“Tigiéase of Subscription Price Suggested ‘See page 263. f "“s NOVEMBER, 1920 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS QL : ay a Vol XXXI. No. 9 AsA FITcH 1809-1879 PHILIP P. CALVERT, Ph. D., Editor. E. T. CRESSON. Jr., Associate Editor. TENRY SKINNER, M. D., Sc. D., Editor Emeritus, J. A. G. REHN, H. W. WENZEL. TER, PA., anv PHILADELPHIA, PA. bneaster, Pa., Post-Office as Second Class Matter ! at the special rate of postage provided in Section II03 ctober 3, 1917, authorized on July 10, 1918. ING RATES: 4.20, wo snches: 9,40). + 41.00; : 90.00», “6h eo: 35.00, of Ent. News, VoL. XXXI. Plate III. OSBORN AND METCALF—SALT MARSH CICADA. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS AN D PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SECTION THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA. ANG) a, OO, a & = NOVEMBER, 1920. No. 9. CONTENTS Chamberlin—Description of One New Ramsden—A New Kricogonia from Buprestid with Notes on Other @ubar(Eepye Ropes sire eae tere 259 Little Known Species (Coleop.).. 241 Davis mindianay (nSGCts mn.) tenets rs 5) oc 260 Martin—Notes on the Genus Hetaer- Brimley—On Scolia bicincta Fab. and ius and Descriptions of Three Scolia undata Klug (Hymcnop- New Species (Coleop.).........- 245 TELA COMMA) acielelere eine ers) + sie 201 i — TES 1) GOURUs ase a 26 Osborn & Metcalf—Notes on the Life- LS EIDE SS a Se 20 F : Editorial—Mental Attitudes toward History of the Salt Marsh Cicada Ae fer : Insects; Anert an Increased Sub- (Tibicen viridifascia Walker), ae s (emip) 248 SCH CIOL Ma bI COL Unite ete eens: Sade at ate 263 Peep cnnee re rege srg = Skinner—Two Syntomidae New to Mann—The Occurrence of Mallophaga Mississippi (Lep.)..........---- 263 on a Dragonfly (Odon.)....... 252 | Entomological Literature............ 264 Calvert—Studies on Costa Rican Odo- Review of Morse’s Manual of the nata IX. Sympetrum with De- Orthoptcra of New England..... 207 scription of a New Species....... 253 Correctlonicascaev a oe rite wissen oe eens 270 Description of One New Buprestid with Notes on Other Little Known Species (Coleop.). By W. J. CHAMBERLIN, Forest Entomologist, Oregon Agri- cultural College. , Cinyra robusta n. sp. Form elongate, robust. Entire upper surface, head, thorax and elytra covered with scattered, short, fine, recumbent hairs, arising from the punctures. Head same color as elytra, not shining, very coarsely punctured, with a faint median line running one-third from the thorax. Front rough with irregular callosities extending across the middle. Clypeus_ shallow, broadly emarginate. Antennae with the third joint twice as long as the second; from the fourth joint on, all joints are broad and flattened, entire antennae black not testaceous. Thorax coarsely, moderately densely punctate with irregular smooth callosities, especially along the middle, sides of thorax slightly arcuate, widest just behind the middle and narrowing sharply at the anterior fourth. Scutellum semi-circular, small. Prosternum dull black not shining, an irregular slight depression ex- tending around the sclerite just inside the border: (Fig. 1). From this 241 242 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxx ee depression protrude many lines of long yellowish hairs. Metasternum with large shallow punctures and scattered pubescence. Length of elytra 10 mm., apex quadri-spinose, finely rather densely punctate, costa apparent on the posterior half; an irregular network of callosities over the whole elytra. Color dull purplish black, the punctures giving a faint bronze reflection in the light. Elytra narrowing rather sharply at the apical fifth. Abdgmen dull black with a faint purplish tinge, sparsely punctate with intermediate, smooth elevations; last ventral truncate. Length 14.5 mm. Fig. 1. Prosternum of Cinyra robusta n. sp. Fig. 2. Prosternum of Cinyra prosternalis Schaeffer. Fig. 3. Last ventral segment of Cinyra robusta n. sp. Fig. 4. Last ventral segment of Cinyra prosternalis Sch. Fig. 5. Last ventral segment’ of Cinyra gracilipes Mels. Fig. 6. Lest ventral segment of Cinyra purpurescens Sch. One specimen Texas. Exact locality unknown. Type in the author’s collection. Abundantly distinct from its nearest ally, C. prosternalis Schaeffer, by its more robust form, darker and less shining color. In the specimen of C. prosternalis which I have, the antennae from the fourth joint on have testaceous lobes, (similar to Chrysobothris dentipes), a point not mentioned by’ Mr. Schaeffer. In C. robusta the joints are broad, flattened, uniform in texture and color. The border of hairs around p.0.0.6 Fare) ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 243 the prosternum as well as the shape of that sclerite (Fig. 1) is different. In prosternalis the depression near the border of the prosternum extends only down each side, the hairs are short and scattered, the surface is smooth and shining. In robusta the hairs are thick, extend entirely around and the surface lacks any luster. The last ventral segment of prosternalis is stated to be truncate; in my specimen it is slightly sinuate, while in ro- busta it is squarely cut off, almost twice as broad as in pros- ternalis and lacks the definite spines of the latter. Our four* species are, I believe, very readily distinguished as follows: 1. Front coarsely, evenly punctate, metallic coppery color, with no prom- inent callosities. Clypeus broadly emarginate, rounded at each corner. Menothy Samitniep en sta nc cist eiciy 1m 6 ginreca ats C. purpurescens Schaeffer 2. Front with scattered, coarse punctures, dull blackish violet with faint greenish tinge. A depression at the vertex and an irregular callosity extending across the middle. Clypeus broadly, slightly emarginate, cornersangulate: Wength 14:5mm...............-... C. robusta n. sp. 3. Front coarsely punctate, shining green, with callosities more or less resembling an inverted W. Clypeus more deeply emarginate, angles sharper, edges thickened. Length: 13 mm..C. prosternalis Schaeffer 4. Front densely, moderately coarsely, punctate. Coppery bronze, metallic, with a shining green callosity in the shape of an inverted Y. Clypeus triangularly emarginate. Length: 11 mm. C. gracilipes Melsheimer There is, I believe, ample reason for separating the above species into different genera as suggested by Colonel Caseyf, but this could only be done by one thoroughly familiar with exotic genera. Ultimately the species mentioned above will probably fall into three separate genera. C. gracilipes Mels. in one, purpurescens Sch. in another and C. prosternalis Sch. and robusta n. sp. in the third. Agaeocera scintillans Waterhouse. This beautiful buprestid has not heretofore been reported as occurring in the United States. Dr. Frank Lutz kindly *]T am unable to distinguish Col. Casey’s C. macilenta from C. gracil- ipes Mels. 7 Casey, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci. XI, p. 176 (1909). 