carina ; tegulae dark reddish ; wings dusky, stigma honey- color, nervures dilute fuscous ; legs bright ferruginous ; abdomen piceous above, dull, without bands, base of second segment pale red- dish; apex with coarse black hair; second and third ventral segments light ferruginous. Huascaray, Peru ; type in U. S. Nat. Museum. Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS If) Notes on the Genus Dicranoptycha Osten Sacken (Tipulidae, Diptera). By CHARLES P. ALEXANDER, Lawrence, Kansas. The genus Dicranoptycha was erected by Osten Sacken in 1859 to include four closely allied crane-flies from the eastern states. In 1910, Coquillett designated the first of these four species, D. germana, as the genotype. Later on, in the Mono- graphs (1869), Osten Sacken relegated D. sororcula to the synonymy of' D. sobrina, where it still remains. Besides the four valid Nearctic species, there are two European species of the genus. The Oriental D. slgnaticollls v.d.W. is undoubtedly a Libnotes rather than a Dicranoptycha. The known species of the genus are all very closely related and are separable only on slight differences of color and structure. Of the American species, D. germana O. S., the largest form, is characteristic of the Canadian life-zone and its range rarely overlaps those of the other species. The three remaining forms, together with the two species described in this paper, are characteristic of the Austral and lower Transitional life- zones. They frequent open woods, often but not necessarily near water, and several species may be found flying together. Thus at Plummer's Island, Maryland, in July, 1915, Mr. Mc- Atee and the writer found D. sobrina and D. wlnnemana com- monly. At Lawrence, Kansas, in July and August, three species fly commonly at the same time, D. winnemana, D. minima and D. tigrina. These species appear on the wing in about the order given, D. ivinnemana emerging first in early June, D. minima in early Julv and D. tigrina in mid- July, though all three species continue on the wing throughout August and most of September. They frequent the open Austral woodlands such as North Hollow on the University Campus and in such situations may be found resting on tin- leaves of tall herbage and low shrubbery. They arc almost invariably the only Limnobiinae occurring but fly with a numbi-r of species of Tipula which have a much shorter flight period (Tipiila dlctzlana, T. mingive, T. morrisoni. T. unimaculata, T. nmbrosa, T. flavoumbrosa, T. flavibasis, etc.). The general distribution of the American species lias hi-m indicated by the writer in an earlier paper M'rnc. Acad. \'at. Sri., Phila., 1916, pp. 496, 407). All of the species are com- paratively restricted in distribution excepting D. sohnim. In the Monographs (1869, p. 117) Osten Sacken stated that tin- Calif ornian specimens represented a in-\\- species which be did not characterize. In his Western Diptera ( 1877. pp \n~, 2O ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [ T^H., 'ig however, he indicated that the species was very probably D. sobrina. I have examined a great number of specimens from the western states and must state that I cannot distinguish the material from typical eastern sobrina and so must consider this species as being trans-continental, the widest distribution for any species of the genus. Specimens from New Mexico break this rather discontinuous range of sobrina and the species may be looked for in Texas and other intermediate states. D. nigripes is still known only from the unique type taken in Georgia. Specimens that were distributed by me under this name are herein described as a new species, D. minima. D. unnnemana, described from Plummer's Island, Maryland, ranges from Maryland and Georgia westward to Kansas. The new species described below have as yet been found only in scattered localities in Douglas County, Kansas, but unquestion- ably have a wide range in this section. The larvae of the species that T have reared, D. u'innemana and D. minima, are very similar to one another and are very characteristic in appearance. They are unusually elongate, slender, the body terete ; the skin very thin, glassy, entirely transparent, and glabrous so that the head-capsule and contents of the alimentary tract show through as clearly as through a very thin glass. The head-capsule is of the massive Limnobiine type and is readily told from all other crane-flies with the exception of Epiphragma by the three-toothed mentum. The spiracular-disk is comparatively small, surrounded by four small, slender, pointed lobes, two being lateral and two ventral in position. The inner face of these lobes and the disk itself are variously marked with black lines. The anal swelling is fleshy and highly protuberant. The larvae live in the moist or rather dry earth where they occur beneath the surface layer of leaf-mold and other debris. The pupa is likewise very char- acteristic since it apparently lacks pronotal breathing horns, these being sessile as in the higher Diptera. The pupa lives encased in a small, oval case of earth. The above observations were made on material reared by my wife, Mabel M. Alex- ander. Detailed observations on the immature stages of this interesting genus are given in another paper. A Key to the American species of Dicranoptycha. 1. Wings with a strong reddish-brown or fulvous tinge; Rs notably longer than cell 1st A/2; Canadian life-zone. (Northeastern United States) gcrmana O. S. Wings not strongly fulvous ; Rs approximately as long as cell 1st M2 ; Austral and Transitional life-zones 2 2. Tips of the femora conspicuously black; abdominal tergites uni- formly light brown or yellow 3 Vol. XXX] ENTOMdl.ociCM. XRWS 21 Tips of the femora not black; abdominal tergites banded or at least the seventh segment blackish 3. Size large (male, length, about 10 mm.); wings brownish yellow; male hypopygium with the gonapophyses acicular, prominent (Georgia) nigripcs O. S. Size small (male, length, under 8 mm.) ; wings brown; male hypo- pygium with the gonapophyses small, not projecting. (Kan- sas.) minima, sp. n. 4. Coloration yellow, the wings deep yellowish. (Eastern United States) winnemana Alex. Coloration brown or gray; wings pale brownish or grayish 5 5. Abdominal tergites uniformly dark brown or only the seventh seg- ment darker ; male hypopygium with the gonapophyses not acicular or projecting. (United States) sobrina O. S. Abdominal tergites banded, tigrine in appe?rance, the apical third of each segment pale; male hypopygium with the gonapophyses acicular, prominent. (Kansas) tigrina, sp. n. Dicranoptycha tigrina, sp. n. $ . — Length, 9 mm.; wing, 9.8-10 mm. 9 . — Length, 10 mm.; wing, 9.3-9.5 mm. Rostrum reddish. Palpi black. Antennae with the scape reddish yellow, the flagellum black. Head grayish brown, the vertex narrow. Mesonotum dark brown with a sparse brownish yellow pollen and without distinct stripes. Pleura clear gray becoming more yellowish below. Halteres pale. Legs with the coxae brownish yellow, the an- terior coxae darker brown ; femora brownish yellow, the tips of the femora darker brown ; tibiae and tarsi brown. Wings with a strong gray tinge, highly iridescent ; veins dark brown. Venation : Sc mod- erately elongated, extending to about midlength of the basal deflection of ^4+5; Rs moderately elongated, about as long as the long cell ist Mz and half again as long as the deflection of 7^4+5; basal de- flection of Cm inserted at or before one-third the length of cell ist .1/2. Abdominal tergites dark brown, the apical third of each segment more yellowish, producing a banded or tigrine appearance ; segment seven dark brownish black; hypopygium reddish yellmv. Sternites similar but the pale posterior margins to the segments are still broad- er. Male hypopygium with the dorsal pleural appendage bent at a right angle before midlength, the long apical point provided with num- erous setae ; ventral pleural appendage a short, broad, flattened blade, with a short curved tip and the inner margin with 8 or 9 acute serra- tions. Gonapophyses long, acicular, projecting conspicuously between the pleurites. Habitat: Kansas. Holot\pe, $, Lawrence, Douglas County. Kansas, alt. QOO ft., July"i6, 1918. Allotopotype, 9 . Paratopotypes, 50 July 16-30, 1918. This species is apparently close to D. >m/n/v.v < >. S. in the structure of the male hypopygium but the coloration of the wings and body are very different. Dicranoptycha minima, sp. n. $ .—Length, 6.7-7.2 mm.; wing, 6.5-7-8 mm. $ .-Length, about 6.5 mm. ; wing, 7-7.2 mm. Rostrum brownish yellow. Palpi black. Antennae with the scape 22 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 bright yellow, the flagellum brownish black. Head brown ; vertex rather broad. Pronotum grayish brown. Mesonotum light brown without stripes ; pseudosutural foveae distinct, black. Dorsal pleurites indistinctly gray- ish, the ventral pleurites yellow. Halteres brown. Legs with the coxae and trochanters yellow ; femora dull yellow, the tips narrowly and abruptly blackened ; tibiae yellowish brown, the extreme bases and tips a little darkened; tarsi brown, the metatarsi more yellowish. Wings with a strong brownish tinge, more yellowish basally and along the costa ; veins dark brown, subcosta yellow. Venation about as in D. tiprina. Abdomen yellowish brown without distinct darker markings ; tergite seven concolorous with the other abdominal segments. Hypopygium yellowish. Male hypopygium with the dorsal pleural appendage flat- tened, very broad, the surface covered with setae. The narrow ventral appendage is produced into a long slender apical point. Gonapophyses short, not acicular or projecting conspicuously between the pleurites. Habitat: Kansas. Holotype, $ , Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, alt. 900 ft., July 16, 1918. Allotopotype, ? . Parato'potypes, 50 $ $ . The types of the new species are in the collection of the author. Paratypes have been placed in the leading collections of the country. — • <»» ' — Cordulegaster dorsalis (Odonata) as an Enemy of Trout. Mr. Frank Springer writes from the Abbott Ranch, Rito de los Frijoles, New Mexico, Sept. i, as follows: "I am sending you some beasties, that I should like to know a little more about. They are highly predaceous devils, and I first discovered them in the act of seizing some of 'a lot of young trout which I was placing in the brook here. The bug lies buried in mud or sand, in shallow parts of the stream where the current is not very swift, with only his eyes projecting. When a little fish (about an inch long) comes wiggling along close enough over the bug, he snaps, projecting his formidable mandibles [lateral labial lobes] and the shovel-like part below them for quite a distance to the front, and catches the fish by his wiggling tail. By simulating the wiggling motion of a fish with a knife-blade, I could induce the bug to snap at it, and thus saw the motion several times I found the creatures quite numerous in the shallow, quieter waters where T was planting the young fry, and apparently they constitute a rather serious menace to the stocking of the stream, as they infest the shallow places, while the deeper water is dangerous on account of the older fish. I find that the trout eat these bugs to some extent, as in several instances they were contained in the stomach, and they are readily taken when offered as bait." Specimens sent agree in all particulars with Cordulegaster dorsulis Hagen, as described and figured by Needham. — T. D. A. COCKERELL, Boulder, Colorado. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. PHILADELPHIA, PA., JANUVRY, 1919. The News for 1919. Whether the hopes for the betterment of Entomology ex- pressed in our editorial for November last are any farther toward realization may well be doubted. In one respect, affect- ing the NEWS very strongly, it is certain that conditions are worse than at any time in the past. We regret to say that in- creased charges for labor within the last few months, unac- companied by any decrease in other expenses, positively com- pel us to reduce the number of pages which we are able to pub- lish each month and to forego all illustrations in plate or text, except where authors bear their cost. Even with these curtail- ments we look forward to a considerable deficit at the end of 1919. We surely owe this statement of our outlook for the new year to our many friends and contributors when they open the pages of the present number and note its smaller size. It is unnecessary to say that they can not regret this condi- tion more than do the editors and committees of the NEWS. Whenever financial matters improve, we shall respond at the earliest possible moment by restoring this journal to its former thickness. Bittacomorpha clavipes (Dipt.). On Sept. I, as I was crossing a road in Boulder, Colorado, I saw a strange apparition. What seemed to be a series of black and white specks, symmetrically arranged, was passing rapidly through the air. I realized at once that I was looking at Bittacomorpha claripcs, which I had never before met with in my years of collecting at Boulder. Having no net, I could only knock it down with,my hat, breaking off the strange and beautiful legs. This is not the first capture of B. claripcs in Colo- rado, as Mr. C. P. Alexander informs me that Dr. F. H. Snow took it in Alanitou Park, in August, years ago. The group is an ancient one, now represented by comparatively few species, scattered over the earth. A species of the same genus (/>'. niiocctiica Ckll., 1910) has been found fossil in the miocene shales at Florissant. — T. D. COCKF.RKLL, Boulder, Colorado. 23 24 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS |]an., '19 Notes and News. ENTOMOLOGICAL GLEANINGS PROM ALL QUARTERS OF THE GLOBE. A One Year Life Cycle for Saperda Candida Fab. Reared in an Apple (Col.). In Bulletin No. 156 of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Sta- tion the writer called attention to the fact that it seemed quite prob- able that Saperda Candida could be reared through all of its stages in the fruit of apple. At the time of the writing of the above mentioned bulletin the writer had in rearing two larvae which were at that time nearly one year old. The eggs from which these larvae had hatched had been deposited in an apple by a beetle during the season of 1917. The eggs hatched in this apple, and the larvae were allowed to bur- row around in the fruit until it began to decay, after which each larva was transferred to a fresh fruit. The borers were transferred to fresh fruits whenever the condition of the latter made it necessary to do so. During the winter the apple containing the insects was kept in the laboratory so that temperature conditions were favorable for them all the year. Reared in this way, one larva pupated and emerged as an adult in the summer of 1918, which was just one year after the egg from which it hatched, had been deposited. During the course of their develop- ment larvae were fed upon all sizes of apples, ranging from young green fruits not much over one and one-half inches in diameter to fully ripened and matured fruits. Part of the time the borers fed upon soft and rotten fruits. The larva which matured in the fruit had probably fed upon six different apples during the course of its development It is possible, in fact quite likely, that the unfavorable conditions under which the larvae were reared, were responsible for the develop- ment of one of them in one year. The beetle which developed from this larva was only about 15 mm. long, whereas a normal beetle is usually from 18 to 20 mm. in length. The second larva died at about the time when the first one pupated. It seems most likely that the second larva died because of the condition of the apple at the time of its death. The latter was in the same soft and rotten condition as the apple in which the first larva pupated. In view of the rapid and apparently normal development of the lar- vae up until winter of their first year, it seems quite likely that they would attain their normal development in the fruit if they were given fresh material from time to time so that the medium in which they were feeding would not become soft, gelatinous and even liquid as was the case many times in the apples in which we reared our larvae.— GEO. G. BECKER, Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Fayetteville, Ar- kansas. Vol. XXXJ ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 25 Botanical Abstracts. Under this title there has appeared No. i, Vol. I, dated September, 1918, of "a monthly serial furnishing abstracts and citations of publi- cations in the international field of botany in its broadest sense. The Board of Control of Botanical Abstracts has charge of the publi- cation. With the beginning of the year 1919, the membership of the Board of Control will be representative of the [13! various American botanical societies. At that time each society will be represented by two members, one elected for a period of two years and the other for a period of four years. After January, 1919, each society will elect a member for a period of four years, at intervals of two years, to re- place its representative who automatically retires." It is planned to issue two volumes of 300 pages each within one year, at $6.00 for the two volumes. This first number bears on its cover the names of an editor-in-chief and 15 editors for different divisions of botany with others still to be announced. As Entomology is so closely linked with Botany this magazine will be very useful to those cultivating the for- mer. Indeed so "broad" is the "sense" of botanv interpreted that we find in this number summaries of articles whose content is zoological or entomological and not botanical, e. g., "Inheritance in Orthoptera," "A preliminary report on some genetic experiments concerning evo- lution" [largely concerned with the gypsy moth], "Studies in inheri- tance in the hybrid Philosamia (Attacus) ricini (Boisd.) $ Philo- samia cynthia (Drury) $ ." The publishers are the Williams and Wilkins Co. of Baltimore. The Larval Habitat of Chalcomyia aerea Loew. (Diptera, Syrphidae). On March 4 Dr. R. D. Glasgow brought to me a number of larvae of the above species which he had found in a dead basswood log at Augerville Woods near Urbana. Along with these were several larvae of the tipulid Xiphura fitmificnnis O. S., and one of Xylota fraudulosa Loew. On March 13 the latter produced an imago, and on March 14 two males of aerea appeared. The only record of the larval habitat of the latter is that published by Metcalf in his "Syrphidae of Ohio." His record states that a pupa was found under the bark of a log lying close to a river and whether the larva had gone there to pupate or had lived in the log was left in doubt. The larvae very closely resemble those of Eristalis, posses- sing a long slender tail-like caudal respiratory appendage, but the log in which the specimens before me were found was not supersaturated and as Xylota fraudulosa does not possess a long caudal appendage it is difficult to explain the relation between the structure of Chalcomyia larva and its habitat. — J. R. MALLOCH, Urbana, Illinois. 26 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., '19 A Change of Names (Coleoptera). Thanks to the courtesy of Mr. C. W. Leng, my attention has been called to a number of pre-occupied names used by me in recent descriptive work. These, with the new names now proposed, are as follows : For Bled'ms dissimilis Fall (Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. 1910, p. 107) Substitute B. philadelphicus new name. For Blcdius fraiclhts Fall (loc. cit. p. 112) Substitute B. transitus new name. For Pachybrachys instabilis Fall (Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. 1915, p. 4/O Substitute P. hector new name. H. C. FALL, Tyngsboro, Massachusetts. Note on the Vinegarone (Arach., Pedipalpi). Professor Comstock, in his Spider Book, concerning the giant whip- tail scorpion (Mastigoproctus gigantcus), writes, "In some parts of the South they bear the local name grampus and are greatly feared on account of their supposed venomous powers ; but it is probable that there is no foundation for this fear; for although it has been stated often that their bites are poisonous, I can find no direct evidence that this is true, and no poison glands have been found in this order." Many years ago, when the late Dr. George Marx was connected with the United States Department of Agriculture, he kept one or more specimens of this dangerous looking creature in a glass jar in the labo- ratory of the Division of Entomology and made a careful study of its possibility for harm, but both experimentally and by dissection failed to find any basis for the common superstition. For a long time it was a standing joke in the Division of Entomology to test the nerves of occasional visitors by inviting them to handle one of these specimens. I remember that no less a person than that excellent entomologist, John B. Smith, refused absolutely to touch one, while those of us who knew handled them with impunity. As is well known, the name z-inegarone in the southern United States was originally given by French settlers from the French West Indies, and arose from the vinegar-like, intensely acid secretion which the whip-tail scorpion exudes when approached. An interesting story was told me the other night at the Biological Society of Washington by General T. E. Wilcox, to the effect that in 1877 at Camp Supply, Indian Territory, a blacksmith crushed a rinc- garone on his upper left breast. Blisters resulted which extended over the whole breast, and the glands were involved to some extent. He stayed away from work for a week, and General Wilcox, who at that time was a surgeon in the Army, treated him. Of course there was no sting, and the blisters resulted simply from the acid secretion. — L. O. HOWARD. U. S. Bureau of Entomology, Washington, D. C. Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 2/ Eumerus strigatus Fall., the Lunate Onion Fly, in New Jersey (Dip.)- On February 6, 1918, an adult of this European species, kindly iden- tified by Dr. Bequaert, was taken in a greenhouse at Rutherford, New Jersey. This is the first definite record of its occurrence in New Jer- sey, but its presence was suspected several years ago in connection with iris roots injured by Macronoctua onusta Grote (Psyche, June, 1915, p. 106). Felt (27th Kept. State Ent., N. Y., p. 119) records it from Saratoga Springs, New York, and states that Dr. Chittenden in- formed him that it had been bred from bulbs received from Connecti- cut and Texas. Its presence in New Jersey at Rutherford is not sur- prising in view of the fact that huge quantities of Holland bulbs are consigned to this locality every year. In "Ziekten en Beschadigingen der Tuinbouwgewassen," by Van Den Broek en Schenk, it is listed as a pest of narcissus in Holland and it is stated that it and Merodon cquestris constitute the most important insect enemies of that plant. According to the Dutch authors, the flies appear in May and June and the eggs are evidently laid on the bases of the leaves. The larvae enter the nose of the bulb, from 10 to 30 being found in a single one. When full grown they are from 7 to 9 mm. in length. The maggots feed in the interior, which soon becomes slimy and decayed and the destruction appears to be more complete and rapid than that caused by Merodon cquestris larvae with which they are sometimes associated in the same bulb. The puparia are usually found in the outside layers, or at the nose of the bulb, during August and it appears that a second brood of flies, of which little is known, appears in September and Octo- ber. On bright, sunny days the adults can be seen flying low over the narcissus plants. It is also recorded as attacking hyacinths and onions. In Holland the destruction of infested bulbs appears to be the common method of control. Verrall (British Flies, 8, 615, 1901) states that it is recorded from all North and Middle Europe and Italy, and Walker (1851, Insecta Britannica, Diptera, I, 241-42) records it as being generally distributed in Great Britain and states that the larvae of the genus feed on bulbous roots. Considering the fact that it was first noted in the United States in 1006 (Chittenden), it is strange that more records of it have not turned up. On account of its reputation as an onion pest in Europe its presence in this country should be of interest, especially in such states as Ohio, New York, Texas, California, Indiana, Illinois, Louisi- ana, Massachusetts, Kentucky and New Jersey, which are the ten main onion States in the order of their importance. — H. B. WEISS and A. S. NICOLAY, New Brunswick, New Jersey. A Remarkable Case of Longevity in Insects (Hem., Horn.) The genus Maryarodcs (Hemiptera, Coccidae) contains certain curious species in which the first stage larva possesses legs and antennae, these appendages being lost in the intermediate stages and reappearing in the adult. All of the described species are subterranean in habitat and in all the appendageless, intermediate stages are enclosed within a tough, hard cyst formed from the secretions of certain dermal glands of the insect. The details of the life histories of most of the species are unknown but one species. M. ritinm Giard, has received a considerable amount of attention. 28 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan..'ln the economic importance of Samia cecropia. 10, xx, 150-2. Barnes & McDunnough — Illustrations of the N. Am. sps. of the genus Catocala. (Mem. Am. Mus. N. H., n. s., iii, pt. 1, 47 pp.) Dognin, P. — Heteroceres nouveaux de 1'Amerique du Sud. Fasc. xiv, 27 pp. Ehrmann, G. A. — New exotic [neotropical] papilios. 17, ii, 82-4. Riser, O. F. & J. S.— Life history of Catocala nuptialis. 16, ii, 66-9. Prout, L. B. — New L. in the Joicey collection [S. Am]. 11, ii, 412- 18. Rowley, R. R.— A long-fasting lepidopter. 4, 1918, 363-4. DIPTERA. Greene, C. T.— Note on the habits of Pegomyia affinis and other anthomyid genera. 10, xx, 160. Lindner, H.— Ueber die mundwerkzeuge einiger dipteren und ihre beziehungen zur ernahrungsweise. 52, 1, 19-27. Alexander, C. P.— New [5] nearctic crane flies. 4, 1918. 381-6. COLEOPTERA. Hudson, C. H.— Concerted flashing of fireflies. 68, xlviii, 573-5. Chapin, E. A. — A new Hydnocera (Cleridae). 54, xxxi. 107-8. Swaine, J. M. — Canadian bark-beetles. Part 2. [8 new]. (Canada, Dept. Agr., Ent. Branch. Bui. 14.). Woods, W. C.— The biology of Maine species of Altica \?> new]. 60, Bui. 273. HYMENOPTERA. Cockerell, T. D. A.— Descriptions and rec- ords of bees [Neotropical]. 11, ii. 418-25. Cushman, R. A. — Notes on the cocoon spinning habits of two sps. of Braconids. 10, xx. 133-6. Henning, H. — Zur ameisenpsychologie. Fin kritische erort- erung uber die grundlaTen der tierpsychologie. 57, xxxviii. 208-20. Rohwer, S. A. — North American snecies of the sawfly genus Lau- rentia. 10, xx, 157-9. Sladen, F. W. L.— The genus Vespa in Can- ada. 18, xxxii, 71-72. White, G. F. — Note on the muscular coat of the ventriculus of the honey bee. 10, xx, 152-4. Gahan, A. B. — A synopsis of the species belonging to the chal- cidoid genus Rileya [4 new]. 10, xx, 136-50. The NEWS for December, 1918, was mailed at the Philadelphia Post Office on December 14, 1918. List of Coleoptcra of North America ? By CHARLES W. LENG TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE SPRING OF 1919, PROVIDED 500 PAID SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE OBTAINED BEFORE FEBRUARY 1st This long needed work has now been completed, and the untiring and painstaking efforts of Mr. Leng have resulted in a book which will be indis- pensable to all those interested in this Order of insects. The main features are briefly these : — I. Complete list of the species, varieties and synonyms, about 30,000 in all, together with page reference to the place in which each was originally described, and also an indication of distribu- tion— the whole arranged in genera, tribes and families, according to recent systems of classification. The species are numbered in the usual manner for the convenience of those desiring it. II. Complete list of all works containing original descriptions of North American species, from 1758 to the end of 1918. III. Complete list of the Fossil species of North America, pre- pared by Professor H. F. Wickham. These three divisions of the book will require about 400 pages of text. The book will be the size of Col. Casey's " Memoirs of Cole- optera," about 7 x 10 inches, the text printed two columns to the page, with some marginal space for annotations, which may be made in ink, if desired. The subscription price has been fixed at the lowest possible amount to encourage all who are interested to subscribe at once, and in this way insure early publication of the book. In order to bring about this result, it will be necessary for all subscribers able to do so to take two or more copies. PRICE, UNBOUND, INCLUDING DELIVERY, FIVE DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS PRINTED ON ONE SIDE ONLY, SEVEN DOLLARS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE IN ALL CASES Owing to the high Cost and scarcity of paper and labor, it is not practi- ticable to print a large edition, and the price will have to be materially increased upon publication. SEND ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS AND REMITTANCES TO THE PUBLISHER JOHN D. SHERMAN, Jr. 24 Claremont Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York NEW ARRIVALS u From Columbia, So. America : OVER 10,000 BUTTERFLIES. INCLUDING Morpho cypris Morpho amathonte • sulkowskyi Caligo spp. From Cuba : 1500 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio columbus Urania boisduvali andraemon Erinyis guttalaris celadon Protoparce brontes, etc. devilliersi u « « From Venezuela : Over 5000 Lepidoptera 200 Dynastes hercules From New Guinea : 2000 Colecptera 200 Orthoptera From Assam, India : 1200 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio arcturus Kallima inachis philoxenus Brahmaea wallachi And Many Other Showy Species U From Tibet (Bhutan) Armandia lidderdalii Parnassius hardwicki CATALOGUES OF ENTOMOLOGICAL SUPPLIES AND SPECIMENS ON APPLICATION If interested kindly send your list of desiderata for further information to THE KNY-SCHEERER CORPORATION Department of Natural Science New York G. Lagai, Ph.D. 404-410 W. 27th Street FEBRUARY, 1919. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS Vol. XXX. No. 2. Thaddeus William Harris 1795-1856. PHILIP P. CALVERT, Ph.D., Editor. E. T. CRESSON, JR., Associate Editor. 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Pure White Ledger Paper. Not Over 4 Lines or 30 Characters (13 to a Line) Additional characters 1c. each, per Line, per 500. Trimmed. C. V. BLACKBURN, 12 Pine St., STONEHAM, MASS., U. S. A. ENT. NEWS, VOL. XXX. Plate III. ODONATA ANISOPTERA FROM GUATEMALA.-CALVERT. 1-6, ERPETOGOMPHUS SCHAUSI ; 7-9, E. DIADOPHIS, PARATYPE ; 10-12, E. DIADOPHIS7. CAYUGA ?. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS AND <^\-- ' ai' V X.* PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SE( VOL. XXX. THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA.''' --X — t, • -«&\ FEBRUARY, 1919. CONTENTS: Calvert— Od on a t a Anisoptera from Guatemala 31 Stoner — Swarmingof the Monarch But- terfly in Iowa ( Lep. ) 38 Wilson and Davis— A New Genus and Species of Aphid ( Hem., Horn.).. . 39 Cockerell — Neocorynura, a Genus of Halictine Bees (Hym.) 41 Crampton — Notes on the Phylogeny of the Orthoptera 42 Skinner— A few hours on Mt. Washing- ton ( Lepid. ) 48 Editorial— Entomology at the Convo- cation Week Meetings 49 Entomological Literature 50 Review of Prof. Carlos E. Porter's Collector's Manual in Spanish 53 Review — Washhurn's Injurious Insects and Useful Birds. 54 Review — Rau's Wasp Studies Afield.. 54 Doings of Societies — Ent. Sec., Acad. Nat. Sci. of Phila 56 American Entomological Society.. 56 Feldman Collecting Social 58 Obituary— Victor Arthur Erich Daecke 58 Odonata Anisoptera from Guatemala Collected by Messrs. William Schaus and John T. Barnes. By PHILIP P. CALVERT, University of Pennsylvania, Philadel- phia, Pa. (Plate III) Messrs. Schaus and Barnes, whose extensive collecting of Lepidoptera in Guiana, Mexico and Costa Rica is well known, turned their energies to Guatemala in February, 1915, remain- ing in that country until April. 1918. During that period they sent to me from time to time a number of Odonata which add to our knowledge of the fauna of ( iuatemala over and above that recorded in the Xeuroptera volume of the Biologia Ccn- tr ali- Americana. I have listed them, following the order of the species in the Biologia and occasionally adding some descrip- tive matter. Mr. Schaus made some notes on the fresh colors of some of the specimens and these I have enclosed in quota- tion marks. He has also given me data on some of the more unfamiliar localities at which they took (')dnnata, as follows: 32 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. Caballo Blanco, "13 miles beyond Retalhuleu on the branch line to Champerico ; it consists of grazing country with a little vegetation along the rivers, but no forest near at hand, and the soil is humid and very fertile." Cayuga, 23.4 miles from Puerto Barrios and a little west of Tene- dores. A farm house recently abandoned was fitted up by the United Fruit Company and placed at their disposal; it was their Guatemalan headquarters. "The house stands on a hill by itself, 150 feet above the railway and river, with the most glorious views in every direction. The chief veranda faces the south with the winding [Motagua] river threading through thousands of acres of bananas, limited by virgin forests, and with the mountains of Honduras in the distance; to the north we are close to forest clad hills and almost all my day collecting is along [their] trails and streams. The elevation of the [railway] station is 107 feet and the forest ridge about 400 feet higher. The hills on the south side are covered with dense tropical forest, no pines at all." On October 7, 1915, he wrote: "I cannot understand why with the heat and rain there are not more things flying." On April 30, 1917: "The conditions here (climatic) are still disastrous and not an insect is to be seen except a few wasps. Not a drop of rain has fallen since I last wrote and all the weeds around the place are dead and dried up and there are extensive forest fires, fanned into energy by strong easterly gales which blow all afternoon and evening.' Chcjcl, in Baja Vera Paz, eleven miles from Tucuru, elevation 3100 feet. "I have had five weeks at Che j el, where I have been visiting most charming friends" | in June, etc., 1917]. Iguana, "a flag station, 72.3 miles from Barrios, elevation 493 feet, and at the beginning of the dry section of the Motagua valley; the country is hilly, with scattered pines and swampy in places. We only went there once for a few hours and found your Odonata flying in the wet places." Joaquina, "a flag station, 170 miles from Barrios, elevation 2269 feet; a dry district owing to steep mountains with muddy ditches along track in rainy season, little vegetation and some 200 feet above river. We were delayed there several hours by a land-slide, so I put my net on and caught a few insects." Montufar, "44 miles from Barrios (Motagua valley)." Oncida, "Motagua valley near Morales, 25 miles from Barrios, eleva- tion 300 feet." Polochic River. Writing Aug. 17. 1917 : "I am still in Vera Paz since a week I have worked every night with my lamp until 3 A. M. Barnes is doing the day work and rides nine miles down the moun- tains to the Polochic River and gets in several hours' collecting." Pundha "is the correct spelling, not Purula, as Champion spells it." Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 33 In the letter just quoted : "I have had throe weeks at I'urulha." Quiriyua "is 57.4 miles from Barrios, elevation 240 feet, and is in the humid banana district. The Motagua valley is very broad there, with hills on the south side covered with forest of poor growth, chiefly pines and the manaca palms; there are small streams in all the valleys. The forest in the main valley has all been cleared by the Fruit Co." In their first year in Guatemala they had a month or six weeks at Quirigua before going to Cayuga. San Felipe, "in the department of Retalhuleu, elevation 2056 feet, surrounded by sugar cane and coffee plantations." Santa Maria, Volcano, department of Quezaltenango, elevation 5500 feet. Tactic, Baja Vera Paz ; "ten days in Tactic" (Aug. 17, 1917). GOMPHINAE. Gomphoides elongata Selys. Gualan, August, 1 $. Very close to the only male of elongata which is available for comparison, viz., from Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, July, by Schumann, listed in the Biologia volume, page 157. This Gualan male is smaller (abdomen 43.5, hind wing 31 mm.), less robust, the lateral margins of abdominal segments 8 and 9 are less dilated, that of 9 less angulate, angle distinctly rounded, superior anteapical angulation of the superior ap- pendages also rounded. Gomphoides suasa suasa Selys. Cayuga, May, 101 T, 1 $. Qui- rigua, forest, June 2~>, 1 t? , 1 9. Erpetogomphus schausi n. sp. (PI. I IT, figs. 1-6). Purulha, forest stream, July / , i $ , type, in the writer's collection at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. $. Black or blackish brown, the following bright green: greater part of the frons (except its postero-dorsal and antero-ventral mar- gins), the rhinarium, a transverse streak on the middle of the free margin of the labrum, the greater ("anterior) part of the fore pro- thoracic lobe, anterior margin of the propleuron, the greater part of the transverse dorsal mesothoracic ridge (but not where it joins the mid-dorsal carina or the humeral suture), an antehumeral stripe separating the dark submedian and antehumeral stripes, increasing in width cephalad and ventrad and confluent with the green of the trans- verse mesothoracic ridge just mentioned (at mid-height this green ante- humeral stripe is a little wider than half of the dark submedian and narrower thnn the dark antehumeral stripr), a n>nndrd triangular spot just below the antealar sinus and anterior to the humeral suture, 34 ENTOMOUJGICAI, NEWS. [Feb. ,'19 almost confluent with the upper end of the green antehumeral stripe (this spot apparently represents the upper end of an otherwise ob- solete pale humeral stripe), a mesepimeral stripe wider above, a round- ed superior spot and an inferior stripe on the metepisternum, a wider stripe on the metepimeron (each of these three sclerites being margined with black on all sides, but the postero-ventral angle of the metepimeron is green), and the dorsal interalar sclerites. (PI. Ill, figs. I, 2.) Mandibles, maxillae and labium buff, but the apices of the first two- and of the median and lateral labial