244 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xXxx1, 26 presented me with a specimen of Agaeocera, which I took to be A. gentilis Horn, but upon comparing it with the type, at Philadelphia, I found it was an entirely different species and have placed it as A. scintillans Water., previously re- corded from Mexico. The specimen which I have, with another identical specimen in the American Museum, bears the following label: “Sabino Basin, Sta. Catalina Mts., Arizona. July 8-20, ’16. 32°22’ N. 110°16.5’ W. About 3800 ft.’’ Collected by Dr. Lutz. The species is easily distinguished from A. gentilis by its prominent shining costae, narrower thorax, on which is a median sulcus extending two-thirds from the base towards the head and the presence of an elongated fovea on each side of the thorax, which are lacking in gentzlis. Dicerca pecterosa Lec. This rare buprestid has been bred from both peach and prune, where the larvae work low down in the trunk, most commonly in trees attacked by the peach root borer (San- ninoidea opalescens). It has been submitted from Roseburg and The Dalles, Oregon, where it is causing considerable damage to orchard trees. Much of the damage in this state attributed to Chrysobothris femorata Fab. is in reality due to C. mali Horn and D. pecterosa Lec. The native host tree of pecterosa is not known with certainty, although the author collected one specimen in Grant County, Oregon, on lodge- pole pine (Pinus contorta), where it was apparently oviposit- ing. Melanophila pini-edulis Burke. This rare species has been recorded from Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, and California and Mr. H. E. Burke gives Pinus edulis and Pinus sabiniana as hosts. A speci- men was taken from its cell in Jeffrey pine (Pinus jeffrey) at Waldo, Oregon, in March, 1914, by Mr. J. M. Miller, thus giving a new host plant for the species and extending its range into another state. ~ ————SS es ll err eee ee Pe —_. | AK XI; 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 245 Notes on the Genus Hetaerius and Descriptions of three New Species (Coleop.) By J. O. Martin, Berkeley, California (Continued from page 225.) Hetaerius mitidus very closely resembles brunnipennis Rand; but in that species the lateral thoracic area is crossed at basal third by a distinct sulcus, represented in nitidus by a foveate depression. In brunnipennis the lateral thoracic area is coarsely punctate, in nitidus it is very finely so and the punctures are fewer in number. The interstrial spaces of the elytra in brunnipennis have coarse scattered punctures which are lacking in nitidus. The pygidium in brunnipennis is smooth, in nitidus punctate and hairy. They agree in having the margined area of the prosternum closed by the meeting of the marginal striae. Hetaerius hirsutus sp. nov. Body oblong, shining, castaneous, upper surface feebly convex. Head piceous, vertex concave, punctate, portion next to thorax moder- ately, coarsely punctured, each puncture with a coarse branched hair, cephalic portion more finely punctured without hair; front smooth, shin- ing, impunctate. Thorax two-fifths wider than long, slightly narrowed in front, divided longitudinally by two suture-like diagonal grooves into a discal and two lateral areas; lateral areas again divided by a deep transverse sulcus at basal third; discal area slightly longer than wide, a little less than one-half as wide in front as at base, bordered laterally by a shallow sulcus which is smooth, shining and impunctate; central portion of discal area smooth, shining, impunctate, between this rounded impunctate portion and the impunctate bordering sulcus is a roughly triangular area with base at upper edge of elytra and extending slightly less than two-thirds the length of disc which is coarsely and thickly punctured, each puncture bearing a long branched hair, depressed and directed caudad, forming a brush-like bunch at its outer basal portion; along the apical border of discal area are ten to twelve punctures, each with a depressed, squamose, fringed hair; lateral area of prothorax widest at its cephalic end, thickly, coarsely punctured, apical punctures bearing depressed, squamose, fringed hairs; in the lateral and basal punctures the hairs are not squamose but are long, pointed and branched, forming at the edge of the transverse sulcus a brush-like tuft which nearly conceals the sulcus; posterior part of lateral area piceous, shining, tuberculate, lateral edge with numerous. long, 246 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxxI, ’20 branched hairs which are combed inward, partly covering the tuberculate portion. Elytra shining, hairy, slightly wider than adjacent base of thorax, sides sinuate at base, nearly straight at middle, gradually curving inward to the obtusely rounded, outer apical angle, the truncate tips slightly arcuate; first stria from the suture nearly reaching to apical margin, sinu- ate, outer edge raised and densely covered with inward pointing, squa- mose, fringed hairs which at basal third become long, branched hairs directed inward and form at base a brush-like tuft which meets a similar thoracic tuft at an acute angle, their tips intermingling; second stria about five-sixths the length of elytra, broad, shallow and rounded at base, smooth and impunctate; third stria not as broad as second, nearly meet- ing second at tip, subhumeral stria extending two-thirds the length of elytra; the outer edge of all striae being raised; interstrial spaces moder- ately punctured, punctures bearing depressed, squamose, fringed hairs and among them a few, long, simple hairs. Prosternum punctate rugose, ventral surface two-thirds its length; area within the margin shining, sparsely punctate with two slightly converg- ing ridges which are widest apart caudally and extend two-thirds the length of the margining striae; marginal striae bent inward at cephalic end but not meeting. Thoracic and abdominal segments smooth, shining, sparsely micro- scopically punctured. Legs smooth, shining, moderately punctured, punctures without hairs. Propygidium moderately, thickly punctured, punctures with squamose fringed hairs. Pygidium smooth, shining, with a few microscopic punc- tures. All hairs of the various parts described are yellow. Length 2.5 mm. width 1.8 mm. Described from two examples; one, the type, taken by my- self at Mill Valley, Marin County, California, is in my own collection, the other, a paratype, is from San Francisco and is in the collection of Dr. E. C. Van Dyke. This species resembles loripes Casey, but differs from it in elytral striation and the brush-like tufts of hairs. I have com- pared it very carefully with tristriatus Horn, from