lobes black. Ventral thoracic surface dull greenish with pruinose traces in the depressions. Abdomen blackish-brown, its pale markings evidently faded, such as are visible being the sides of i inferiorly, the auricles, a postero- ventral spot and possibly a mid-dorsal stripe on 2, a mid-dorsal basal stripe or spot of indeterminable extent on 3-6, a basal lateral spot on the same four segments, the basal half of 7, a large (reddish) spot on each side of 10. Femora reddish-brown, blackening distally, fore pair pale greenish inferiorly. Tibiae and tarsi wholly black. Occiput non-tuberculate, its hind margin moderately convex. Abdomen narrowing from segment i (2.6 mm.) to the middle of 3 (.8 mm.), thence widening very gradually to apex of 6 (1.4 mm.), thence widening rapidly to the apex of 8 (2.6 mm.), thence narrowing to the apex of 10 (1.9 mm.). Superior appendages (PI. Ill, figs. 3, 6) 1.96 mm. long, slightly longer than 10, subequal to 9; in dorsal view, their external margins straight and parallel for two-thirds' length of the appendage, each appendage constricted at its extreme base, following which, on the internal side, it is swollen for its first third, then gradually narrows, the terminal third of the appendage strongly curved mesad forming a blunt hook; in profile view, the superior margin is almost straight for two-thirds of the length of the appendage, the inferior margin sub- parallel, but swollen a little at two-fifths of the same length, no superior or inferior teeth or tubercles, the terminal third of the appendage curved strongly ventrad to an acute apex ; superior append- ages yellow, brown at apex. Inferior appendage blackish-brown, stout, two-thirds as long as the superiors; in profile view, its superior margin concave throughout except for the first fifth of the appendage's length, which is straight, slanting caudad and ventrad, and forms an obtuse angulation where the concave curve begins, terminal half of the appendage curved strong- ly dorsad and slightly cepha?ad ; in ventral view, the appendage is bifid for its entire visible extent f, c., its distal two-thirds, the proximal third being concealed by the sub-anal plates), the two branches in Vol. xxx ) Kvn>.M, T9 ; forest, May 3, i teneral 9 ; forest, i $ over stream, i teneral 9 ; stream in dark forest, May 28, i $ , "oblique black and greenish blue Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 37 streaks on thorax. Abdomen black with fine yellow segmental lines; a broak yellow mark before end" [/. c. on segment 7]. CORDULEGASTERINAE. Cordulegaster godmani McLachlan. Furulha, forest, July 10, i <5 i 9 "in cop." AESHNINAE. Anax amazili ( Burmeister). Cayuga, June 2, stormy night, at light, 1 9; August 24, at light, 1 9. In the key to the species of Ana.r in the Biologia volume, page 176, I stated for ainazili "Superior frontal marking a triangular black spot, no dark ring," by way of contrast with j mi ins and walsinghami. In well-colored individuals there is on each side, right and left, of the triangular black spot and separated from it by a yellow line, a triangular blue spot, as Hagen (1861, 1867), Brauer (1866) and Martin (1908) have stated. Occasionally these two blue spots are not visible, as in a Costa Rican female before me ; in other cases, as in the Cayuga female of June 2, the blue has become a dark brown, although the two spots are not united anteriorly and hence form no ring as in juniits and walsinghami. Still my state- ment of 1905, quoted above, is incomplete and hence a little confusing. It may be bettered by inserting after "a triangular black spot:" "usually with a separate triangular blue (some- times brown) spot to right and left." The capture of these two females at light is interesting. Aeshna cornigera Brauer. Chejel, June 2fi, 1 $ , "almost entirely black; some pale greenish markings on thorax laterally." Purulha, forest, July 10, i $ , "f rons and base of abd. turquoise blue. Broad green lateral oblique stripes on thorax. Fine broken green transverse lines on abd." Antigua, 5500 feet, November 24, i $ , i 9 . Volcan Santa Maria, November, i $ . Aeshna multicolor jalapensis (Williamson). Santa Maria, 5.r>00 feet, June i:i, 1 $. Volcan Santa Maria, October 31, 1 9. Aeshna virens Rambur. Cayuga, on veranda, September 5, I 9. Gynacantha trifida Rambur. Cayuga, at dusk, April, 1 9 ; forest, August 23, 1 9, and 27, 1 $. Gynacantha septima Selys. Cayuga, at dusk, April, 1 $ ; forest, September 1(5, 1 9. The male has the anal triangle 3-celled. Gynacantha mexicana Selys. Cayuga, at dusk, June 3, 1917. 1 $. Gynacantha tibiata Karsch. Cayuga, forest, August 30, 1 9. 38 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. |Keb.,'l() Gynacantha gracilis Burmeister. Cayuga, forest, September 4, ] 9. This is the most northern locality for this species yet re- corded; I have taken it also in Costa Rica, in the Banana River country.* EXPLANATION OF PLATE III. Figs. 1-6, Erpeto-gomphus schausi n. sp., type $, Purulha, Guate- mala, July 7. Figs, i, Dorsal, and 2, Right lateral views of the meso- metathorax showing the color pattern, x 6.6. Figs. 3, Dorsal, and 6. Left lateral, views of the apex of the abdomen, x 7. Fig. 4, Right lateral view of penis and vesicle removed from the other genitalia of the s-econd abdominal segment, inverted. Fig. 5, Right lateral view of genitalia of the second abdominal segment, inverted, penis lying be- tween the hamules of the right and left sides; all, anterior, and ph, posterior, hamules ; Tp, vesicles of the penis, ah' , anterior hamule viewed antero-laterally to show form of apex; am III, anterior margin of abdominal segment 3. Figs. 4-5 x 14.3. Figs. 7-9, Erpetogomphus diadophis Calvert, $ paratype, Texas. Figs. 7, Dorsal, and 8, Right lateral views of meso-metathorax showing the color pattern, x 6. Fig. 9, Sternite of abdominal segment 8 and part of groove (lattidae are regarded by most investigators as the lowest living representatives of the group to which they be- long, and their type is undoubtedly an extremely ancient one ; but I am by no means certain that the Blattidae are so much more primitive (anatomically) than the Isoptera, as some palaeontologists would have us believe. The opisthognathous head, which is typical of the Blattids as a whole, is certainly Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 45 of a higher type than the more prognathous one found in many Isoptera, and the great extent of the compound eyes upward toward the top of the head, which occurs in so many Blattids should also be regarded as a more highly specialized condition. The thickening of the fore wings to form tegmina indicates another specialized condition in the Blattids, as does the ex- tremely flattened condition of the body developed in connection with their hiding habits. The asymmetrical development of the genitalia of the males and the asymmetry of the cerci (in regard to the number of segments composing them) and other similar features would indicate that the Blattids are somewhat more modified than the Isoptera in some respects ; although in others, the Blattids are much more primitive than the Isoptera. The Isoptera have preserved a number of features occurring in the more primitive members of the group to which the Plecoptera belong, such as the nature of the thoracic sclerites, etc., which suggest that the Isoptera are even closer than the Blattids are, to the very primitive Plecopteroid group ; so that if we are to regard the Plecoptera as the nearest living rep- resentatives of the ancestors of the other groups under dis- cussion, it might be argued that the Isoptera are near the an- cestral type connecting the Blattoid group with the Plecop- teroid group. I am as yet unwilling to go to this extreme, however, since I regard the lower Blattids as more primitive than the lower Isoptera, taking their anatomy as a whole. The fossil Protoblattoidea as reconstructed by Handlirsch cer- tainly show a marked resemblance to certain members of the group to which the Plecoptera belong, as well as to the Palaeodictyoptera, and it is quite probable that these Pro- toblattoidea more nearly represent the ancestral type leading back to the Plecoptera-like forebears than the Isoptera do, particularly since the Isoptera are quite highly specialized in regard to many features in which the Blattids are decidedly primitive. The Blattids and Mantids are extremely closely related, and their lines of development soon merge in a common stock when traced back toward their point of origin. Handlirsch would 4.6 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb./IQ derive the Mantids from Protoblattoid ancestors, and if this be correct, it is very probable that the Blattids also are descended from the same type of ancestor, and the Proto- blattoids might be regarded as the forms connecting the Blat- tids and Mantids with the ancestral Plecopteroid stock. The Isopteron line of development does not follow that of the Blat- tids quite as closely as the Mantids do, and I am not certain whether the Isoptera branched off from the common Blattid- Mantid stock at a point near the origin of this common stock, or somewhere further along its path of development. There is some reason for considering that the Isopteron line arose rather near the base of this common stock, however, and I would consider that the lack of fossil remains of Isoptera in the earlier strata is again due to the incompleteness of the palaeontological record rather than to the fact that the Isoptera supposedly did not arise until a much later geolog- ical period than the Blattids, as Handlirsch would maintain. At any rate, the Isoptera have retained some very primitive characters which occur among the lower representatives of the Plecopteroid group, and their early or late geological appear- ance cannot alter this fact ; so that the study of the ancestral features occurring in the Isoptera and Mantids is extremely in- structive for a phylogenetic comparison with the structures of the Dermapteron and Embiid representatives of the Plecop- teroid group, with which they have a surprisingly large num- ber of features in common. The Isoptera, Mantidae and Blat- tidae have been grouped in the superorder Panisoptera and it is possible that the fossil Protoblattoidea belong in this super- order also ; but I would not group the Corrodentia, Mallophaga and Siphunculata with them, as Handlirsch seems to do. The Corrodentia with the Neuroptera appear to be an offshoot of the Plecopteroid stock leading toward the Hemipteron line of development, and as has been pointed out in several papers, the Corrodentia, Mallophaga, Siphunculata (Anoplura), Thysan- optera, Hemiptera and their allies constitute the superorder Patilioiuoptcra whose line of development parallels remarkably closely that of the superorder Panneuroptera (composed of the Neuroptera, Mecoptera, Diptera, Siphonaptera, Hymen- Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 47 optera, Trichoptera, Lepidoptera, and such fossil forms as the Protomecoptera, etc.)- The relationships of these other forms, however, have no bearing on the ancestry of the Orthoptera, and need not be further considered here. In making a study of the ancestry of the Orthopteroid in- sects, the condition found in such primitive representatives of the group as the Grylloblattids and Phasmids is fully as instruc- tive as the study of the fossil Orthoptera thus far described, since these fossil forms appear to be in many respects even more highly modified than the Grylloblattids, etc., and one can make out practically nothing of their anatomical details from figures of them, due no doubt to their poor state of preserva- tion, yet in most cases it is just these structural details which give us the clue to relationships and greatly simplify an other- wise extremely difficult study. On this account I have given more attention to the study of the interesting little insect Grvlloblatta camf>odeiforniis (described by Dr. E. M. Walker) which is so to speak a ''living fossil" having preserved many features occurring in the more primitive representatives of the other lower groups of insects, and which appears to have de- parted as little as any known form from the probable ances- tral condition of the Orthoptera as a whole. No one insect, however, has retained all of the ancestral feature's, and the study of such primitive Phasmids as the interesting little in- sect Tiiiicuni califoniica Scudder is no less important, since it has preserved certain features which even Grylloblatta has lost. Unfortunately both of these insects are wingless; but T do not consider this a great handicap in such a study, since I cannot help thinking that too great weight ha? been placed up- on a phylogenetic study of the wing veins alone, and anyone who will go into the matter at all deeply will soon become con- vinced that it is only through an examination of a widely dif- ferent series of structures from as many parts of the body as possible, that we can come to an approximately correct con- clusion in the matter of determi.iing the relationships of the different orders of insects, so that it may perhaps be a good idea to give the already overworked wing- venation a rest, and take up the consideration of some other Features as well 48 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb., 'iQ Dr. Walker (Canadian Entomologist, Vol. xlvi, page 93), has maintained that the line of development of Grylloblatta should be traced back to the Blattids as the nearest living rep- resentative of the ancestors from which the Grylloblattids were derived, while I have contended that although Gryl- loblatta exhibits undoubted affinities with such Hlattoid in- sects as the Mantidae (and Isoptera also), the Kmbiids and Dermaptera more nearly represent the ancestral stock from which the Grylloblattids were descended.* ( To be continued. ) A Few Hours on Mt. Washington (Lepid.). On July 31, 1918, I ascended Mt. Washington, on the carriage road, to just beyond the five mile post. Below the Half-way House a short distance, the first Argynnis montiiius was seen. A little farther on the road they were fairly abundant, one appearing on the wing every few minutes. They settled to feed on the flowers of Solidago I'irgaurea Linn., a very pretty little species of goldenrod, and while so occupied, could be caught, if approached carefully. Some specimens settled in the road, but I did not see any on flowers other than the one men- tioned. The specimens were all fresh and in fine condition. Dr. Scud- der gives July I2th as the earliest date of their appearance and the latest as September I5th. Some years ago I caught a number of speci- mens on August 20th at the same locality, but they were not in as fine condition. It is likely that they do not appear before the month of July. Their life history is unknown and to elucidate it some days should be spent on the mountain. I caught a number of females of the species, but was not fortunate enough to find one ovipositing. Tt is not unlikely that the female drops her eggs over the food plant as is the habit in some other species of the genus. The collector would probably always find the species on clear days during the time of its appearance. In the afternoon, when the east side of the mountain was in the shadow, I did not see any of the butterflies. Plusia u-aurcum Guen. was quite abundant on the goldenrod and in perfect condition. One female of Chinnobas scinidca was taken just above the five mile post. This is probably a low altitude for it on the mountain. This particular day was wonderfully clear and the views superb, and it was a great pleasure to have good collecting and an inter- esting tramp up the big hill. — HENRY SKINNER. * Mr. A. N. Caudell has kindly permitted me to make a study of specimens of Zoraptera (whose line of descent branches off near the base of the Isopteron line), and an examination of this material would indicate that the fairly even balance of characters in the Grylloblattids between the superorders Panisoptera and Panplecoptera is made to swing slightly nearer the Zoraptera and other Panisoptera, thus swing- ing the base of the line of development of the Grylloblattids slightly toward the side of the Zoraptera (with the Isoptera and Mantidae), although the Grylloblattids are also very close to the Embiids and Dermaptera. It is very probable that the genitalia of male Gryllo- blattids will be found to resemble those of the Zoraptera remarkably closely. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. PHILADELPHIA, PA., FEBUARY, 1919. Entomology at the Convocation Week Meetings. When arrangements were first made in the Autumn of 1918 for the meetings of the American Association for the Advance- ment of Science and Affiliated Societies at Baltimore, Decem- ber 23 to 28, 1918, wartime conditions were such as to lead to positive discouragement of any large attendance. With the signing of the armistice, an increased interest was manifested and several societies, which had decided to hold no sessions, arranged scientific programs. Nevertheless the annual pro- gram of the seventy-first meeting of the A. A. A. S. and of the meetings of other societies is a slim pamphlet of but forty- four pages in comparison with those of recent years. The number of papers, which can be called entomological in any sense, listed therein is but 64, and is much smaller than for many years. Fifty-two of these appear on the program of the American Association of Economic Entomologists, including the Apicultural and Horticultural Inspection Sections. 6 on the joint program of Section F, Zoology, of the A. A. A. S., and the American Society of Zoologists, 2 each on those of the American Society of Naturalists and of the Ecological So- ciety of America, i each on those of Section I, Social and ti Economic Science, A. A. A. S., and the School Garden Asso- ciation. The presidential address before the Economic Entomol- ogists, by Dr. E. D. Ball, was on "Economic Entomology,— Its Foundation and Future." Prof. Herbert Osborn, as retir- ing Yice-President of Section F. spoke on "Zoological Aims and Values." Dr. L. O. Howard ga\e a paper at the confer- 49 5O ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb./lQ ence between Government and Laboratory Zoologists arranged for the same section, and Prof. J. G. Needham led the discus- sion following. Dr. Howard also spoke on "Economic Ento- mology and the War" before Section I. The two papers with entomological bearing given before the Ecological Society were by H. C. Oberholser, "Ecological Investigations under the Federal Government" and V. E. Shelford, "Suggestions as to the Climograph of Deciduous Forest Invertebrates, as illus- trated by Experimental Data on the Codling Moth." Not in- cluded in the numbers given above were the papers presented to the Optical Society of America on various optical apparatus, of interest to entomologists. Smokers for biologists, and dinners for the Naturalists and Ecologists were held as usual. Entomological Literature. COMPILED BY E. T. CRESSON, JR., AND J. A. G. REHN. Under the above head it is intended to note papers received at the Academy of Natural Sciences, of Philadelphia, pertaining to the En- tomology of the Americas (North and South), including Arachnida and Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American entomology will not be noted; but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of insects, how- ever, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. The numbers in Heavy- Faced Type refer to the journals, ae numbered in the following list, in which the papers are published. All continued papers, with few exceptions, are recorded only at their first installments. The records of papers containing new species are all grouped at the end of each Order of which they treat. Unless mentioned in the title, the number of the new species occurring north of Mexico is given at end of title, within brackets. For records of Economic Literature, see the Experiment Station Record, Office of Experiment Stations, Washington. Also Review of Applied En- tomology, Series A, London. For records of papers on Medical Ento- mology, see Review of Applied Entomology, Series B. 2 — Transactions of the American Entomological Society, Phila- delphia. 