which it is distinct in elytral striation, its hairy tufts and the absence of hairs on the sides of the legs which in ¢ristriatus are present though very small. Hetaerius williamsi sp. nov. Body oblong, one-third longer than wide, shining, castaneous, hairy. Head shining; vertex concave, shining, evenly, moderately, coarsely punctured, each puncture with a stout fringed hair; front nearly smooth, x SKI 20) ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 247 clypeus moderately hairy; genae and upper part of mandibles with numer- ous fringed hairs. Thorax one-fifth wider than long, divided into a discal and two lateral areas by a suture-like groove which extends nearly to apical border and is paralleled by the shallow sulcus of the discal area, said sulcus being smooth, shining and impunctate; discal area twice as wide at base as at apex, moderately, thickly, coarsely punctured, each puncture witha slightly squamose, fringed hair which becomes longer and more pointed toward the base; lateral area widest in front, the apical angles obtusely rounded, divided at basal third by a deep, transverse sulcus; front por- tion moderately thickly punctured, punctures with fringed hairs which are longer at sides and edge of sulcus over which they project; basal por- tion of lateral area piceous, tuberculate with a few punctures on its sur- face, becoming more numerous on the outer side. Elytra shining, moderately thickly punctured, hairy, coarsely striate; first stria from elytral suture nearly reaching apical margin, broad and shallow at base, becoming narrow at apex, outer edge raised and thickly covered with squamose fringed hairs; second stria almost as long as first and like 1t broad and shallow at base; outer edge raised and bordered with squamose fringed hairs which are not as dense as on first stria; third stria slightly shorter than second with raised edges, having fewer and shorter fringed hairs than second stria and likewise broadened at base; subhumeral stria extending two-thirds the length of elytra, also broadened at base; the broad basal part of all striae smooth, shining, impunctate; striae one and two with a few longer, branched hairs at base; interstrial spaces moderately, thickly, coarsely punctured, each puncture with a depressed, squamose, fringed hair and among them a few erect, long, simple hairs. Prosternum opaque, rugose-punctate; margined ventral surface moder- ately punctate and with fringed hairs, marginal striae extending one- half length of prosternum, very slightly inflexed at cephalic end, not enclosing area. Thoracic and abdominal segments shining, moderately punctate, punctures with fringed hairs. Pygidium and propygidium moderately evenly punctured, punctures with fringed hairs. Legs shining, moderately punctate, punctures with fringed hairs. Length 3 mm., width 2 mm. Described from three examples from the collection of Dr. E. C. Van Dyke, taken at Merced Lake, San Francisco, California, in the nests of a grey Formica by Mr. F. X. Wil- liams, for whom I have named it. Type in the collection of Dr. E. C. Van Dyke, paratype in my own collection. This species has the same form as that figured by Dr. Horn* as morsus, Lec. but the elytral striation is quite dif- * Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. Vol. III (1870), Pl. 1 248 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XxxI; ‘20 ferent and the size much smaller. It resembles Joripes Casey, but differs from it in having the whole of the discal area of the prothorax, excepting the sulcate lateral border, punctate and hairy. The elytral striae also differ from his description, as does the margined portion of the prosternum and the vestiture of the pygidium. Casey did not describe the vestiture of the leg surface. Notes on the Life-History of the Salt Marsh Cicada (Tibicen viridifascia Walker) (Hemip.) By H. Ossorn and Z. P. MEtca.F, North Carolina State College and Experiment Station. (Plate III) While collecting at Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, on July 27, 1919, we had the fortune to collect a goodly num- ber of the adults of the Salt Marsh Cicada (Tibicen viridi- fascia Walk.). We also made some observations on the life-history of this species which seem worth recording. The adults were common on the beach, frequenting the tall dense grasses that abound everywhere in that region. They were especially common on the so-called Sea Oats (Uniola paniculata) which grows luxuriantly on the higher sand dunes on the Wrightsville Banks. The males were busily singing and usually half a dozen or more could be heard at one time. The song is a high pitched zing-g-g-g which is much prolonged. One male observed singing was clinging to a stem of the sea oats about five feet from the ground, head up and abdomen well elevated. Several other males were flushed from a coarse, densely matted, short grass which grows near the edge of the water at low tide. These were not singing and were only flushed when they were in danger of being tramped upon. All the females collected were found in this latter locality but a numbr of adults were flushed from the sea oats which did not give the peculiar startled zing given by the disturbed males and were apparently females. EKXL'20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 249 A close examination of the stems of the sea oats revealed characteristic cicada egg punctures. These punctures were found principally on the old stems of last year’s growth as well as on the growth of the current year. In one case old and new punctures were found in the same stem. These punctures were found at varying distances from the ground, some being about eighteen inches and others about four feet from the ground. The number of punctures found in any one group varied from one to at least ten. Examination showed that the punctures went right through the thick wall of the stem to the pith. The eggs are not placed in pairs as is the case with the periodical cicada, but several are placed in each puncture averaging 6-7 in the cases where the eggs were actually counted. What appeared to be fresh egg punc- tures were brought back to the laboratory and placed in cages on August I. Owing to the writer’ absence from the laboratory these eggs could not be examined again until September 2, when several larvae were found dead in the bottoms of the cages, so that they had evidently hatched some time previously. The nymphal cast skins were found in various situations, clinging to the sea oats on the higher sand dunes, clinging to the short grass at water edge during low tide and in the drift cast up by the waves. Some, if not most, of the nymphs must pass their underground life in the between tide zones and be subject periodically to submersion during the in- coming tide. The following technical