4 — Canadian Entomologist, London, Can. 5— Psyche, Cambridge, Mass. 7 — Annals of the Entomological Society of America, Columbus, Ohio. 9 — The Entomologist, London. 11— Annals and Magazine of Natural History, London. 12 — Journal of Economic Entomology, Concord, N. H. 16 — The Lepidopterist, Salem, Mass. 17 — Lepidoptera, Boston, Mass. 19— Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society. 20 — Bulletin de la Societe Ento- Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL \ KWS. 51 mologique de France, Paris. 51 — Archiv fur Mikroskopische Ana- tomic, Bonn. 54 — Proceedings of the Biological Society of Wash- ington, D. C. 61 — Proceedings of the California Academy of Sci- ences, San Francisco. 62 — Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, New York. 63 — Memorias de la Sociedad Cuhana de Historia Natural "Felipe Poey," Habana. 64 — Parasitology, London. 65 — Archives des Sciences Physiques et Naturelles, Geneve. 66 — Records of the Indian Museum, Calcutta. 67 — Le Naturalise Canadian, Quebec. 68 — Science, Lancaster, Pa. 69— Comptes Rendus, des Seances de I'Academie des Sciences, Paris. 70 — Journal of Morphology, Philadelphia. 71 — Novitates Zoologi- cae, Tring, England. 72 — The Annals of Applied Biology, Lon- don. 73 — Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, Sydney. 74 — Proceedings of the Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences, New York. 75 — The Anatomical Record, Philadel- phia. 76 — Nature, London. GENERAL. Bentley, G. M.— Benefits to be derived from ob- serving, collecting and studying insects (Tennessee State Board of Entomology, Knoxville. Bull. No. 20). Cardin, P. G.— Notas entomologicas. 63, iii, .53-01. F. A. D. — Nursing habits of ants and termites. 76, cii, 308-9. Ellsworth, A. — The vastness of insect life. 17, ii, 92-4. Knab, F.— Obituary. 12, xi, 484-5. Mann, W. M.— Myrmecophilous insects from Cuba. 5, xxv, 104-6. Swett & Cas- sino — The White Mountains of New Hampshire. 16, ii, 90-6 (cont.). Woodward, C. W. — The pronunciation of insect names. 19, xiii, 122-3. GENETICS. Nakahara, W. — Some observations on the grow- ing oocytes of the stonefly, Perla immarginata, with special regard to the origin and function of the nucleolar structures. 75, xv, 203- 15. MEDICAL. King, W. V. — Memorandum on a case of derma' myiasis caused by Lucilia sericata. (New Orleans Med. & Surg. Journal, Ixxi, 106-8.). ARACHNIDA AND MYRIAPODA. Brethes, J.— Nephila ri- verai, nouvelle araignee argentine. 20, 1918, 216-18. Chamberlin, R. V. — Myriopods from Okefenokee Swamp, Ga., and from Natchitoches Parish, La. [10 new]. 7, xi, 369-80. New spiroboloid diplopods [7 n. sps.L 54, xxxi, 165-70. NEUROPTERA. Banks, N.— Termites of Panama and British Guiana. 62, xxxviii, fi.V.i-f.r. Dobson, R. J.— A European termite, Reticulotermes lucifugus, in the vicinity of Boston. 5, xxv, 90-101 Howe, R. H. — Distributional imtcs on New England Odonata. II. 52 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb., '19 5, xxv, 306-10. Kennedy, C. H.— The varieties of the dragonfly, Agrion aequabile. 4, 1918, 406-11. Peacock, A. D. — The structure of the mouthparts and mechanism of feeding in Pediculus humanus. 64, xi, 98-117. Stohr, R. P. — Odonates des environs de Saint Alex- andre, Ironside, P. Q. 67, xiv, 81-5. Tillyard, R. J.--The structure of the cubitus in the wings of' the [Australian] Myrmeleontidae. 73, xliii, 116-22. Whedon, A. D. — The comparative morphology and possible adaptations of the abdomen in the Odonata. 2, xliv, 373-437. ORTHOPTERA. Chopard, L.— Apropos des Cylindrachaeta, genre de gryllides endophyte [S. Am.]. 20, 1918, 233-16. Cramp- ton, G. C. — The thoracic sclerites of the grasshopper Dissosteira Carolina. 7, xi, 347-68. Dusham, E. H. — The wax glands of the cockroach (Blatta germanica). 70, xxxi, 563-81. HEMIPTERA. Ball, E. D.— The phlepsids of Mexico and Cent Am. (Cicadellinae). 7, xi, 381-9:2. Becker, G. G. — Empoasca mali attacks man. 5, xxv, 101. Fracker, S. B. — The Alydinae of the U. S. 7, xi, 255-82. Green, E. E.— A list of Coccidae affecting various genera of plants. 72, v, 143-56. Olsen. C. E. — Xotes on some Cicadellinae in the U. S. Nat. Museum. 19, xiii, 119-21. Parshley, H. M. — Three sps. of Anasa injurious in the north. 12, xi, 471-2. Taylor, L. H. — The thoracic sclerites of Hemiptera and Heteroptera. 7, xi, 225-54. Weiss & Dickerson — The life-history and early stages of Corythucha parshleyi. 4, 1918, 401-6. Weiss & Nicolay — The life history and early stages of Calophya nigri- pennis. 12, xi, 467-70. Knight, H. H. — Interesting n. sps. of Miridae . . . with a note on Orthocephalus mutabilis [7 new]. 19, xiii, 111-16. Van Duzee, E. P. — New species of H., chiefly from California [many new]. 61, viii, 271-308. LEPIDOPTERA. Bonniwell, J. G.--Arachnis zuni. 16, ii, 85. Davidson, W. M. — The California pistol-case bearer (Coleophora sacramenta). 12, xi, 446-53. Hampson, G. F. — Some small families of the L. which are not included in the key to the families in the catalogue of Lepidoptera Phalaenae. 71, xxv, 366-94. Mosher, E. — Pupae of common Sphingidae of eastern No. Am. 7, xi, 403-4:.. Pictet, A. — Sur 1'origine du dimorphisme sexuel de coloration chez les lepidopteres. Intervention de 1'elevation de la temperature pour provoquer 1'eclosion des papillons. 65, xlvi, Suppl. 17-:.".', 32-34. Prout, L. B. — A provisional arrangement of the Dioptidae. 71, xxv, 395-429. Reiff, W. — Colias philodice, f. nigrofasciata. 17, ii, 90-1. Swett, L. W. — A new geometric!. 16, ii, S2-4. \ol.XXX I ENTOMOLOGICAL MiWS. 53 Cassino, S. E. — A new form of Cataloca [Catocala] blandula. Catocala faustina f. rul>ra. 16, ii. 81-2; 84-5. Grinnell, F. — Some variations in the genus Vanessa [3 new]. 5, xxv, 110-15. DIPTERA. Cameron, A. E.— The oviposition habit of Gastro- philus nasalis. 68, xlix, 2(5. Davis, W. T.— The Tabanidae of Sta- ten Island, N. V. -74, vi, 201-:;. Johnson, C. W. — Notes on the species of the genus Dioctria. 5, xxv, 102-'.}. Morris, H. M. — The larval and pupal stages of Scatopse notata. 72, v, 102-111. Pra- shad, B. — Larval and pupal stages of an Indian Chaoborus and Dixa. 66, xv, 153-8. Roubaud, E. — Rythmes physiologiques et vol spontane chez FAnopheles maculipennis. 69, 1018, 967-9. Royer, M.— Note sur la ponte d'Anopheles maculipennis. 20, 1918, 211-1.'?. Aldrich, J. M. — The kelp-flies of N. Am. (Fucellia, Anthomyii- dae), [4 new]. 61, viii, 157-179. Malloch, J. R. — Three new North Am. Chloropidae. 19, xiii, 108-11. Petley, F. W. — A revision of the genus Sciara of the family Mycetophilidae [2:28]. 7, xi, 319-46. COLEOPTERA. Davis, A. C.— Notes on Pleocoma (II). 19, xiii, 116-18. Denier, P. — Sur le genre Picnoseus (Meloidae) [S. Am.]. 20, 1918, 208-10. Kraatz, W. C,— Scirtes tibialis, with ob- servations on its life history (Dascylidae). 7, xi, 393-402. Leng, C. W. — Some beetles of a Staten Island garden. 74, vi, 204-9. Woods, W. C. — The alimentary canal of the larva of Altica bimar- ginata. 7, xi, 283-318. Blatchley, W. S. — Some new or scarce C. from western and southern Florida [3 new]. 4, 1918, 41(5-24. Wolcott, A. B.— Notes on Cleridae [2 n. gen.]. 19, xiii, 107-8. HYMENOPTERA. Buchner, P.— Vergleichende eistudien I. Die akzessorischen kerne des hymenoptereneies. 51, xci, Abt. 2, 1-202. Cockerell, T. D. A. — Descriptions and records of bees [Alex.]. 11, ii, 470-82. Bees from British Guiana. 62, xxxviii, 085-90. Howard, L. O. — Two new instances of polyembryony among the Encyrtidae. 68, xlix, 43-4. Beutenmuller, W. — Two new Cynipidac. 19, xiii, 118-19. Brad- ley., J. C. — Descriptions [of :> new sps.j and records of some inter- esting parasitic H. mostly collected ... in Tompkins County, N. Y. 19, xiii, 98-10(5. Cockerell, T. D. A. — Some halictine bees [2 new]. 9, 1918, 2(11-2. A COLLECTOR'S MAX UAL ix SPANISH. — That very energetic worker, Prof. Carlos E. Porter, Director of the Museum and Laboratory of Applied Zoology, etc., at Santiago, Chile, has recently published a 54 K\T().\iMi,<)<;i: <• perience and wh.. tioiial conduct." — E. T. Cri . Ju. 56 ENTOMUUIGICAI, NliVVS. | Feb. ,'19 Doings of Societies. Entomological Section, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 'Meeting of September 26th, 1918, Director Philip Laurent presiding; eleven persons present. Orthoptera. — Mr. Rehn made a few remarks on the discovery of a new Asiatic species of a hitherto exclusively North American genus of Decticinae (Tettigoniidae), the comments illustrated by a series of all the known species of the genus. Lepidoptera. — Dr. Skinner reported that he secured a good col- lection of Arr. Van Dyke took up in more detail the origin and general distribution of the coleoptera Vol. xxx I KNTOMOUH;IC\I. XKWS. 57 of North America, especially in regard to the Glacial, Ozarkan and Sonoran zones of dispersal. Mr. Rehn spoke of similar zonal dispersion in some orthopteran genera. Dr. Calvert brought up the question as to the origin and relation- ships of the Elateridae and Lampyridae, to which Dr. Van Dyke re- plied that they were evidently very close; probably of the same origin with more or less parallelism in their development of certain characters. Both families are considered by most authors as being of the most primitive of the coleoptera. Mr. Rehn illustrated the error in considering species as widely spread over certain areas while, in fact, if more detailed collecting was done and more detailed data given as to locality, altitude, and environment, it would be found that such species are more or less restricted, with distribution following only a well-defined, connected life zone. Meeting of June 10, 1918, in the same hall, Dr. Henry Skinner, President, in the chair. Sixteen persons present including Messrs. Passell and Kline, visitors. The custodian announced the following donations to the collection : two specimens Tabanus fusco-punctaius from Florida, from G. M. Greene; twenty species Crane flies and larvae in alcohol, from C. P. Alexander; 300 microscopic slides of the male genitalia of the genus Lycacna (Lepidoptera) and the insects from which the segments were taken, from R. C. Williams, Jr. Orthoptera. — Mr. Rehn exhibited the series of the Acridid genus sicrniiria from the Hebard collection, all the known forms being rep- resented by large series. The speaker also made some comments on the relationship and distribution of the species, followed by discus- sion on the distribution of insects in general by Messrs. Calvert, Skinner and Williams. Coleoptera. — Mr. Laurent exhibited specimens of Hylotnifcs ba- jitlns Lee., and the destructive work the larvae had done in a pine board. The speaker cited a case at Anglesea, New Jersey, where the larvae of this beetle had honeycombed the yellow pine flooring of a house to such an extent that it was necessary to lay an entire new floor. Lepidoptera. — Dr. Skinner reported .-llypia octomaculata as abun- dant here this year and swarming in New York. The following were elected to membership: Messrs. Arthur H. Napier, Geo. M. Greene and J. Wagener Green. — R. C. WILLIAMS, JR., Recording Secretary. 58 EXTO.MOI.MCICAI, \K\VS. [Feb.,'i(j Feldman Collecting Social. Meeting of September i8th, 1918, at the home of H. W. Wenzel, 5614. Stewart Street, Philadelphia; ten members present. President H. W. Wenzel in the chair. Lepidoptera. — Air. Haimbach mentioned Eucosina adctinantaiia Gn., a species described from Lapland and never seen again from that time until rediscovered by Air. Daecke in New Jersey sixty years later. Said he had gone to Lucaston on September 12 and, though it was the proper time and he worked over the ground for six hours, he was unable to get a single specimen. Also said he has bred thousands of Callosamia promcthca Dm. and this year was about to liberate several specimens when he noticed an odd form which proved to be the aberration caeca described from a unique female from Xew York by Cockerell in Packard's Monograph of the Bombycine Moths of North America III, p. 228, 1914, and the type presented to the United States National Museum. Coleoptera. — Dr. Castle said his annual trip to Maryland was a complete failure though he had gone a week later than usual. All species which were generally common were not found at all. Exhibited specimens of Popillia japonica Newm., the Japanese pest, which he had gotten at Riverton, New Jersey, IX-I, saying they will eat anything, that boys are paid to gather them and bring them in by the quart. Diptera. — Mr. Hornig recorded a species of mosquito, as new to this vicinity, Acdcs currici Coquillett, from the northwest, and found here under the same conditions and in the same place with the swamp mosquito. — GEO. M. GREENE. Sec'y. OBITUARY. VICTOR ARTHUR ERICH DAECKE. In the NEWS for December last we briefly announced the death of our fellow member of the Advisory Committee at Richmond Hill, Long Island, New York, on October 28, 1918. Thanks to the kindness of his sister, Mrs. Jenny Schwensen, of that town, we are able to give some data on his early life. E. Daecke, as his autograph appears on letters of the past year, was born at Scharnikan, in the province of Posen, Ger- many, March 28, 1863, and was the son of Julius and Augusta Daecke. Most of his early years were spent in I'romberg, Germany, where he attended the Gymnasium and the Real Yi.'l. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL XKWS. 59 Gymnasium. From his early childhood he was a serious lo\er of nature and of art, the latter interest influenced, no doubt, by a visit through Italy, as a youth. He came to the United States in 1881 and lived at Mont- clair, New Jersey, Richmond Hill and Xew York City, before coming to Philadelphia about 1900. He applied his artistic- ability in various lines, being at one time artist with the United States Printing Company, at Brooklyn, and at the time of our first acquaintance with him was connected with the Philadel- phia Press as an illustrator. .He soon became known to the Philadelphia entomologists and apparently the first record of his speaking at the Feldman Collecting Social is that given in the NEWS for December, 1900, (page 642). At the October meeting of that year, he gave the results of some collecting at Castle Rock, Pennsylvania, and Manumuskin, New Jersey. He was nominated for membership on the same evening, his residence being given as 1709 Chestnut Street, and elected at the following November meeting. On November 22, 1900, he became an Associate of the Entomological Section of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and thereafter scarcely a volume of the NEWS does not contain, under the heading of "Doings of Societies," some records of his collect- ing activities in New Jersey or Pennsylvania. In 1907-08 he suffered from a long illness, but after his re- covery removed to Harrisburg to become an assistant in the Pennsylvania State Department of Zoology, under Professors H. A. Surface and J. G. Sanders, a position which he held until his death. On October 27, 1910, he was elected a mem- ber of the Advisory Committee of the NEWS. He was a charter member of the Entomological Society of America and a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science since 1907-08. He became a member of the New York Entomological Society previous to his re- moval to Philadelphia and in 1895 \\as Chairman of its Publi- cation Committee. Mr. Daecke was a most enthusiastic and careful collector. devoting himself to the local fauna wherever he might be. He gathered insects of all orders and paid much attention to 60 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb., '19 their early stages, life histories and habits. In the early years at Philadelphia he did much with the Odonata, as a paper in the NEWS for January, 1903, indicates, a notable discovery of his in this order being that of Tclagrion? dacckii at Manumuskin ; nor did he ever neglect them, as a note in our issue for last July (page 2/8) evidences. Later the Tabanidae especially attracted his energies and he prepared the list of species of this family for the 1909 report on the Insects of New Jersey. In this report. Prof. John B. Smith wrote of him : "An excellent general collector whose expeditions into South Jersey have produced a large number of most useful records in almost all orders." Many of his associates are indebted to him for valuable material and he unquestionably did much in the way of accumulating positive data on geo- graphical distribution. The writer especially will greatly miss his kindly aid extending over nearly twenty years. His nephew, Mr. Erich E. Lehsten, of New York City, writes of him : "Mr. Daecke was always exceedingly self- contained ; very rarely discussing his private affairs with any- one ; doing all the good he could ; giving those with whom he came in contact every assistance in his power, and, to the best of my knowledge, has never injured anyone." He never mar- ried, but was a great lover of children. He contributed the following papers to the NEWS. To bring together his collecting records contained in volumes XI-XXIX is a task of some considerable extent which, we believe, has not been attempted. Notes on Priona[>tcr\.\- ncbnlifcra Steph. Vol. XVI, pp. 12-14, P'- '' and text figure. January, 1905. [Lepid.l Two new species of Diptera from New Jersey, t. c. pp. 249-251, text figs. October, 1905. [Chrysops bistellatus, amazon.] On the Eye-Coloration of the Genus Chrysops. Vol. XVTI, pp. 39-42, 1>1. i. Feb., 1906. [Dipt.l Mydas fuh'ifrons. Illiger. t. c., p. 347. Nov., 1906. [Dipt.] Annotated List of the Species of Chrysops occurring in New Jersey, and Descriptions of two New Species. Vol. XVI11, pp. 139-146, pi. vi, text figures April, 1907. [C. pcinntlus and hind new.] Trypetid Galls and Hnrosla ctsa n. sp. Vol. XXI, pp. 341-343, pi- x. Oct., 1910. [Dipt.; the new species named for his niece, Elsa Schwen- sen]. Til ii. IP P. CALVERT. List of Colcoptcra of North America BY CHARLES W. LENG A complete list of described species, varieties, subspecies, and synonyms, with page reference to work in which each was originally described, and general distribution of each. Also a complete list of all works containing original de- scriptions of .North American species from 1758 to the end of 1918, and complete list of the fossil species of North America by Professor H. F. Wickham. Price, unbound, including delivery, $5.50 ; printed on one side only, $7.00. Payment in advance is requested to assist in financing pub- lication. It will be necessary to advance the price upon pub- lication. Less than 200 subscriptions have so far been received. There should be 500 in hand before publication. Please send your subscription at once to the publisher. JOHN D. SHERMAN, JR 24 CLAREMONT AVENUE MOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK NEW ARRIVALS u From Columbia, So. America : OVER 10,000 BUTTERFLIES, INCLUDING Morpho cypris Morpho amathonte stilkowskyi Caligo spp. From Cuba : 1500 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio columbus Urania boisduvali andraemon Erinyis guttalaris celadon Protoparce brontes, etc. devilliersi u II From Venezuela : Over 5000 Lepidoptera 200 Dynastes hercules From New Guinea 2000 Coleoptera 200 Orthoptera From Assam, India : 1200 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio arcturus Kallima inachis philoxenus Brahmaea wallachi And Many Other Showy Species U From Tibet (Bhutan) Armandia lidderdalii Parnassius hardwicki CATALOGUES OF ENTOMOLOGICAL SUPPLIES AND SPECIMENS ON APPLICATION If interested kindly send your list of desiderata for further information to THE KNY-SCHEERER CORPORATION Department of Natural Science New York G. Lagai, Ph.D. 404-410 W. 27th Street MARCH, 1919. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS Vol. XXX. No. 3 M Thaddeu-- William Harris 1795-1856. PHILIP P. CALVERT, Ph.D., Editor. E. T. CRESSON, JR., Associate Editor. HENRY SKINNER, M.D., Sc.D., Editor Emeritus. ADVISORY COMMITTEE: EZRA T. CRESSON, J. A. G. REHN, S'HILIP I-AURENT, GEORGE M. GREENE, H. W. WHNZEL. PHILADELPHIA : THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, LOGAN SQUARE. Entered at the Philadelphia Post-Office as Second-Class Matter. Acceptance for mailing at the special rate of postage provided in Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized on July 19, 1918. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS published monthly, excepting August and September, in charge of the Entomo- logical Section of The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, and The American Entomological Society. , ANN UAL, SUBSCRIPTION, $2.OO IN ADVANCE. SINGLE COPIES 24 CENTS. ADVERTISING RATES : Full width of page. Payments in advance. 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Not Over 4 Lines or 30 Characters (13 to a Line) Additional characters 1c. each, per Line, per 500, Trimmed. C. V. BLACKBURN, I 2 Pine St., STONEHAM, MASS., U. S. A. ENT. NEWS, Vol. XXX. Plate IV. 4 v M EPIPSILIA MONOCHROMATEA.-HOOKER. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS AND PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SECTION THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA. ' VOL. XXX. MARCH, 1919. No. 3- CONTENTS: Hooker — Notes on the Life History of Epipsilia monochromatea Morr. (Lepid., Noctuidae) 61 Crampton — Notes on the Phylogeny of the Orthoptera 64 Calvert— Odonata Anisoptera from Guatemala 72 Hebatd— Remarks on the Species as- signed to Cavotettix Hancock, a Synonym of Neotettix Hancock (Orthopt., Acrididae, Acrydiinae) 78 Davis — An Entomologist's Handbook 82 Editorial— The Next International En- tomological Congress 83 The Jubilee of the Canadian Entomo- logist 83 An Appeal from Belgium 84 Entomological Literature 85 Doings of Societies — Feldman Collect- ing Social (Coleop., Orthop., Dip.) 88 Obituary— Benjamin Hayes Smith 88 Notes on the Life History of Epipsilia monochromatea Morr. (Lepid., Noctuidae).1 By HENRY D. HOOKER, JR., Ph.D. (Plate IV.) In the course of some work on Droscra rotundifolia during the summer of 1915, Droscra plants collected from Beaver Swamp in the city of New Haven, Connecticut, were found to be attacked by the larva of a noctuid moth, which is as far as I know the only insect that eats with impunity this insectivor- ous plant.2 The larvae collected in the early part of July were not more than 3 millimeters long and were readily caught and eaten by the Droscra plant when brought in contact with the secreting glands of the tentacles. However, the larva 1 Contribution from the Osborn Botanical Laboratory, Yale Uni- versity, New Haven, Connecticut. 2 H. D. Hooker, Jr., 1916. Physiological enervations on Drosera rotundifolia. Bull. Torrey Club 43 : pp. 4, 5. 61 62 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., 'iQ avoids this clanger by crawling up the under or abaxial side of the leaf petiole and by attacking the leaf from beneath. When young the larva is pale and feeds on the tips of un- folded leaves and on the central bud. As it grows older it be- comes greenish and eats mature leaves, invariably approach- ing them from the under side. When larvae were placed on the upper or adaxial side of the petiole, they immediately crawled around to the opposite side. This was found to be due to the presence of epidermal hairs on the adaxial surface of the petiole. The abaxial surface of the petiole and the under side of the leaf blade are free from these hairs. The following summer, 1916, it was accidentally discovered that when the larvae reached a length of about 15 mm. they changed their diet, giving up Droscra for the cranberry, Vac- chihnn iiiacrocarpon. The mature larva is 16 mm. long when extended. 12 mm. long when contracted and 2 mm. thick. It is reddish brown on the back and pale yellow-green toward the front on the ventral surface. There is a well developed white dorsal stripe between two parallel black lines. On either side there are three more dark lines. The head is shiny and very dark honey yellow in color. The true legs are of the same color PS the h??d. b'it i"ot shiny. There are four pairs of transparent false legs, that are dark at the tip. The anal prolegs are of the same color as the dorsal side. A single mature larva was obtained, which was taken care of and reared by Dr. W. E. Britton at the Connecticut Agri- cultural Experiment Station in New Haven. The larva pu- pated between March T and 20. 1917. and a male moth emerg- ed May 8, 1917. It was identified by Dr. William Barnes as Bpipsilia monochromatea Morr.3 This form was originally described by Morrison4 as Agrotls tnonochrotnatea, and is listed as Pachnobia monochromatea Morr. by Dyar and Smith.6 It 3 W. Barnes and J. McDunnough, 1917. Check list of the Lepidoptera of North America, No. 1475. Decatur. 4 H. K. Morrison, 1874. Description of new Noctuidae. Proc. Bos. Soc. Nat. Hist. 17. p. 165. 5 H. G. Dyar, 1902. A list of North American Lepidoptera, p. 131, Washington. Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 63 has been reported from Massachusetts,7 Durham. New Hamp- shire,8 and Canada.9 The first specimen discovered in Con- necticut was collected in New Haven, May 24, 1910, by Mr. B. H. Walden. of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station. This specimen was a female. Subsequently a mature larva was found in some sphagnum collected by Professor G. E. Nichols in Beaver Swamp in April, iQi8. Mr. Walden found a pupa in the same swamp April 29, 1918; the adult emerged May 25, 1918. Detailed descriptions of the moth are given by Morrison,10 Smith11 and Hampson.12 Morrison de- scribes the form as follows. The expanse of wings measures 32 mm. The male antennae are very strongly bipectinate. The collar, thorax and anterior wings are uni- formly reddish brown. All the lines and spots are obsolete, except the two median lines, which are dark, broad, outwardly curved and sub- parallel. The posterior wings are brownish fuscous, with yellow fringes. The life history of Epipsilca monochromatea may be out- lined as follows. The eggs are laid and hatch out in June or July. The young larvae feed on Drosera until August, and then live on cranberry. The mature larvae pass the winter in Sphagnum, pupate in April and the moth emerges in May. EXPLANATION OF PLATE IV. Fig. I. Young larvae feeding on Drosera rotnudifolia. Photographed by Professor G. E. Nichols, x i. Fig. 2. Mature larva contracted. Photographed by Mr. B. H. Walden. x i. Fig. 3. Mature larva on Sphagnum. Photographed by Mr. B. H. Walden. x i. Fig. 4. Pupa. Photographed by Mr. B. H. Walden. x I. Fig. 5. Posterior hooks of pupa. Photographed by Mr. B. TI. Walden. x 5. Fig. 6. Adult $ . Photographed by Mr. B. H. Walden. x 2. 6 J. B. Smith, 1893. A catalogue of the species of moths of the Lepidopterous superfamily Noctuidae found in boreal North America, p. 62. Washington. 7 H. K. Morrison, he. cit. 8 G. F. Hampson, 1903. Catalogue of the Noctuidae in the collection of the British Museum Vol. TV, p. 483. London. 9 A specimen was collected by Dr. Fletcher in Canada. 10 H. K. Morrison, loc. cit. 11 J. B. Smith. 1890 Revision of the species of the genus .-It/rotis. Bull. No. 38 U. S. Nat. Mus. p. 55. 12 G. F. Hampson, loc. cit. 64 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., 'iQ Notes on the Phylogeny of the Orthoptera.* By G. C. CRAMPTON, Ph.D. (Continued from page 48.) Structures which are of but little importance to the life of the organism, are not greatly affected by natural selection ( or by use and disuse, if these are factors in evolution) and are among the least-varying structures within an order or super- order of insects. It is just these structures, however, which are of the utmost phylogenetic importance, since their reten- tion is almost wholly due to heredity alone, and on this ac- count I would lay much greater stress upon the evidence af- forded by such structures than upon those which are of greater value in the struggle for existence (and hence subject to its modifications), yet vary a great deal even within the same order of insects. Such structures which furnish very serviceable clews as to the interrelationships of the orders of insects are the cervical sclerites or neck plates, which are remarkably constant within an order, or even superorder of insects, and I have therefore laid greater stress upon the character of the cervical and prothoracic sclerites than upon any other one set of structures, although unless supported by the evidence drawn from many other sources as well, the evidence afforded by these structures alone would be wholly inadequate — as is true of any one set of structures taken alone. In Vol. 28 (p. 393) of Ent. News for 1917, it was shown that the lateral neck and prothoracic sclerites of Grylloblotta are astonishingly like those of the Embiids, even in regard to the minutest details — and the resemblance cannot therefore be attributed to a mere convergence (parallelism) in develop- ment. Such a resemblance in these unimportant and little- varying structures can only mean that these types of sclerites were inherited froir a common ancestry. While the antennae may vary considerably within an order, or even family of in- sects, the remarkable resemblance (even in the matter of the relative lengths of the segments, etc.) between the antennae * Contribution from the Entomological Laboratory of the Massachu- setts Agricultural College, Amherst, Mass. Vol. xxx ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 65 of Grylloblatta and Euibia major Imms adds further sup- port to the contention that the Grylloblattids are quite closely related to the Embiids, as was pointed out in the June, 1917, issue of The Canadian Entomologist (page 213). In Ent. News, Vol. 26, page 337, attention was called to the resemblance of the tergal thoracic plates of Grylloblatta to those of the Dermapterous representative? of the superorder to which the Embiids also belong, and the lateral thoracic sclerites of the Grylloblattids are very like those of the Embiids, al- though it must be admitted that the lateral thoracic sclerites of Grylloblatta are also quite like those of the Isoptera, and the ventral thoracic plates resemble those of the Zoraptera and Mantids as much as those of any other insects. The legs of Grylloblatta are quite like those of the Blattids (and Zoraptera) ; but I fail to find any other marked Blattid features in the Grylloblattids — although the investigations of Dr. Walker (who is at present working upon the anatomical details of the recently discovered males of Grylloblatta) may bring to light other Blattid-like characters in the Grylloblattids. The cerci of Grylloblatta are very like those of certain Plecop- tera in regard to the relative lengths of the component seg- ments, etc., as was pointed out in a paper published in Vol. 25 of the Journal of the New York Ent. Society (page 225), and I also find a marked resemblance between the cerci of Grylloblatta and those of the immature Dermaptera, such as "D\scrihna" longisctosa, Diplatys, Karschlclla and other earwings in which the forceps of the adult are preceded by segmented cerci in the nymphal stages. On the other hand, Ihe cerci of Grylloblatta also resemble those of the Man- tids to some extent. The ovipositor of Grylloblatta could easily be derived from the type found in certain Dermaptera such as Hchinosotna; but on the whole, the ovipositor of Grylloblatta is more like that of certain Mantidae. From the foregoing discussion, it is evident that Grylloblatta resembles the Panplecoptera in regard to the least-varying structures, while in regard to its body as a whole (with the ex- ception of the body contour and its slender nature in which it 66 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., '19 is strongly similar to the Embiids and Dermaptera) the re- semblances are fairly evenly divided between the Panplecoptera and the Pandictyoptera. Grylloblatta has many features in common with the Embiids, Dermaptera, Isoptera, Zoraptera and Mantids, and fewer in common with the Blattids and Plecoptera, so that the choice which we make as to what forms more nearly represent the ancestors of the Grylloblattids depends upon what structures we consider the most important for a phylogenetic study. From my own studies of a rather wide range of anatomical structures, I would be more inclined to regard the neck and prothoracic sclerites as the most de- pendable features, and taking the evidence as a whole, I have become convinced that Grylloblattids arose from a Plecopteroid stock* ( Panplecoptera) rather than from a Blattoid stock (Panisoptera), although it is quite evident that the Grylloblat- tids branched off from the Plecopteroid stock very near the point at which the Blattoid lines of development likewise branched off from the same Plecopteroid stock, as indicated in the diagram (page 43). While much attention has been paid to Grylloblatta as the most primitive represent? tive of the Orthopteroid group, it must be borne in mind that all of the evidence of relationship must be considered from every available source, and in this connection it would be a very grave error to slight the evi- dences of relationship presented by that other very primitive Orthopteroid insect Tiincma calif ornica Scud., (a small wing- less Phasmid), since Timciua has preserved certain features which even Grylloblatta has lost. Tiinenia, like Grylloblatta, is wingless in both sexes, and anyone who will compare Timema and Grylloblatta with the wingless females of the Embiids or Dermaptera will certainly concede that the general appearance of the body is very much more similar in these insects than is the case when one compares the Grylloblattids with the average wingless Blattid or Mantid (or even with the Isoptera, for that matter). Again, while the tarsi of Grylloblatta are five- jointed and the legs arc quite like those of the Blattids, the *See footnote, page 48. Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 6/ tarsi of Timema, on the other hand, are but three-jointed, and the legs are extremely similar to those of the Plecopteroid in- sects, so that in this respect Timema is as strongly Plecopteroid as Grylloblatta is Blattoid ! The head and its appendages in Timema are more like these structures in the Plecopteroid in- sects, as is markedly true of the neck and prothoracic sclerites. I find a strong suggestion of the pronouncedly demarked in- tersegmental region in front of both the meso- and metathorax in Timema, and since to my knowledge, this condition occurs elsewhere only in such Plecopteroid insects as the Embiids and Plecoptera, I think that it is a very important feature in de- termining the ultimate affinities of Timema! The terminal ab- dominal structures (exclusive of the rather aberrant genitalia of the male) of Timciua are strongly suggestive of Dermap- teron affinities — such for example as the flattened cerci com- posed of a single segment and bearing mesal prong-like pro- jections, the projecting epiproct (eleventh tergite) and the dorso-ventrally flattened paraprocts (or plates on either side of the anus) .which are quite similar in both Dermaptera and Timema as may be readily seen by comparing the figures of these structures shown in a paper published in Vol. 13 (page 49) of the Bulletin of the Brooklyn Ent. Soc. for June, 1918. Although the ovipositor of Timema is more like that of the Blattids and Mantids, it could have been derived from the type of ovipositor present in such Dermaptera as Echinosoma as well, so that the fact that most of the Panplecoptera have not developed (or preserved) an ovipositor would not stand in the way of deriving the Orthopteroid insects from ancestors resembling the Panplecoptera, since some Panplecoptera, at least (Echinosoma, etc.), have an ovipositor — and then, too, all of the Orthopteroid insects have not preserved an oviposi- tor either, since the Gryllotalpids, for example, have none. From the foregoing discussion, it is apparent that Timema is much more like the members of the group Panplecoptera (and the Dermaptera in particular) than it is like the mem- bers of the group Pandictyoptera. That I am not alone in this view is evident from the following passage from Mr. 68 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., '19 Caudell's paper on the North American Phasmidae (Proc. U. S. Nat. Museum, Vol. 26, p. 884) in which he says "This species (Tiinema calif ornlca} apparently represents a step in the transition from the Phasmidae to the Forficulidae. The forcipal cerci of the males, ventrally attached legs, short, broad head, and especially the short, stout legs with the three- jointed tarsi, indicate a relation to the earwigs. As Phasmids these creatures are certainly anomalies, having in one instance at least, been mistaken for a species of Perlid larvae." Handlirsch himself must have been struck with the resemblance of the Orthopteroid insects to the Dermaptera, since he attempts to derive the latter insects from the former, although it is as- tonishing that he should seek to reverse the evolutionary se- quence and derive the Dermaptera from the Gr\llidac — which is just about on a par with the recent sensational attempt of an English writer to prove that apes are descended from men! The .only reason Handlirsch gives for thus arbitrarily discard- ing all of the evidence of comparative anatomy, embryology, etc., which clearly show that the Dermaptera are more primi- tive than, and are doubtless "ancestral" to* the Orthoptera in question, is that the known fossil remains of these Orthoptera geologically antedate those of the fossil Dermaptera thus far discovered. Handlirsch makes no allowance for the fact that when the geological formations have been more thoroughly ex- plored it will undoubtedly be found that Dermapterous in- sects occur m these earlier strata also, and it is this calmly ignoring the evidence of comparative anatomy and embryology that has led him into all sorts of absurdities, such as attempt- ing to derive the winged insects directly from Trilobites (which are not even in the direct line of descent of the Insecta) with- out reference to the anatomically primitive Apterygota (such as the Protura, etc.), which he is inclined to regard as de- generate winged insects! It may be an indication of the trend *In stating that the Dermaptera are "ancestral to" the Orthoptera in question, it is merely meant that they have departed hut little •from the condition which was prohahly characteristic of the ancestors of the Orthoptera in question. Vol. XXXJ ENTOMor.oC.irAT. XF.WS 69 of the times that so many of our most learned physicists, psychologists, and others, have accepted with blind faith, the revelations of the spiritualist ''mediums," but I must confess that I am still old-fashioned enough to be astonished at the ready acceptance that even the most revolutionary ideas of Handlirsch have met with at the hands of such eminent geol- ogists and paleontologists as Schuchert, Lull and others who seem to see nothing at all remarkable in the view that winged insects were derived directly from Trilobites ! When it comes to the discussion of the lines of descent of the saltatorial Orthoptera, however, I would more nearly agree with Handlirsch in his conception of the interrelationships of these insects. The Gryllidae (with the Gryllotalpids, etc.), are undoubtedly very closely related to the Tettigoniidae (for- merly called "Locustidae") and their allies, while the Tridac- tylidae seem to be quite closely related to the so-called Acri- didae and their allies. In certain respects, the Tridactylidae occupy a position intermediate between the Acrididae and the Gryllidae, but their line of descent parallels that of the Acri- didae quite closely. I formerly proposed that the Acrididae (and Tridactylidae) with their allies constitute an order of in- sects distinct from that composed of the Locustidae and Gryl- lidae with their allies ; but this is largely a matter of individual opinion depending upon the value one places upon structural differences. With regard to the relationship of the saltatorial Orthop- teroid insects to their more primitive allies, it would appear that such primitive "Locustoid" insects as PJwsinodes are very like Grylloblatta in many respects, and their line of de- scent has been represented as though quite near that of the Grylloblattids in the diagram. 