descriptions are appended. The egg is pearly white in color and measures from 2.1 mm. to 2.2 mm. in length and .5 mm. in greatest diameter. The egg is slightly curved and tapers to blunt points at either end. The first stage nymph. The recentiy hatched nymph is about 1.5 mm. long from tip of head to the end of the abdomen. The abdomen is slender and the head is somewhat flattened. The body is sparsely but rather uniformly clothed with long slender hairs. The hairs on the legs and an- tennae are somewhat shorter and much stouter. The general body color is chitin yellow with the eye spot dark red. The antennae are rather short, stout and seven-jointed. The first and second joints are subequal in length with the second much more slender. Joints three to six are 250 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxXXI, °20 subequal in length and diameter. The seventh joint is shorter and sub- globular in shape. The arrangement of the spines is shown in figure 4a. The beak is stout and reaches beyond the middle of the abdomen. The fore legs are well developed, with the coxa long; the trochanter about half as long as the coxa; the femur about as long as coxa, broad and heavy with ventral tooth well developed and provided with a prominent lateral tooth; the tibia is slender, about half as long as the femur, and the single tarsal claw is very long, nearly equalling the tibia in length. The middle and hind legs are slender with long coxae and single-jointed tarsi which are without claws at the tip. Fig. 5. Mature nymph. X2. Fig. 5a. Antenna of mature nymph. x15. Fig. 5b. Fore leg of mature nymph. 4. Last nymphal stage. Length of body 18 mm; in general appearance like other cicadas in the last nymphal stage; head large and robust, eyes large; frons well inflated, crossed by eleven rows of long hairs; antennae 3.1 mm long, eight-jointed, the first joint stouter than second about two-thirds as long, joints three to six gradually decreasing in length and diameter, the seventh and eighth abruptly so; beak stout reaching hind XXX, 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 251 coxae, three-jointed; all the coxae are very much elongate, and the femur of the front legs is thick and heavy with a long ventral tooth provided with an anterior tooth, secondary ventral tooth present; the femoral comb with seven teeth decreasing in size apically; the fore tibia is about as long as the femur, bifid apically; the fore tarsus is long, three-jointed and provided with two sub-equal claws, the median one smaller. The middle and hind legs are nearly equal in size, with the tibia provided with five, stout, black spines at the apex, the tarsi are one-jointed with two very unequal claws at apex, the outer claw about one-half as long as the inner. The adult is a medium small cicada with a bright green collar, the costal vein brownish and sub-costa and radius bright green to the bend of the wing and the other main veins of the fore wing green to the cross veins, black beyond. The head is black above, with fuscous spots at the inner angles of the eyes and a greenish stripe from the antennal ledges to the eyes, the frontal arcs are fuscous with the interspaces heavily pruinose; the antennae are eight-jointed with the two basal joints heavy, the others flagellate. The pronotum is fuscous with narrow anterior border between the eyes and the collar green, two converging black spots continued poster- iorly in a broad triangular black spot bordering the collar. The mesono- tum is mostly black with fuscous markings. Legs yellowish fuscous with the spines and the tips of the tarsi black. The abdomen is black above. Beneath, the head, thorax and lateral parts of abdomen are heavily pruinose, the central part of the abdomen lightly so, showing the pale fuscous ground color. The drums are short, broadly, roundly divergent, the uncus is wish-bone shaped with the prongs long, curved and sharp-pointed. Length to end of abdomen, male 23 mm; female 24 mm; to tip of wings, male 38 mm; female 41 mm; width of collar 10 mm. Previous records indicate a distribution restricted to the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts from North Carolina to Louisiana, but no suggestion of the adaptation to aquatic conditions appears in any record that has come to our notice. EXPLANATION OF PLATE III. Tibicen viridifascia Walk. Fig. 1. Dorsal view adult male. 1%, showing characteristic color pattern and venation of fore and hind wing. Fig. ra. Adult antenna. X15. Fig. tb. Female genitalia ventral view. 2. Fig. 1c. Ventral view of male abdomen, showing hind leg, opercula and male genitalia. 22 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xo 20 Fig. 1d. Male genitalia extended lateral view. Fig. te. Male genitalia extended posterior view. Fig. rf. Tip of ovipositor. 8. Fig. rg. Anterior leg. X2. Bigvo ne gee sy octs: Fig. 3. Stalk of sea oats showing characteristic egg punctures. Xl. Fig. 3a. Stalk of sea oats cut longitudinally to show arrangement of egg punctures. XI. Fig. 3b. Single egg puncture. X15. Fig. 3c. Single egg puncture. X15. Fig. 4. Recently hatched nymph. X20. Fig. 4a. Antenna of recently hatched nymph. X120. Fig. 4b. Anterior leg of recently hatched nymph. X35. The Occurence of Mallophaga on a Dragonfly (Odon.). Mr. E. B. Williamson has recently sent me specimens of Mallophaga, several of a small species of Gyropus, and one Trichodectes, which he found at Quebrada La Camelia, Colombia (Feb. 18, 1917) attached to a dragonfly (Ischnogomphus jesset Williamson). The only recorded case of a Mallo- phagous insect found on another insect is that noted by Sharp (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1980, p. xxx) who found several attached, apparently by the mandibles, toa Hippoboscid fly, Ornithomyia avicularia. As this is alsoa bird parasite it is not surprising that the smaller Mallophaga should at times crawl upon it, but the occurrence of the’ Colombian specimens on the dragonfly seemed at first inexplicable, especially as the genus Gyropus lives exclusively on small terrestrial rodents. However Williamson, in his description of the dragonfly (Occ. Papers, Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich. No. 52, 1918, p. 44) shows that it is in the habit of alighting on the ground or on leaves near the ground, and one may reasonably suppose that the drag- onfly had recently perched upon some dead agouti or similiar rodent and that the insects had then attached themselves to it. So while this case is very interesting, it is not an example of phoresy, but more properly belongs with other cases of insects being found in unusual situations, best explained by our genial E. A. Schwarz in words which formulate a simple yet indubitable biological law: ‘‘They must sit somewhere.”’ Wm. M. Mann, U. S. Bureau of Entomology, Washington, D. C. XXXI, ’20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 253 Studies on Costa Rican Odonata. IX, Sympetrum, with Description of a New Species, By Pamir P. Catvert, University of Pennsylvania, Phila- delphia, Pa. The only Sympetrum recorded from Costa Rica in the Biologia Centrali-Americana is S. illotum virgula, specimens of which were examined from San José, San Francisco and from an altitude of 6000-7000 feet on Irazi. Dr. Ris, in the Catalogue, Collections Zoologiques . . . Selys* and in his Libellen (Odonata) aus der Region der amerikanischen Kordilleren von Costarica bis Catamarca,{ has neither added any Costa Rican data for this form nor increased the number of species of Sympetrum from that country. In the course of the year May 1, 1909,-May I0, 1910, we observed Sympetrum illotum in Costa Rica at Cachi, Paraiso, Cartago and vicinity, Laguna Ochomogo, on the mountain Carpintera, near Tres Rios and at Alajuela. These seven localities represent a range in altitude from 985 to 1600 meters (3230-5250 feet).{ For the vicinity of Cartago, including San Isidro del Tejar, our notebooks record its appearance in every month except December and January (during the latter of which we were absent except for short visits by one of us), transformation to the imago on Septem- ber 20, October 30, 31, November 12, 21, 29, and oviposition *Fasc. XIII. Libellulinen, p. 677, Bruxelles, 1911. +Archiv f. Naturges. 82 Jahrg., Abt. A, 9 Heft., p. 180. Berlin, 1918. {Details as to altitudes, localities, etc will be found in ‘‘A Year of Costa Rican Natural History” by A. S. and P. P. Calvert, New York, Mac- millan, 1917. I have also one male, intermediate between 7. al/lotum and 7. virgula, sent by Mr. C. H. Lankester with specimens taken near the Rio Jesus Maria, on the Pacific slope, April 2-4, 1918. The altitude of this locality, less than 100 meters, is much below that in which this species has been observed elsewhere in Central America or Mexico. The specimen has been submitted to Mr. Lankester, who writes that it ‘“conveys no memory of capture.”” The envelope in which it was originally sent to me is part of a printed page, another piece of which contained an Erythrodiplax con- nata whose occurrence at Rio Jesus Maria there is no reason to doubt. 254 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XxxI, '20 on May 10, June 20, August 28, September 26, October 7, 11, 31, November 12, 21, April 5, 20. Specimens are not at hand for all the dates on which the species was noted, so that it is impossible to specify which subspecies was the form seen at each observation. Those which are accessible, irre- spective of locality, are chiefly of the subspecies illotum vir- gula, or intermediates between 7. virgula and 7. giluum, as these are defined in the Biologia, volume Neuroptera. There are before the writer I o& 7. virgula and 2 @ intermediate between 7. virgula and 7. giluwm, all three taken at Cartago, May 10, 1909, over the same swampy place. “Two males taken just above Cartago, May 24, 1909, are respectively intermediate between 7. allotum and 7. virgula and between 1. virgula and 1. giluum. It seems unlikely, therefore, that the exact form of the species has any strict correlation with the habitat. In Costa Rica we found this species in open swamps and open fields, at small pools (as in lanes at Cartago), on the banks of the Rio Reventazon (at Cachf), at a tank in a coffee plantation (Cachi). As in other species of this genus, the male and female fly around together while the latter is ovi- positing, the male holding the female’s — with his abdom- inal appendages.* The occurrence of this species at a given station is erratic. Thus on the southern edge of the town of Cartago: “The day . . . . was May 10, I909. The rains of the two preceding days had changed the dusty roads to damp and produced little swampy spots in the pastures. Over one of these swamps a species of dragonfly (Sympetrum illotum virgulum) was swarming There was an exceedingly handsome frog here (A galychnis helenae) The morning of May II was not so bright as that of the preceding day, *Dr. C. H. Kennedy states that in California ‘‘ Usually the female of this species oviposits unaccompanied by the male but here [Auburn in Placer County] I observed a pair working together.’’ Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. vol. 52, p. 609, 1917. On all of the eleven dates mentioned above for oviposition in the vicin- ity of Cartago and also at Laguna Ochomogo on Sept. 25, our field note books expressly record that male and female were flying together, the male holding the female. We have no record of oviposition in any other way. SK 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 255 although the sun was shining. We revisited these same swampy spots but not a single individual of the bright red species of dragonfly nor one of the peculiar frogs was to be seenthere . . . "'f On March 4, 1910, this species was at a tank in a coffee plantation at Cachi and on March 5, by stagnant pools near the bank of the Rio Reventazon near Cachi; on March 9 and 10 it was not found at these two places respectively although the days were sunny. The dates at which this species was observed at localities other than the vicinity of Cartago and Cachi were: Septem- ber 25, Laguna Ochomogo; December 4, La Carpintera; December 9, Alajuela and vicinity; March 17, east of Tres Rios. On April 21, 1916, Professor Anastasio Alfaro, Director of the Museo Nacional de Costa at San José, who has done so much to advance scientific knowledge of that country, collected some Sympetra on the Volcano Poas. These at first sight appeared to be intermediate between S. illotum virgula and S. allotum giluum, but a detailed study apparently justifies their recognition as a distinct species for which I pro- pose the name Sympetrum nigrocreatum n. sp. Similar to S. allotum virgula Selys but differing as follows: Size larger. Range of length of abdomen <, 26-28 mm. (22-25*), 9, 26-28 (21-23); average o 27.045 (23.33), 9 27.14 (22.6) mm. Range of length of hind wing 7 30-33 (26-29), 2 31-34 (27-30); average # 31.72 (27.41), ? 32.35 (28) mm. No additional transverse carina on abdominal segment 4 in <, except in one o& in which it is low but distinct (present, distinct), but present in the 2 (present, distinct). TA Year of Costa Rican Nat. Hist., pp. 73,74. *The figures and other statements enclosed in parentheses in this de- scription are those obtained from 12 o&, 5 @ of S. illotum virgula and intermediates between it and S. zllotum illotum on one hand and S. illotum gibrum on the other, from the seven Costa Rican localities mentioned on page 249. They are given immediately after the corresponding figures for S. nigrocreatum which latter are based on II o', 7 9. Where percent- ages of variation are given, as for venational characters, each wing, fore or hind, = 2.777 % for nigrocreatum and 2.941 % for S. illotum virgula and intermediates. 