1 find many evidences of a rather close relationship between the Oecanthidae and the Gryl- loblattidae, however, and it is very difficult to determine from the evidence available whether the Grylloblattidae are more closely related to the "Locustidae" or to the Gryllidae. Dr. Walker has contended that the Grylloblattids and Locustids are the more closely related, and a further study of the more primi- /O ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS | Mar., 'iQ tive "Locustids" may indicate that his view is the correct one; but, since the Gryllid and ''Locustid" lines of descent very quickly merge in a common ancestry, in tracing them back to the common stem forms from which the saltatorial Orthoptera arose, it is rather difficult to say which of the two lines is the more closely related to Grylloblatta, and until all of the avail-' able evidence has been brought forward, it is preferable to suspend judgment in the matter. I have maintained that the line of development of the Acrididae is closer than that of the Locustid-gryllid group to the Phasmid line of development (of which the Phylliidae are an offshoot), and the recent work of Turner, 1916, on the breeding habits of the Orthoptera (Vol. 9, page 117, of the Annals of the Ent. Soc. of America) would seem to support this view. Handlirsch considers that the Phasmids are con- nected by the fossil Chresmodidae with the fossil Elcanid fore- bears of the Tridactylids ; but I do not think that such highly specialized Orthopteroid insects as the Elcanidae and their saltatorial allies can be regarded as ancestral to the much more primitive Phasmid Timcma, whose structural features clearly point to a Panplecopterous ancestry ; and the relationship of the lines of descent of these insects as shown in the diagram is more in harmony with the evidence of comparative anatomy. So far as I can judge from the description of these insects, the fossil Elcanidae, Locustopsidae and Chresmodidae should doubtless be included in the superorder Panorthoptera, of which the Phasmidae, Acrididae, "Locustidae," Gryllidae, Gryl- loblattidae and their allies, form a part. The Thysanoptera, which Handlirsch would group with these insects, seem to have closer affinities with the insects descended from Psocid- like forebears (superorder Panhomoptera), and the Dermap- tera (including the Hemimeridae or "Diploglossata," which are true Dermaptera and are not a distinct branch of the Gryllid stock as Handlirsch seems to think) are undoubtedly more closely related to the other members of the superordc-r Panplecoptera, instead of being more closely related to the Gryllid stock, as Handlirsch would have us believe. Vol. XXXJ EXTO.MorjHilCAL NEWS "\ Since Handlirsch's views are so widely accepted, I would briefly summarize the differences between bis grouping and derivation of the different lines of descent of the lower winged insects, and that here proposed. Aside from the great differ- ence between Handlirsch's idea of the direct origin of winged insects from Trilobites t while I would derive winged insects from Apterygota, which, with their relatives the Symphyla, are descended from Crustacea related to Bathynclla and the Isopoda) the principal points wherein the method of grouping and deriving the lines of descent of the lower winged insects as here proposed, differs from that of Handlirsch as given in his book "Die Fossilen Insekten," may be stated as follows. 1 would gather the Plecoptera, Embiids, Dermaptera, and their allies in an ancestral group, instead of scattering them, as Handlirsch does in his diagram. Handlirsch regards the Dermaptera as an offshoot of the saltatorial Orthoptera in- stead of placing them in the ancestral superorder Panplecoptera as is here proposed, and he also represents the Diploglossata (Hemimeridae) as a distinct offshoot of the saltatorial Orthop- tera, while in reality the Hemimeridae are Dermaptera and should be grouped with them in the superorder Panplecoptera. Handlirsch regards the Phasmids as an offshoot of the salta- torial Orthoptera, while I regard them as nearer the ancestors of these Orthoptera, and I would derive the whole Orthopteroid stock from Panplecopterous forebears — although this Orthop- teroid stock branched off very near the point of origin of the Blattoid stock. Handlirsch regards the Thysanoptera as an offshoot of the saltatorial Orthopteroid stock, related to the Dermaptera, while I place the Thysanoptera together with the Corrodentia, Mallophaga and Pediculidae (all of which Hand- lirsch derives from the Blattidae) in a superorder with the Hemiptera (i. e. in the superorder Panhomoptera ) , and I con- sider that this superorder arose at the base of the Neuropteroid group, to which all of them are very closely related. They, with the Neuropteroids, are descended from Plecopteroid (not Blattoid) forebears, and the Hymenoptera arose from the base of the Neuropteroid stock also, and are therefore to be traced 72 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., 'n,i back to Plecopteroid forebears rather than to Mantoid ances- tors as Handlirsch considers to be the case. I place the Coleoptera in the group Panplecoptera, next to the Dermap- teron line of descent, thus differing from Handlirsch who would derive the Coleoptera from the Protoblattoidea. There are many other points of difference, especially in the grouping and derivation of the higher insects ; but these will be taken up under the discussion of the phylogeny of the other groups of insects, in a series of papers dealing with each group in detail. Odonata Anisoptera from Guatemala Collected by Messrs. William Schaus and John T. Barnes. By PHILIP P. CALVERT, University of Pennsylvania, Philadel- phia, Pa. (Continued from page 38.) LlBELLULINAE. Libellula foliata (Kirby). Purulha, 5500 feet, June .30, 1 $ , "body orange brown, costal margins orange," 1 $ , swampy road. Guatemala City, July 1, 1 $. These three specimens are younger than those described in the Biologia volume and by Ris, in the Cat. Coll. Zool. Selys, the males having the frons and vertex pale ochre, the female pale greenish brown, both sexes with the labrum orange yel- low. In the male from Guatemala City the genital lobe has a posterior process or lobe similar to that figured for Brechmo- rhoga postlobata ( Proc. California Acad. Sci. 3d Ser. Zool. I, pi. xxv) but even more distinctly developed. I find no other differentials correlated with the presence of this process so, in spite of the precedent set by naming this Brcchuwrhoga, do not consider this male worthy of a separate name, at least until additional similar specimens come to hand. Libellula herculea Karsch. Chejel, 3100 feet, June :->(>, 1 , dusk, 1 9, "flew into house"; September 2, 1917. veranda. 1 9. Micrathyria didyma didyma (Selys) Ris. Cayuga, forest: June 10, 1 9 ; August 25, 1 $ , 1 9 ; September 4, 1 $ . Micrathyria aequalis (Hagen). Cayuga, August 25, 1 9 on veranda. Orthemis ferruginea (Fabricius). Cayuga, at light: Atarch 7, 1 teneral 9 ; April 3, 1 teneral 9 ; August 12, 1 $ (adult) ; September 20, 1 $ , "abdomen purple." Cannaphila insularis funerea (Carpenter) Ris. Cayuga, April 20, i teneral $ a, 2 $ b; Cayuga, Rio Xegro trail, forest, April 30, 2 $ a; trail behind Cayuga, forest ridge, dry, May 17, 1915, i $ , i 9 b ; Cayuga, forest, May 27, i 9 b, "abdomen above golden brown with black segmental lines" ; June 5, i $ b : in forest, June 20, i 9 a, "body fuscous; pale dorsal yellowish line interrupted seg- mentally; a similar short lateral streak at base of abdomen: oblique pale greenish streaks on thorax." Escuintla, July 7, 1 96. This is the Cannaphila angustipennis ( Rambur) of the Bio- logia volume, page 241, a name which Dr. Ris has shown to be untenable on account of the priority of angustipennis Stephens, a homonym. The letters a and b are employed in the above list of specimens as in the Biologia to indicate specimens with entirely yellow labium (a) or with the labium more or less marked with black (&). It would seem that this difference in labial coloring has no geographical, seasonal or ontogenetic sig- nificance. Cannaphila vibex (Hagen). Tactic, July 30, 1 $. Escuintla, May, 1917, 1 9- Anatya normalis Calvert. Cayuga, April 21, 1 , 1 $ ', track, August 8. 1 $ , "eyes, shoulders and dorsum lilac." Macrothemis hemichlora ( Burmeister). Quirigua, March, 1 roai'us Fox, Ent. News, XXIX, p. 347. (Descrip- tion of caudate phase.) [9 : Clarksville, Tennessee.] After careful examination and comparison of a considerable 1 In reference 1o this remarkable feature, Rehn and Hebard have stated : "That this condition is deep seated in the subfamily is quite apparent, and it is equally evident that it is characteristic of certain species and again occurs as a variant in species normally of the usual type." Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1916, p. 138, (lpr6). 80 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., '19 series from Clarksville, Tennessee, with the type of proai'its and other specimens of this species, we unhesitatingly assign Cavotettix apterus Hancock to the present synonymy.2 In considering the characters given by Hancock as diagnostic for aptcrus, we find them attributable wholly to individual vari- ation, excepting the presence or absence of tegmina and wings. From examination of the series it is ascertained that in this species greatly atrophied tegmina and much reduced wings are present in all, but apparent only in occasional examples.3 Measurements (in millimeters} Length Length Width Length Width of body4 of pro- of pro- of caudal of caudal notum notum femur femur $ Jasper, Ga 8-5 7 I 2.25 C 2. Macon, Ga. All o type 8-5 / • * 7-1 2-45 J • 4-9 River Junction, Fla 7.8 7- 2-35 4-9 1.95 Clarksville, Tenn. (20) . . 7-5-8-6 7.1-8.1 2.4-2.8 5-3-5-6 2. -2. 1 Greenville, Ala 7.8 7.2 2 ^ 2. Evergreen, Ala ... / 8.3 / •"• 7 2.65 C. 2. $ / * Buckhead Ga . . . 9 9 8 T, 2.0 c o :> I r Macon, Ga. T\pc y*y 10.4 •J 8.8 2.85 •J*-x c, 7 2.1 * *-'**-|- '•^J «.' / River Junction, Fla. (2) 9.8-9.9 8.-S.6 2.8-3 5-5-5-8 2.I-2.I Clarksville, Tenn. (18).. 9.5-10 8.4-9-1 3--3-I5 5.6-6.1 2.1-2.3 Clarksville.Tenn.5 (2) ... 10.8-10 H.-H.3 3-4-3-4 5.8-6 2.15-2.2 - We have received full concurrence in this opinion by James A. G. Rehn, Henry Fox and W. S. Blatchley. The pair from which apterus was described was given to Blatchley by Fox, who in turn loaned the specimens to Hancock for examination. Though Hancock stated that aptcrus might be only a race or variety of proavus. it is clear that he made no real effort to secure further material for comparison, or to determine the actual values of the characters given as of specific diagnostic importance. 3 Through a desire to damage or distort the male allotype of proavus as little as possible, Rehn and Hebard erred in making the statement "Tegmina absent." Examination of this specimen relaxed shows that, as in the other specimens at hand, vestigial tegmina are present though wholly concealed. It is believed that Hancock is similarly incorrect in his statement concerning apterus in his key, "Tegmina absent in female," which statement is qualified by "or entirely hidden from view" in his description. 4 From vertex to apex of abdomen. 5 Caudate examples. Vol. XXXJ EXTOJMOUHirCAL XK\VS 8l The great majority of the specimens are brown (maximum recessive, tawny olive), individually varying to blackish brown. The velvety black posthumeral triangles are very conspicuous in the majority, in a few weakly defined. One female from River Junction is decidedly mottled; while the male from that locality and the female type from Macon alone show a very striking bicolored condition, blackish in the cephalic half, paler and decidedly contrasting verona brown caudad of the posthumeral triangles, the external faces of the caudal femora alone blotched with blackish proximo-mesad. This species has been found by Dr. Henry Fox to be a spring form ; the majority of the series assembled by him were taken about the middle of June. This is probably also true for N. )inHisini(s (Hancock). As our field work has been largely undertaken in the late summer and during the fall, the reason why we have not collected much larger series is apparent. We have given here a reference to the discussion of the recently discovered caudate type of the present species by Dr. Henry Fox. This is a most interesting feature, ably treated by that author. Specimens Examined: 50; 26 males6 and 24 females. Jasper, Georgia, elevation 1550 feet, VIII, 5, 1913, (R. ; woodland composed of mixed pine and oak), I $, paratypc, [A. N. S. P.] Buckhead, near Atlanta, Ga., VIII, 2, 1913, (H. ; hillside oak forest), i 9, paratypc, [A. N. S. P.] Macon, Ga., VII, 30 and 31, 1913, (R. & H.; woodland of short-leaf pines) ,i $, i 9, type, allotype, [Hebard Cln.]. River Junction, Florida, VIII, 31, 1915, (R. & H. ; in damp sandy area of ravine deciduous forest among very scant herbage), i ^,29, [Hebard Cln. and A. N. S. P.]. Clarksville, Tennessee, V, 27 to VII, 24, 1917, (H. Fox), 20 $ , 20 9, (2 9 caudate), [Fox, A. N. S. P. and Hebard Clns.]. Greenville, Alabama, VIII, 3, 1915, (H.), i $, [Hebard Chi.]. Evergreen, Ala., VIII, 4, 1915, (H.; in leaf litter on almost bare ground of heavy forest of magnolia, gum and some holly and tulip trees), I <$ , [Hebard Cln.]. Neotettix nullisinus (Hancock) 1918. Ctri'otctti.v intllisinus Hancock, Ent. News, XXIX, p. 344. [9 : Brownsville, Texas.] The less decidedly tectiform pnmotum. with cephalic margin 6 One male labelled only "Schaum's Collection" is in the Hebard Col- lection. 82 KXTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Mar., 'iy of dorsum transverse or very feebly obtuse-angulate produced, and the tegmina which, though reduced, are normallv in large part apparent, readily distinguish this interesting species from N. proai'iis Rehn and Hebard. The previously unknown male of this species is a smaller replica, in all ambisexual features, of the female sex. Measurements (in millimeters) Length Length Width Length Width of of of of of body pronotum pronotum caudal caudal femur femur Houston, Tex 7.3 7.2 2.3 4.8 2.1 W'ebster, Tex 7.4 7. 2.3 4.8 2.2 Webster, Tex 7.7 7.2 2.35 4.7 2. Webster, Tex 7.8 7. 2.35 4.75 2.1 9 Houston, Tex 9.5 8.8 ^. =1.7 2.3 Webster, Tex 9.9 8.8 2.9 5.8 2.3 With the exception of one female, the series is uniform fuscous black in general coloration. The velvety black humeral triangles are weakly indicated in the males, slightly more conspicuous in the females. One female is of the bicolored type which is also found in proants; in this example, the portions cephalad of the posthumeral triangles are black- ish brown, those caudad of that point distinctly paler, saccardos umber shading to sepia toward the medio-longitudinal carina on the pronotum. Specimens Examined: 6; 4 males and 2 females. Houston, Texas, VIII, 12, 1915, (R. & H. ; on ground covered with scant short grass under scattered oaks7), i $ , i 9, [Hebard Cln.] Webster, Harris County, Tex., VII, 19, 1912, (H.), 3 $ , i 9, [Hebard Cln. and A. N. S. P.]. An Entomologist's Handbook. An entomologist's handbook or compendium is very much needed, especially by economic entomologists. It is planned to compile such a handbook, which will include principles and methods of studying the life histories of insects, of conducting field experiments and demonstra- tions, handy tables for field workers, et cetera. It is desired to have references, or better, to have separates of all published notes dealing directly or indirectly with the subject and to have details, and if pos- sible, drawings or photographs as well, of cages, apparatus, methods, etc., as yet unpublished. The handbook will be a compilation and full credit given to all contributions. The co-operation of entomologists is solicited. — JOHX J. DAVIS, Box 95, West Lafayette, Indiana. 7 Long continued search in this area, with a view to securing fur- ther specimens of this insect, proved fruitless. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. PHILADELPHIA, PA., MARCH, IQIQ. The Next International Entomological Congress. The first International Entomological Congress, held in Brus- sels, Belgium, in 1910, was an unqualified success, both from the scientific and social standpoints. The exposition being held at the same time and place was an additional interest. The second Congress was held in Oxford, England, during August, 1912, and was equally enjoyable in every way. A feature of this meeting was the pleasant excursions to places near Oxford and the very profitable and enjoyable day spent at Tring. There was a relatively large attendance of Amer- icans at this meeting, seventeen being present and but three at the first Congress. The third Congress was to have been held in Vienna, Aus- tria, in 1915, but unforeseen, non-entomological European in- terests made the meeting difficult, if not impossible, so it was not held. The termination of the war has led some entomologists to think of the next meeting of this association. Dr. C. Gordon Hewitt, the Dominion Entomologist, sug- gests holding the Congress in the United States next year, \\ hen traveling conditions become settled. He believes that if the congress were held in one of our large cities the atten- dance would be a record one. There is no question but that a meeting on this side of the ocean would greatly increase the membership and would afford much pleasure to the delegates and members from abroad who have not visited America. They would probably also be glad of the opportunity to study our museums and collections. It will be interesting to know what American entomologist^ think of the suggestion to have the meeting on this side.— HENRY SKINNER. The Jubilee of the Canadian Entomologist. With the number for December. miS, "//;.- i ' ADVISORY COMMITTEE: H2RA T. CRESSON, J. A. G. REI»X, PHILIP LAURENT, GEORGE M. GREENE, H, W. WENZEt. PHILADELPHIA : THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL, SCIENCES, LOGAN SQUARE. 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CONTENTS: Hollinger and Parks — Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens), the Kermes Parasite (Micro-lepidoptera, Tine- oides, Oecophoridae ) 91 Skinner — A new Species of Copaeodes (Lep) 100 Weiss — A Resurrected Paper on Mos- quitos and Malaria ( Diptera) 101 McDunnough — Change of Address.... 102 Ferris — Two Species of Phylloxera from California ( Hemip ; Aphidae) 103 Kennedy — The Naiad of the Odonate Genus Cory phaeschna 105 Braun — Descriptions of New Species of Coleophora ( Micro-lepidoptera). . . 108 Coleman — An Aberration of Polygonia progne (Lepid.) 112 " Seventeen Year Grasshoppers" 113 Editorial — Swat the Fly Versus Starve the Brute 114 Cockerel! — Crabro montanus Cresson (Hym.) 114 Cockerel! — Capture of Ants by Gummy Exudations ( Hym. ) 115 Entomological Literature 115 Doings of Societies — Ent. Sec. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phil. ( Hymen.. Lepid.).. 118 Feldman Collecting Social (Lepid., Coleop., Orth , Dipt.) 119 Ohio Entomological Workers 120 Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens), the Kermes Para- site (Micro-lepidopterat Tineoidea, Oecophoridae). By ALBERT HAROLD HOLLINGER, Bryan, Texas, and HARRIS BRALEY PARKS, College Station, Texas.* (Plate V.) HISTORY In March, 1864, Clemens established the genus Hamadryas for a microlepidopteron received from H. F. Bassett, of Waterbury, Connecticut. Clemens named the species in honor of Bassett, and it was known as Hamadryas bassettella Clemens until April, 1878. Grote in that year called attention to the pre-occupancy of Clemens' genus Ha)iiadr\as in the Lepidop- tera by Hiibner and Boisduval, and he proposed the name Euclemensia as a generic substitute. It has since been referred to as Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens) in literature and in manuscripts. *The authors' names are alphabetically arranged, and do not denote seniority. 92 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Apr./IQ There seem to have been some conflicting notes in literature relative to the habits of this pretty moth (plate A", C). Clemens quotes Bassett, saying: "The species is very common in the neighborhood of \Yaterbury, Connecticut, and the larva feeds in a gall found on a species of oak which I call Oncrcns tiuc- toria. The galls are found on the smaller branches, three or four being aggregated, are globular, yellowish-brown, shining and hard." Comstock (i8So£>)t says that this beautiful moth with red- dish-orange-marked fore wings was bred from a large gall-like coccid from Cedar Keys, Florida, and that Riley pointed out to Bassett that his supposed gall was in reality a coccid. Com- stock further says : "The rearing of the same moth from what is evidently a closely allied, if not the same, species of coccid from two such widely separated localities as Connecticut and Florida, is a strong indication of the permanence of the car- nivorous habit in this species." Packard (iSyo/?) on page 219 of his "Forest Insects" says: "The following species are said by Clemens and Chambers to live on the leaves of various species of oak," and on page 220 R. bassettella (Clemens) is listed as a leaf miner of the under surface of oak leaves, with a further note that it feeds, in galls. Evidently Packard overlooked Comstock's record. King (1899) says that in Massachusetts Kcnncs galliformis Riley is attacked by Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens). Britton (1916) states: "Specimens of a Kcnncs. probably K. sassceri King, were collected on an oak at Yalesville. April 13, 1916, by B. H. Walden. On examining this material dur- ing the summer four specimens of a small moth were found in the box, and in the scales were holes from which the moths had emerged. The moths proved to be Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens)." Lawson (1917) records this moth from Kcnncs galliformis Riley taken at Lawrence, Kansas, and identified by Dr. Mc- Dunnough. Due to the fact that in both Missouri and Texas this oecoph- fDates in parentheses refer to the bibliography listed at the end of this article, Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 93 orid moth has been reared abundantly from Kcnnes of more than one species, the writers are led to believe that Bassett's "galls" were nothing more nor less than some species of Ker- wes, and that Packard merely copied Clemens' notes which accompanied the original description of this microlepidopteron. This view is strongly emphasized or even substantiated by the records of Comstock, King, Britton and Lawson. OTHER RECORDS OF PARASITISED KEKMES. The only other known records of the genus Kcnnes being infested by lepidopterous larvae are those given below. Chambers (18/8) described Blastobasis cocchorclla, a spe- cies of Tineoidea which was reared abundantly from a large coccid, Kerntes sp. from Florida. Comstock (18800) says that some of the scales were pierced by round holes and entirely eaten out. By dissecting apparently sound ones, he found a few full-grown lepidopterous larvae measuring about eight millimeters long. These were plump, the 4th and 5th abdominal segments being the largest. The general color was milk-white, the head light brown with darker brown mouth-parts. The prothoracic plate was narrow, light brown, and divided longi- tudinally in the middle. It had six well-developed thoracic legs and five pairs of pro-legs. When the larva began pupating, it first cut an opening through the exterior of the coccid, which up to that time had been entire. Then it spun up a compara- tively compact cocoon on the outside of the coccid, attached to the edges of the circular hole. Dyar (1902), however, does not record Chambers' species at all, and the writers can find no other place in literature where B. cocch'orella Chambers is mentioned. Is it a synonym of some valid species, or was it entirely overlooked by Dyar in his check-list ? Comstock ( i88ort) described a tineid moth, Dakniina cocci- dh'ora (=Dakruma pallida], which was reared from a species of Kcnnes from Sanford and from Fort George. Florida, lie gave the following account of the larval habits of the parasite: "When full-grown the larva leaves the coccid. which it in- fested, and makes a cocoon which is attached to the outside of 94 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Apr., 'iQ the coccid or to a neighboring twig." Daknuna coccidii'ora Comstock is now known as Lactilia coccidh'ora (Comstock). (Fracker, 1917). Packard (1890(7), from some of C. V. Riley's unpublished notes, states that: "These scales from Silver City, New Mexico, were infested with the larvae of a lepidopteron apparently belonging to Lactilia (= Daknuna)," which issued in April, 1881. It is quite possible that this species is the same as that described by Comstock (18800). DISTRIBUTION. Euclemensia bassettclla (Clemens) has been reported in literature from the following states : Connecticut, Florida, Kan- sas, Massachusetts and Texas. Having found it to occur abundantly in both Missouri and Texas, we believe it safe to say that this parasitic lepidopteron is generally distributed at least over the eastern half of the United States. It is our fur- ther opinion that this species will be found to occur in nearly every state east of the Rocky Mountains, and possibly even throughout the extent of this country. OCCURRENCE IN MISSOURI. While on a collecting trip the twenty-sixth of April, 1917, Parks was attracted by a pair of downy woodpeckers, Dr\o- batcs piibcsccns niedianus, which were working arduously in a clump of watersprouts of a shingle oak, Oncrcits iinbricaria Michx., near Albany, Gentry County, Missouri. Subsequent investigation showed that the oak was heavily infested by Kcr- mes pettiti Ehrh., (plate V, H). Each bird detached a Kcr- vics and then placed it securely in a fork made by two twigs or in some roughened crevice in the old trunk. After some little hammering and pecking they withdrew something from the interior of the Kenncs and swallowed it. They would then look for another coccid and after finding one to their liking they would again go through a similar procedure. In all cases they left the hard shell of the dismembered Kenncs behind them. Later investigation showed the presence of white lepidopter- Vol. XXXJ ENT().M()l.(l(,lCAI. NEWS. y5 ous larvae (plate V, A) within many of the gall-like coccids. With exception of a few Kcnncs that the birds had opened in situ, no attached specimens showed the presence of abnormal conditions at this date, (plate V, Hb). Much of the Kcnncs material was given over to Hollinger, and it was placed in the laboratory in a rearing cage on the ninth of June. The first moth appeared on the twenty-sev- enth of June and by the middle of July twenty-three moths had emerged and which were identified as Eitclciiicusia bas- scttella (Clemens) by Mr. A. IJusck, of the United States Bureau of Entomology. On the twelfth of July some of the apparently normal Kcnncs were opened, and from these were obtained three larvae and four pupae. The adult moths have been observed in July, 1917, by Dr. L. Haseman, Entomologist of the Missouri Agricultural Experi- ment Station. They were frequenting the blossoms of the gar- den onion. Hollinger collected an adult on the fifteenth of August flying in his own garden. These two records of the moths flying at large, with exception of a recent additional record from Texas, are the only ones that have come to the at- tention of the writers. OCCURRENCE IN TEXAS. Since the writing of the first draft of this article, the writers have removed to Texas. Our new positions have given us un- usual opportunity to observe the occurrence and habits of Euclemcnsia basscttclla (Clemens) in that state. Early in January, KjiS, a remarkable infestation of Kcnncs galliformis Riley was discovered on Q Kerens stellata Wang, near Corsicana, Navarro County, Texas. The Kennes were in such large numbers that many limbs had succumbed to their attack. Investigation revealed the fact that the coccids were heavily infested by the euclemensid larvae. From specimens collected the adults emerged in the laboratory about the middle of July. Numerous other severe infestations have been under observation, and the following list will give the host plants and the locality from which Euclemensia-iniested Kcnncs have been reared, together with the dates ot emergence of the adults. 96 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Apr., '19 Quercus marilandica Muench Black Jack Oak Anderson County . . . July, 1918 Brazos County Henderson County. . Quercns stcllata Wang, Post Oak. .Brazos County Fannin County Navarro County 26 July, 1918 Robertson County... July, 1918 Van Zandt County. Quercns i-irginiana Mill, Live Oak. McLennan County... 24 July, 1918 San Patricio County. July, 1918 Travis County Qucrcus nndulata Torrey Shinnery Oak Comanche County . . Crosby County 26 July, 1918 Quercus nigra L., Water Oak Brazos County July, 1918 Cook County Grayson County On the third of August, 1918, a single adult Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens) was collected by Parks in Robertson County from the flowers of cultivated onions. This is the only adult that has been seen flying at large in Texas. HABITS. When the larva (plate V, A) becomes full-grown, it cvits a circular to oval hole about one or one and one-half millimeters in diameter through the hard body-wall of the host (plate V, D, F, Ha). This hole is then closed securely with a thin, tough mesh of silken threads (plate V, Fc), after which the larva crawls backward to the end of its retreat. Here it transforms to the pupal stage, which is naked, (plate V, B) no cocoon being spun. In all the infested Kenncs examined, the larva apparently produces a more or less distinctly "U-shaped" retreat or bur- row, (plate V, E) living entirely within this division and not working at large throughout the body of the Kennes. This retreat occupies the lower half of all the infested hosts and nearly comes together at the ends, yet leaves a small space between the ends of the "U." After emerging from its pupa, the moth in some way breaks the strands of silken threads over the opening cut by the larva Vol. xxx ] K.\To.Moi.o(,ic.\i, M-;\VS. 97 and makes its escape (plate V, Km). While most of the larvae inherit the instinct to cut the hole through the body-wall of the Rcrmcs large enough for their bodies to pass through, some apparently fail to make the- exit holes quite large enough for the adults to leave their hosts, for several imagoes have been found dead in their retreats with their heads through the open- ings or with parts of their bodies through the exit holes (plate V. Km), not being1 able to enlarge in the least the hole through the hard body-wall of the Kcnncs. SrpposED OCCURRENCE ix GALLS. At Corsicana, Navarro County, and at Bryan, Brazos County, Texas, some limbs of post oaks, Quercns stcllata Wang., bore numerous specimens of Kcnncs galliformis Riley which were badly infested by this oecophorid parasite. They also bore numerous hymenopterous galls which resembled in size and shape the specimens of Kcrmcs. Many of these galls con- tained clean-cut holes resembling in general appearance those made by Euclemensia bassettclla (Clemens). In order to as- certain whether or not Bassett. as quoted by Clemens (1864), and Packard ( 1890/0 were correct in their previous state- ments that this lepidopteron bred in galls, many of these galls were collected and enclosed in rearing cages. Some time in July several specimens of a large hymenopterous insect emerg- ed from the gall material. Specimens sent to Dr. Howard on thirty-first of July were returned in early August with the following notes : ''The insect which you considered to be a gall-maker is a species of Callinioinc, not a gall-maker, but a parasite on some gall maker. It is a Chalcidid of the family Toryminac, but undeterminable specifically. It is possible that it is a parasite of the Euclemensia." The writers would refute this latter possibility, however, be- cause the several hymenopterous galls were placed in separate rearing jars from the Kcnncs material, and from the gall material Hynicnoptcra alone emerged. Kurthermore. there is no possibility of Callinioinc being a parasite of Eitclcnicnsia bosscttclla (Clemens) because the writers have never reared the lepidopteron from the grills nor have lepidopterous larvae 98 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Apr., '19 ever been found within these galls when they were dissected. In all cases various sized hymenopterous larvae were found after dissection of the galls. On the other hand, no Hymen of>- tera — not even Calliuioinc — have ever been reared by the writers from any Kermes either in Missouri or Texas. All dissections of parasitized Kermes have shown lepidopterous larvae and never hymenopterous grubs. DESCRIPTION. The larva (plate V, A) is a whitish grub about five millimeters long and two millimeters in diameter at the fourth and fifth abdominal seg- ments. The head and the first thoracic segment are chestnut-brown. The pro-thoracic segment is marked longitudinally with a narrow white line which continues along the vertex and down either side of the front to the margins of the clypeus. The pairs of short thoracic legs are edged with chestnut-brown. The pro-legs occur on the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and tenth abdominal segments, and are appar- ently not much developed. Each pro-leg has the crochets or hooks arranged in a uniordinal circle. Fracker (1917) gives as one of the characters of the Oecophoridae, the family to which Euclcmensia bas- settella (Clemens) belongs, the biordinal circle of crochets. Evidently E. bassettclla (Clemens) is an "exception that proves the rule," for it has a clearly defined uniordinal arrangement. The body is but sparsely dotted with setae. The spiracles are small, brownish, and circular. The pupa (plate V, B) is light brownish in general color, measuring about four millimeters in length and about two millimeters in diameter at its middle. The abdomen, in general, is a cream color, and the spiracles are distinctly marked with brownish. The dorsal terga are slightly chitinized with brown. The empty pupal case is a uniform yellow-brown. Inasmuch as the original description of the adult is excellent and undoubtedly inaccessible to some readers, the writers have thought best to reproduce it verbatim (Clemens, 1864). "Fore-wings bright reddish-orange, sometimes tinted with yellowish- orange, with a black spot at the base of the fold of the wing and a broad black stripe showing bluish or greenish reflections along the inner margin extending from the middle of the fold to the tip of the wing and occupying nearly one-half the breadth of it. Along the costa, about the middle of it, is a shining black stripe, which becomes nar- rower as it approaches the apical third of the wing. Cilia blackish. Hind wings shining, dark greenish-black. Head and thorax black. Antennae black. Labial palpi yellowish-orange." (plate V, C). Vol. XXX] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. (J9 Chambers (1878) later notes color variation in Euclemensia bassettella (Clemens) ranging from "sulphur to almost brick- red." SUMMARY. The writers desire to emphasize the following points : (1) Enclemcnsia bassettella (Clemens) is a Kenncs parasite and not a gall feeder as has been reported. (2) Euclemensia bassetlella (Clemens) larvae have habits dif- fering from those of other /vVn;i1;tuse angle, whiK' its emarginate outer edge encroaches deeply upon the narrow fulvous band where it is crossed by the two branches of the cubitus vein. The basal area is of the typical fulvous ground color, which also extends narrowly along the inner margin of the \ving to join the fulvous sub- marginal band. The center of the discal cell is marked by the two usual spots. The costa is concolorous with the broad marginal band. Secondaries are of a rich ferruginous color shading into well denned greyish lilac along the costal and outer margins and on the tail. The fulvous basal area and submarginal band of the primaries are continued faintly on the secondaries. The dark color between these bars gi\es the wings a general appearance of being crossed by a single dark band on a slightly lighter field. Under Side — The pattern and colors are essentially normal except in a few minor respects. Primaries have the contrast between light and dark areas less marked than normally, and the entire pattern is some- what dulled. The usual dark band along the posterior two-thirds of the outer margin is widened, and the greenish metallic crescents along the inner border of this band are enlarged. Secondaries show much less contrast between light and dark areas than do the primaries, but more than do the normal secondaries. The greenish crescents, tho indistinct, are present, and are spaced from the margin to correspond with those in the primaries. The abnormally heavy silver mark is striking. Its vertical limb is 0.5 mm. wide, while its horizontal one tapers from the same width to a point. Each limb is 1.7 mm. long. Type — Catalog No. 5500. Peabody Museum, Yale Univer- sity. One female without data. The specimen was probably cap- tured in Connecticut, for it was pinned with miscellaneous material from that locality. "Seventeen Year Grasshoppers." It is predicted that we arc to have the i~-year locusts this summer. This brood of insects have been lying 15 or _>o feet under ground for the past 17 years and now their long sleep is about to end, and when the spring is full on its way the air will resound with their mu-ic. This insect is popularly supposed to IK- a locust, but it is not so. It is a grasshopper, the same that riddled Kansas and other green spot- years auo. These interesting insects emerge from the ground at the same moment, betake themselves to trees and ferns, raise their fami- lies in a few weeks of aviation and son;,;, then drop to earth, reoccupy their old haunts and resume their slumber for another T~-year period. While mingling with terrestrial scenes they eat up everything they can lay their months to and at the same time enjoying a delightful cabaret with their feasting. < > f course these grasshoppers will wear a big W on their wing^. which always means war. Hut this a new and the choir may not appear."