256 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxxi, 26 Apices of the femora and all of the tibiae and of the tarsi blackish brown (femora and tibiae luteous or reddish); some tendency toward paling of the legs is shown by one male which has all the tibiae with a superior luteous stripe, two males which have the third tibiae somewhat reddish superiorly and one female which has all the tibiae reddish. Venation, especially near the front margin of both front and hind wings blackish brown (luteous or reddish except in three @). Yellow coloring at the base of the wings reaching on the front pair to the first antenodal, less frequently to the arculus (most frequently to the level of the triangle), on the hind pair to the second, rarely the third, antenodal (to the nodus, less frequently to the second antenodal or triangle and then a nodal yellow spot is present); no yellowish spot at nodus of front wings (present). Dark brown streak at base of wing in subcostal and partly in costal area reaching distad on the front wings to one-third or one-half way to the first antenodal (one-fourth way or less to the first antenodal), on the hind wings to the arculus or, less fre- quently stopping at a point half-way from first antenodal to arculus (first antenodal, less often to arculus). Dark brown basal streak in cubital area of hind wings varying from a mere trace to reaching almost to the cubito-anal cross-vein or anal crossing. Pterostigma uniformly luteous or even golden yellow, not paler at its distal end (luteous or ochre brown, paler at the distal end, but golden yellow in 1 o, 1 @, and not paler at distal end in 3 co’, 3 9), longer, 2.66- 3.26 o! (2.33-2.74), average 2.92 (2.51), 2.81-3.18 Q (2.52-2.81), average 2.97 (2.63) mm.* Antenodals, front wing, 84 2.77%, 9% 36.1%, 10 2.77%, 10% 44.43%, 11% 5.55%, the remaining 8.32% somewhat irregular (71% 8.82%, 8% 79.38%, 934 5.88%, 8% 5.88%); hind wing 6 22.17%, 7 72.2%, 8 5.557% (5 + % 5.88%, 6 91.14%, 63% 2.94%). Two rows of cells between M2 and Rs on the front wings begin at the following distances from the mar- gin and extend thence distad: 2 cells 2.77%, 3 cells 8.33%, 4 cells 33.33%, 5 cells 33.33%, 6 cells 16.67%, 7 and 9 cells each 2.77%f (2 cells 41.16%, 3 cells 23.52%, 4 cells 5.88%, while 29.4% have but one row of cells here) ; marginal cells here 2 25%, 3 61.1%, 4 13.88% (1 5.88%, 2 82.4%, 3 11.76 %). Two rows of cells between M2 and Rs on the hind wings begin at following distances from the margin and extend thence distad: 3 cells 22.21%, 4 cells 41.66%, 5 cells 27.77%, 6 cells 2.77% (2 cells 58.8%, 3 cells 8.82%, while 29.4% have but one row of cells here); marginal cells here 2 11.10%, 3 69.43%, 4 11.1%, 5 2.77% (2 88.2%, 3 11.76%). *The measurements for the length of the pterostigma and for the super- ior and inferior appendages of the o’ were made with an eye-piece mi- crometer in a Zeiss binocular microscope fitted with eyepieces 4, paired objectives F 55. tPortions of the hind margin of two wings have been injured, = 5.55 %. XXX 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 257 Double cells between Rs and Rspl, front wings, 0 11.11%, I 11.11%, 2 22.22%, 3 22.22%, 4 30-54%, 5 2.77% (0 97.03%, I 2.94%); hind wings © 36.11%, I 19.44%, 2 16.66%, 3 13.88%, 4 13.88% (0 100%). Margi- nal cells between Rs and M3, front wings, 17 13.88%, 18 22.21%, 19 30.54%, 20 16.66%, 21 2.77%, 22 8.33% (13 5.88%, 14 14.7%, 15 5.88%, 16 47.05%, 17 20.58%, 18 5.88%). Marginal cells between M4 and Cu1, front wings, 4 36.1%, 5 36.1%, 6 13.88%, 7 8.33%, (2 5.88%, 3 52-94%, 4 38.23%, 5 2.94%). ——1-Omm.—> Fig. 1. Ventral view, apex of abdomen S. nigrocreatum, o&, no. 5, Volcan Poas, alt. 2500 m., April 21, 1916, A. Alfaro. Camera lucida, card at stage level, Zeiss stand, comp. micros. oc. 2, obj. A, lower lens off. Fig. 2. Ventral view, apex of abdomen S. illotum intermediate between subspp. virgula and giluum, oO, no. 53, Cartago, February 19, 1910, Calvert. Same lens and camera lucida outfit. 3’. Inferior denticles of the superior appendages, viewed from below, tending to form a reversed curve as shown in text figure 1 (line of denti- cles almost straight, see fig. 2) and occupying .28-.416, average .353 (.409-.532, average .461) of the total length of the appendage as meas- ured in profile. Inferior appendage .89-1.11 mm. (.89-1.04) wide at base, average I mm. (.96), .30-.44 mm. (.22-.30) wide at apex, average .37 (.28) mm. Ratio of apex width to base width .333-.435 (.229-.337), average .368 (.295). Locality. Poas Volcano, Costa Rica, 2600 metres [8530 feet], April 21, 1916, by Professor A. Alfaro. 12 0, 8 92 258 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxXxD om sent for examination, I o&%, I Q returned to him. Type & in the writer’s collection at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. As to the type locality Professor Alfaro wrote, July 22, 1916: ‘‘Durante la semana santa estuve en el Volcan de Poas y colectado muchas libéllulas en el Potrero del Alto, cerca del crater; alli hay un Hotel y junto a los desagiies de la casa me pareci6 distinguir tres especies, lo mismo que en la zanja del Potrero; la especie de mayor tamafio no dejaba arrimarse y de la tercera solamente un ejemplar vi; creo pues que mis ejemplares colectados en numero de 40 son o y @ de una sola es- pecie . . . las libéllulas del Volcan de Poas, por ser esa la mayor altura en que he colectado Odonatos: 2600 metros.”’ Mr. E. B. Williamson, at my request, has examined a pair of these specimens collected by Prof. Alfaro and independ- ent of any suggestion from me has also reached the conclu- sion that they represent a new species allied to Sympetrum virgula. Several features of S. nigrocreatum described above are of special interest. According to Dr. Ris,* but three species of Sympetrum possess an additional, or supplementary, trans- verse carina on abdominal segment 4: dilatatum Calvert of St. Helena, zllotum Hagen and corruptum Hagen of (chiefly North) America. S. nigrocreatum is clearly closely related to illotum, yet the male, in the majority of specimens exam- ined, lacks this carina, although the female possesses it distinctly developed. In the male, the appearance is as if the carina had been smoothed out, its site being indicated by a slight difference in the surface of the segment. Whether the presence or absence of such transverse carinae has any correlation with the internal anatomy has not been deter- mined, apparently. Assuming that S. zllotum is the nearest ally of S. nigro- creatum, the latter is larger and has a greater number of cross-veins (e. g. antenodals) and of cells on its wings. As nigrocreatum inhabits a higher, and presumably cooler, sta- tion than does the Costa Rican zllotum, a causal relation is *Libellulinen Monographisch bearbeitet. Cat. Coll. Zool. Selys, fasc. XIII, pp. 617-624, 1911. XK 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 259 suggested when similar conditions existing in highland and lower land individuals of Jschnura ramburt1 and I. dentt- collis* are recalled. Similarly individuals of Erythrodiplax berenice from the northern Atlantic coast of the United States are larger and more densely veined than those of the coasts of Florida, the West Indies and Central America.