- -Newspaper. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. PHILADELPHIA, PA., APRIL, Swat the Fly Versus Starve the Brute. This is the time of year when we think of many problems in relation to domestic animals and plants. There is a renewed effort to increase the egg-laying capacity of the domestic hen and to decrease the activity of the cootie. The house-fly is a domesticated animal and many so-called sanitarians are wag- ing a war on this dipteron on account of its disease-transmit- ting proclivities. The cry has been taken up to ''swat the fly," and so far as we know the word "swat" was coined by a Kansan who used the term to sell illustrated postal cards. The numbers of Mitsca domestica in a community form a rather exact index of the amount of fermenting and decomposing vegetable and animal matter that has become derelict and mis- placed, and if one pair of flies, barring accident, will produce billions of progeny in a single season, their early stages would eat millions of pounds, or thousands of tons, of filth. It is quite possible that this material is a distinct menace to health and man should do his own scavenger work and not shove it on to the proboscis of the poor fly. Buzzards and vultures would not be tolerated and protected as scavengers if they came into our houses and visited the cream pitcher and the butter plate. It is time for our sanitarians to get busy, have all filth removed from cities once a week and starve the fly, and then there would be more time to study the nidification of the hen. The fly swatter could also be relegated to the museum as a curiosity. — HENRY SKINNER. Crabro montanus Cresson. (Hym.). Strand, in Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, 1916, p. 98, points out that Crabro montanus Cresson, 1865, is a homonym of C. nwntanits Gistel 1857, and proposes for Cresson's- species the new name montivagans. It is hard to understand why he did not at least look in Dalla Torre's catalogue, where he would have found the available name Crabro cristatus Packard. In our modern nomenclature, the species will be Solcnius cristatus. — T. D. A. COCKEREI.L, Boulder, Colorado. 114 Vol. XXX J KXTO.MOl.nCICAI. NEWS. Ii; Capture of Ants by Gummy Exudations (Hym.). A number of years ago I observed tbat certain ants (Mynnica brcri- nodis) were attracted by the gummy exudations of broken sunflower stems and, attempting to eat the stick\ juice, were snared and finally perished. A specimen showing this was figured and discussed by Wheeler in Bull. Amer. Mus. Xat. Hist., XXII, p. 417. I then sur- mised that the ants being essentially boreal and the sunflowers austral, there was maladjustment where the ranges overlapped, owing to the relatively short time since the organi.'ins occupied the same area. Dr. Wheeler was skeptical, and a new case which has just come to hand can hardly be explained in the manner suggested, since both types concerned are characteristic of the arid plains. Mr. E. Bethel sends a specimen of the plant LyijoiL-si lia juncca, collected at Denver, on which are several workers of i ' >:/t>n<)iiiyrnic.r occidcntalis, with their mandibles firmly fixed in the \vllow gum. The gum exudes freely from the plants and the ants are caught and die, quite unable to escape. Mr. Bethel assures me that many ants are killed in this way. — T. D. A. COCKERELL, Boulder, Colorado. Entomological Literature. COMPILED BY E. T. CRESSON, JR., AND J. A. G. REHN. Under the above head it is intended to note papers received at the Academy of Natural Sciences, of Philadelphia, pertaining to the En- tomology of the Americas (North and South), including Arachnida and Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American entomology will not be noted; but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of insects, how- ever, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. The numbers in Heavy- Faced Type refer to the journals, as numbered in the following list, in which the papers are published. All continued papers, with few exceptions, are recorded only at their first installments. The records of papers containing new species are all grouped at the end of each Order of which they treat. Unless mentioned in the title, the number of the new species occurring north of Mexico is given at end of title, within brackets. For records of Economic literature, see the Experiment Station Record, Office of Experiment Stations, Washington. Also Review of Applied En- tomology, Series A, London. For records of papers on Medical Ento- mology, see Review of Applied Entomology, Series B. 4 — Canadian Entomologist, London, Can. 6 — Journal of the New York Entomological Society. 8 — The Entomologist's Month- ly Magazine, London. 9 — The Entomologist, London. 10 — Pro- ceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, D. C. 11— Annals and Magazine of Natural History, London. 12 — Journal of Economic Entomology, Concord. X. II. 17 — Lepidoptera, Bos- ton, Mass. 19 — Bulletin of the I'.ronklyn Entomological Society. 23 — Bolletino del Laboratorio di /oologia Generale e Agraria, Portici, Italy. 54 — Proceedings of the Biological Society of Wash- ington, D. C. 68 — Science, Lancaster, Pa. 69— Comptes Rendus. des Seances de 1'Academie des Sciences, Paris. 79— Bulletin of n6 KXTO.MOLOCICAL M-;WS. [Apr.,'ii> .tlie Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, Cam- bridge, Mass. 82 — The Ohio Journal of Science, Columbus. 83— Proceedings of the Royal Physical Society, Edinburgh. 84 — Bole- tin de la Sociedad Aragonesa de Ciencias Naturales, Zaragoza. 85 — The Journal of Experimental Zoology, Philadelphia. 86 — The Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, London. 87 — Arkiv for Zoologi, K. svenska vetenskapsakademien, Stockholm. 88— Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michi- gan, Ann Arbor. GENERAL. Ball, E. D. — Economic entomology — its founda- tions and future. 12, xii, 24-35. Foa, A. — L'epitelio dell'intestino medio nel baco da seta sano e in quello malato di flaccidezza. 23, xii, 217-44. Gibson, E. H. — Relation of the systematist to the eco- nomic worker. 19, xiv, 1-3. Giulio, C. — Osservazion sull'influenza della tiroide sullo sviluppo degli insetti (Atti. Reale Ac. d. Lincei, 1918, 376-9). Hampson, G. F. — Systematic papers published in the German language. 68, x!ix, 193. Johnson, C. W. — Insect collec- tions of a museum. (Museum Work, Am. Assoc. Mus., Providence, R. I., i, 154-8. > Leng, C. W. — History of the New York Entomo- logical Society, 1893-1918. 6, xxvi, 129-33. Longinos Navas, R. P. — Insectos Chilenos. 84, xvii, 212-230. Nicholson, C. — Sugaring. 9, 1919, 43. Slosson, A. T.— Reminiscences of the early days of the New York entomological society. 6, xxvi, 134-7. Torre Bueno, J. R. — The far flung field of entomology. 19, xiv, 24. PHYSIOLOGY, GENETICS, ETC. Castle, W. E.— Ts the ar- rangement of the genes in the chromosome linear? The linkage system of 8 sex-linked characters of Drosophila virilis. (Proc. Nat. Ac. Sci. of U. S., v, 25-36.) MEDICAL. Hutchison & Pierce — Studies on the dry cleaning process as a means of destroying body lice. 10, xxi, 8-20. Pierce, W. D. — Some new phases of the entomology of disease, hygiene and sanitation brought about by the great war. 12, xii, 42-9. ARACHNIDA AND MYRIAPODA. Barrows, W. M.— Taxo- nomic position of Mysmena bulbifera (Glenognatha bulbifera) with some observations on its habits. 82, xix. 210-12. NEUROPTERA. Williamson, E. B. — Archaeogomphus, a new genus of dragon-flies [from Colombia]. 88, No. 63. ORTHOPTERA. Caudell, A. N. — Palinodes praetans and its prey. 10, xxi, 40. Pantel, J. — La calcium dans la physiologic nor- male des Phasmides: oeuf larve eclosante. 69, clxi. 127 9. Davis, W. T. — A new Stagmomantis from Florida. 19, xiv, 4-7. Vol. XXX I I fOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 117 HEMIPTERA. Baker, A. C.— Identity of Smynthurodes betae. 10, xxi, 36-8. Muir, F.— Some new [neotropical] American Delpha- cidae. 4, 1919. :;5-9. Davis, W. T. — Mississippi cicadas, with a key to the species of the southeastern U. S. [l new]. 6, xxvi, 141-5.-,. Knight, H. H.— Male of Lygus nnivittatus with the description of a new Lyyns. 19, xiv ,.'Jl-:2. McAtee, W. L.— -Xote on nearctic Hcteroptera ['2 new]. 19, xiv, 8-16. LEPIDOPTERA. Ehrmann, G. A.- New tropical American Papilios. 17, iii, 10-11 (cont.). Forbes, W. T. M.— Guenee's Her- minidae revived. 6, xxvi, 224-5. Kaye, W. J.— New South Ameri- can butterflies. 11, iii. 215-18. Prout, L. B.— New and insufficiently known moths in the Joicey collection [some neotropical]. 11, iii, 165-90. Unzicker, R.— Notes on Basilarchia astyanax var. albofas- ciata. 17, iii, 9-10. Franck, G. — Papilio cresphontes, var, maxwelli, nov. 19, xiv, 3. DIPTERA. Bfczzi, M.— Ulteriori notizie sul gen. Himantostoma Lw. 23, xii. :>r2-4. Brues, C. T.— The Phoridae of Grenada. 79, Ixii, 499-506. Edwards, F. W.— Some parthenogenetic Chironomi- dae. 11, iii, 222-8. Keilin, D.— On the structure of the larvae a.nd the systematic position of the genera Mycetobia, Dityomyia, Sym- merus. 11, iii, :!3-42. Riley, W. A.— Occurrence of Drosophila larvae and puparia in bottled milk. 12, xii, 41. Stark, M. B. — An hereditary tumor. 85, xxvii, 509-:'?. Townsend, C. H. T.— Note on Leskiine synonymy. 10, xxi, 20. Wallis, E. F. — The "singing" of Syrphus ribesii while at rest. 8, 1919, 33. Johnson, C. W.— North American D. described by Nils S. Swe- derus !l n. name]. 4, l'.H9. 32. Malloch, J. R. — One new genus and two n. sps. of Anthomyiidae from the vicinity of Washington, D. C. 54, xxxii, 1-4. COLEOPTERA, Aurivillus, C.— Neue oder wenig bekannte C. longicornia [some neotropical]. 87, x. :::;5-M). Blatchley, W. S.— Home of Hormops and its proper position among other Rhyncho- phora. 8, xxvi, l.V.-iil. Burke, H. E. — Biological notes on some flat-headed bark borers of the genus Meianophila. 12, xii, 105-8. Claycomb, G. B. — Notes on the habits of hcterocerous beetles. 4, 1919. :>5. Hayes, W. P. — Life-cycle of Lachnosterna lanceolata. 12, xii, 109-117. Huie, L. H. The bionomics cf the tiger beetle (Cicindela campestris). 83, xx. 1-11. Munro, J. W. — The genv- Jlylastcs, and its importance in y: a stud\ in scoiytid struc- ture and biology. 83, xx, 123-53. Nicolay, A. S. — A list of the lluprestidac and Cerambycidae t;.ken <>n Long M;ui (cont.). Notman, H. • r.orraphilu<, ;i genus of staphvli- Il8 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. | Apr. ,'19 nid C. new to No. America [l new]. 6, xxvi, 182-89. Razzauti, A. -Contribute alia conoscenza del tonchio del faginolo (Acanthos- celides obtectus). 23, xii, 94-12:2. Sharp, D. — Studies in Rhyncho- phora. VI. "The New York weevil." 6, xxvi, 215-18. Fall, H. C. — New No. American species -of Apion [7 new]. 6, xxvi, 218-23. Fisher, W. S. — Note on Macrobasis murina. A new gen. and sp. of Cerambycidae from Colorado. 10, xxi, 1-2; 38-40. Leng, C. W. — A new race of Cicindela, with notes on other races and species. Notes on some changes in the list of C. 6, xxvi, 138- 41; 201-11. Pierce, W. D. — Contribution to our knowledge of the weevils of the superfamily Curculionoidea [new gen. & families]. 10, xxi, 21-36. Schaeffer, C. — On some genera and species of the family Ostomidae C.12 new]. Miscellaneous coleopterological notes and descriptions [4 new]. 6, xxvi, 190-201; 211-14. Van Dyke, E. C. — Review of the species of the coleopterous genus Silis, which are found in America, north of Mexico [7 new]. A new gen. and sp. of cave-dwelling carabidae from the U. S. 6, xxvi, 161-79; 179-82. HYMENOPTERA. Bequaert, J.— Identity of Evania urbana, 190S, and E. punctata. 1832. 19, xiv, 23. Cockerell, T. D. A.— De- scriptions and records of bees [some neotropical]. 11, iii, 118-25: 191-98. Imms, A. D. — Observations on the insect parasites of some Coccidae. 86, Ixiii, 293-374. MacGillivray, A. D. — Leucopelmonus confnsus. 4, 1919, 33-5. Cockerell, T. D. A. — [Four] new and little known American bees. 4, 1919, 26-8. Gahan, A. B. — A new gen. of chalcid-wasp belonging to tbe family Eulophidae [l new sp.]. 10, xxi, 2-4. Rohwer, S. A. — Descriptions of 3 parasites of Agrilus angelicus. 10, xxi, 4-8. Roman, A. — Ichneumoniden aus West-Groenland [2 new]. 87, x, No. 22. Doings of Societies. Entomological Section of The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Meeting of November 21, 1918. Director Philip Laurent in the chair, ten persons present. The death of Mr. Erich Daecke, an Asso- ciate, was announced. Mr. Rehn called attention to the valuable work being done by C. D. Sherborn in establishing tbe dates of issue of many of the works of early authors which were issued in parts. Hymenoptera. Mr. Cresson exhibited a nest of small bees found in a dye-wood log from Tehuantepec, Central America. Mr. Rehn Vol. XXX ] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. M'J spoke of the work of Dr. Bequaert in the Belgian Congo, especially his Revision of the Vespidae from that region. The speaker called attention to the homely but expressive remarks regarding the similarity in the different color phases existing in the wasps of widely- separated genera. The peculiar structure observed at the base of the abdomen of some species, which Dr. Bequaert termed acarid cavities, was commented on by the speaker. Lepidoptera. Mr. Laurent exhibited a series of 15 female speci- mens of Eurymus (Colias) fhllodlce, collected at Mt. Airy, Philadel- phia, which showed great variation in the presence and absence of yellow scales in the black border of the anterior wings. Specimen No. i has the border entirely black without a yellow scale, while No. 15 has nearly as much yellow as black. — E. T. CRESSON, JR., Recorder. Feldman Collecting Social. Meeting of December 18, 1918, at the residence of H. W. Wenzel, 5614 Stewart St., Philadelphia. Nine members present, Mr. Ernest Baylis, of this city, and Mr. Edgar Vandermark, of Falls Church, Va., visitors. Pres. H. W. Wenzel in the chair. Coleoptera. Mr. Baylis exhibited some specimens he had collected, among the rare forms being: Toxotus cylindricollis Say, Pocono Lake, Pennsylvania, VII-3I, Acinacops thoracica Hald., Castle Rock, Pennsylvania, IV-i6, and Buprestis ultramarina Say, Clementon, New Jersey, V-i6. Dr. Castle exhibited a specimen of Platynus Icrralis LeC. from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, IX-20, and an unnamed allied species from Port Columbia, Washington, VI-2O-I5; also a heavily marked race of Cicindela hirticnllis Say from Kent Island, Maryland, VI-30. Diptera. Mr. Hornig exhibited specimens illustrating life histories of nine species of local mosquitoes. Lepidoptera. Mr. Laurent exhibited a number of Lepidoptera col- lected by Air. H. W. Wenzel, among which was a specimen of Plitsia balhica Geyer from West Philadelphia, VIIT-2O. The speaker stated that this was one of the most beautiful as well as one of the rarest Plusias found locally. The 3 ist annual meeting was held January 15, 1919, at the same place. Eleven members were present. Messrs. H. B. Kirk and Josef N. Knull, of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, visitors; Pres. H. W. Wenzel in the chair. The President read his annual address, which was ordered to be in- corporated in the minutes. The present officers were re-elected to serve for 1919 and are as follows: President. H. W. Wenzel; Viee-1'resident, Wm. S. Hunt- I2O ENTOMOLOGICAL XF.WS. |Apr.,'lQ ington ; Treasurer, H. \V. Wenzel ; Secretary, Geo. M. Greene, and Assistant Secretary, J. Wagoner Green. Coleoptera. Messrs. Kirk and Knull detailed some of their methods of rearing Cerambycidae in the state insectary. Air. Hornig exhibited a specimen of Carnl us neinoralis Mull, which he collected in German- town, Philadelphia. X-is-iS. Dr. Castle exhibited from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, Scal'liinntits •: iiluits Dej., VII-io to VIII-27, S. f/ennari Chaud. VII-20 to VIII-25 and S. ridiugsii Bland VII-io to VIII-is. Mr. H. A. Wenzel spoke of sieving material collected from a swamp at Upper Darby. Delaware County, Pennsylvania, 1-5-19, and finding Dicer,i pugionata Germ, (previous records of which were beating alder in June and July) and D. lurida Fabr. ; he was surprised to find them hibernating. Orthoptera. Mr. Huntington mentioned a man from Sewell, New Jersey, who trapped roaches in his house by placing a sponge soaked with vinegar, over which was spread sugar and grated onions, in a screen trap which was placed in a dark room and proved a great success. Diptera. Mr. Hornig said he had had a complaint from a house that many small flies were in the dining-room and found they were Drosophila in great numbers, but was unable to find the manner in which they bred. — GEO. 'M. GREENE. Sec'v. Ohio Entomological Workers. The Annual Stale Meeting of Entomological Workers in Ohio Insti- tutions was held in the Botany and Zoology Building, Ohio State Uni- versity, Columbus, Ohio, on Thursday, January 30, 1919. Brief addresses were made by Raymond C. Osburn, Head, Depart- ment of Zoology ?nd Entomology, Ohio State University; H. A. Gos- sard, Entomologist, Experiment Station, and E. C. Cotton, Chief, Bure?u of Horticulture. The following reports and papers were presented : H. A. Gossard, Timely Notes: Herbert Osborn, Further Notes on Meadow Insects; W. C. Kraat7, A Study of Scirtes iibiulis Guer. ; W. M. Barrows, Grassland Spiders Stratification in Associations; Robert K. Fletcher, A few notes on the Miridae of Meadows and Pastures; D. C. Mote, Report on Anthelmintic Experiments; T. H. Parks, The Bioclimatic Law (Law of Altitude, Latitude and Longitude) as Applied to Hessian Fly Control in Ohio; Edna Mosher, Some Interesting Beetle Larvae; A. J. Basinger, Preliminary Studies in Ohio Tachinidae; C. H. Young, Notes on Tropisternus glaber (Llerhst) ; R. C. Osburn, The Onion Fly, Eumcrus strigatus, in Ohio; J. S. Hine. The University Entomological Collect'ons; J. S. Houscr, An Undeveloped Profession. T. S. Hnrsi R. ,SVr;v/