{ The question needs much further investigation to determine whether a presumably lower temperature is a cause of larger size and denser venation. If this be so, one would expect individuals of S. illotum from British Columbia and the northwestern United States to exceed those of corresponding or lower altitudes in Mexico for example. It is to be hoped that some one with sufficient material will study it from this point of view. A number of the venational features of nigrocreatum given above are not in themselves sufficiently diagnostic to distinguish this form from d/lotuwm and its sub- species. They do, however, show the tendency to vary away from the conditions to be found in allotum. A New Kricogonia from Cuba (Lep., Rhop.) By Cuas. T. RAMSDEN, Guantanamo, Cuba. While on a recent visit to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Dr. Henry Skinner generously called my attention to specimens of Kricogonia from Guantanamo, Cuba, I had sent him some years before. These differ so much from individuals of other localities that they seem to belong to a new form and may be known as: Kricogonia cabrerai n. sp. o Upperside. Primaries: Yellowish white; costa from’ insertion of wing to one-quarter of its length is lemon yellow, the remainder slightly tinged with yellowish. Secondaries: Same colour as primaries except for a black band 8 mm. long and 3 mm. wide which begins at the costa running toward end of *Biol. Centr.-Amer., Neur., pp. 387-389, 1907. TIbid., p. 268. 260 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XxxI, ’20 discal cell. This band is unbroken by the nervures while in terissa it is breken. Underside. Primaries: Pearly white, base of wing lemon yellow, apices straw color and marbled. Secondaries: Straw colour having a marbled appearance produced by short brown lines except where the black band shows through. Q Upperside. Primaries: Same as male, the lemon yellow parts being more intense. Secondaries: Also as in male but with the outer margins and base suffused with yellow. Black band lacking. Underside. Primaries: As in male, lemon yellow base more intense. Secondaries: Straw colour entirely marbled with short brown lines. Expanse one wing, o& 27 mm., 2 26.5 mm. Male and female, Guantanamo, Cuba, May 27th, 1914. Collected by the author. Type and allotype in the collection of The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Paratypes in collection of the same Academy and also in that of the author. This form is larger than any I have seen from any other locality. It differs from ferissa, on the upperside, in having the black band longer and wider, extending in this form to nearly the middle of the wing, while in ferissa it hardly extends to more than one quarter. The base of the primaries is not orange as in ferissa and differs on the underside, by the marbled appearance of the secondaries. I take pleasure in naming it after don José Cabrera of EI] Cotorro, Cuba, a tireless and unassuming student of Cuban Entomology. Indiana Insects It is the plan of the department of Entomology of Purdue University and the Agricultural Experiment Station to build up a collection of insects which will satisfactorily represent the insect fauna of the Central West, east of the Mississippi, and particularly that of Indiana. Records, pub- lications dealing with Indiana insects, and specimens themselves are solicited. Careful records of occurrence and economic importance will be kept with a view to publishing the ‘‘Insects of Indiana” at a future date. Rec- ords should, therefore, include name, authority for determination, exact locality, date of capture, stage, host if known, collector and other per- tinent data. Your coéperation is earnestly solicited.—JOHN J. Davis, Agricultural Experiment Station, Lafayette, Indiana. NXT, 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 261 On Scolia bicincta Fab. and Scolia undata Klug (Hymenoptera, Scoliidae). By C. S. BrimLey, Division of Entomology, North Carolina Department of Agriculture, Raleigh, N. C. On looking over our specimens of S. bicincta and S. undaia I find that they grade into one another and that no definite line of demarcation can be drawn between them. In addition to the usual white cross bands on the second and third abdominal segments above, which may be without any interruption whatever, even in otherwise typical undata, there are present in two-thirds of the males examined and in one-third of the females, white markings of some sort on either the pronotum, post-scutellum, first abdominal segment above or second abdominal segment below, or on all of these or in any combination. The spots on the pronotum are usually a smail round spot on each side in front; one specimen, however, has a spot on only one side and another has an enlarged transverse wedge-shaped spot on each side. Present in five males. The marking on the postscutellum is usually a small roundish dot, elongate in one specimen. Present in nine males and three females. The marking on the first abdominal segment is either a roundish dot or a transverse stripe; in the latter case it may be either short and narrow, extending on about the middle fourth of the segment, or it may be broader and extend right across the segment. In two cases there is a roundish dot on one side of the middle. instead of in the middle. Present in some form in twenty-seven males, and three females. On the underside of the second abdominal segment there is, in seven- teen males, a roundish or oval spot not far from the lateral margin of the segment. These spots vary a good deal in size and but little in shape. The following table shows the number of specimens showing the vari- ous combinations of the above markings: With usual white stripes on segments 2 and 3 only, males 16, females IT. With additional markings as below: males females 1 A spot or stripe on seg. I above only............... 9 Z 2 A pair of white spots on seg. 2, below only.......... I Co) 3 A white dot on postscutellum only................. 2 2 4 On seg. 1 above, and seg. 2 below only............. 10 oO 5 On seg. 1 above, seg. 2 below and postscutellum only. I o 6 On seg. I above, seg. 2 below, postscutellum and pro- TIO ELIEIN ae cesta cet ee he ET eee z te) 262 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxx 720 7 On seg. I above, seg. 2 below and pronotum only.... I fe) 8 On seg. 2 below and postscutellum only............ I fe) g On seg. 1 above and postscutellum only............ I I 10 On seg. I above, and pronotum only............... I oO 11 On seg. 1 above, pronotum and postscutellum only. . I fo) otal Fes. oh eil je she hae A «te ee 47 16 With white crossbands only on segs. 2 and 3 above.. 16 II Wath additional white marnkinesman 0 ee een cite 31 5 Specimens examined, Raleigh: 33 males, 9 females; Elizabeth City: 6 males, 1 female; Andrews: 4 males, 1 female; Jefferson: 1 male; Blowing Rock: 1 male; Bushnell: 1 male; Statesville: 1 male; Greensboro: 2 fe- males; Durham, Blantyre and Whittier: 1 female each. All localities in North Carolina and all specimens taken between mid-July and mid-Sep- tember. House Flies in Court. One of the noblest decisions on record, so far as bald-headed men are concerned, has been handed down by the Supreme Court of Maine. It is notorious that a bald head has a peculiar attraction for the common house fly. He prefers to roost there or promenade there to any other place in the neighborhood. Now the high court has declared the bald- headed persons are entitled to protection. In the case of Williams vs. Sweet, a hotelkeeper sued because the defendant, who had contracted for accommodations for a certain period, left the hotel before the time had elapsed. The defendant said he was pestered by flies, which were par- ticularly numerous in the dining room. The august court held that the fly is a nuisance and its disease-carry- ing characteristics are well known. A patron of a hotel was warranted in leaving the establishment, regardless of a contract for a longer stay, if the dining room was infested with the pests. An innkeeper, it declared, agreed by implication to furnish accommodations compatible with the prices paid, the standing of the hostelry and the class of persons invited to be- come patrons. ‘‘Accommodations,”’ the judges asserted, included apart- ments, dining service and sanitary conditions, and if the hotelkeeper failed to maintain these in inviting and wholesome manner the patron was war- ranted in seeking quarters elsewhere, regardless of an engagement to remain for any specified time. Hotel men had better get busy with their fly swatters. Restaurant people also.— RICHARD SPILLANE in the Public Ledger, Philadelphia, Aug. 4, 1920. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS PHILADELPHIA, PA., NOVEMBER, 1920. Mental Attitudes toward Insects. Among other occupations, the editor of the NEws gives a course of lectures and readings to university students on the history of entomology. The other day they were reading Otto Keller’s Die Antike Tierwelt, which called his attention again to the long period in the history of civilized peoples in which progress in zoology, and hence in entomology, was very slow. It may seem difficult for a zoologist to realize what must have been the mental attitude of many a cultured Egyptian, Greek or Roman toward insects. But while the editor was in this frame of mind (he is one unit of the fifty millions who make up the rural population of these United States), the butcher came. His business transacted, the butcher observed that the coming winter was likely to be cold only in its latter part—because he had been feeling the caterpillars along the road and they were hard to the touch only at their hind ends! Anent an Increased Subscription Price. In the October NEws (page 226) we asked all our readers to fill in and mail to us a card, from a page near the back cover, stating their willingness or unwillingness to subscribe for the News for 1921 at $2.50. About eighty replies have been received, but we urge all others to whom the October number has gone to send us their message on this question at once, as we must hear from all our subscribers in order to make our plans for 1921. Two Syntomidae New to Mississippi (Lep.). Mr. W. C. Dukes, of Mobile, Alabama, has recently sent me two spe- cies of Syntomidae (Lep.) from a new locality. They were taken on Cat Island, Mississippi, in the Gulf of Mexico. The species are Cosmosoma auge Linn. and Didasys belae Grote. The former is found in Florida, West Indies, Central America and South America, and the latter, so far as I am aware, has not been recorded outside of the State of Florida.— HENRY SKINNER. 263 264 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XXXI) Y2e ‘ 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 Entomology of the Americas (North and South), including Arachnida and Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American ento- mology will not be noted; but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of insects, however, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. The numbers in HEAvy-FAceEpD 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 genera or species occurring north of Mexico are all grouped at the end of each Order of which they treat. For records of Economic Literature, see the Experiment Station Record, Office of Ex- periment Stations, Washington. Also Review of Applied Entomology, Series A, London. For records of papers on Medical Entomology, see Review of Applied Entomology, Series B. 2—Transactions of The American Entomological Society, Philadelphia. 4—Canadian Entomologist, London, Canada. 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, Con- cord, N. H. 17—Lepidoptera, Boston, Mass. 20—Bulletin de la Societe Entomologique de France, Paris. 31—Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Nova Scotia, Truro. 33—Annales de la Societe Entomologique de Belgique, Brussels. 39—The Florida Buggist, Gainesville. 45—Zeit- schrift fur wissenschaftliche Insektenbiologie, Berlin. 49—Entomolog- ische Mitteilungen Berlin-Dahlem. 50—Proceedings of the United States National Museum, Washington. 53—Nature Study Review, Ithaca, N. Y. 62—Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, New York. 68—Science, Lancaster, Pa. 76—Nature, London. 81—The Journal of Parasitology, Urbana, Illinois. 82—The Ohio Journal of Science, Columbus. 90—The American Naturalist, Lancaster, Pa. 103— Biologisches Centralblatt, Leipzig. 110—Naturwissenschaftliche Woch- enschrift, Jena. 111—Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, Berlin. 112—Ento- mologische Berichten, The Hague, Holland. GENERAL. Blackmore, E. H.—Rare and uncommon insects taken in Br. Columbia during 1919. (Rept. Prov. Mus. Nat. Hist. Br. Colum- bia, 1919, 17-23.) Bouvier, E. L.—Revue d’entomologie pour les Annees 1910-1914. Part 1, Biologie; Part 2, Structure et physiologie, developpe- ment et adaptation. (Rev. Gen. d. Sci. Pures et Appl., xxxi, 410-18; 155-62.) Bouvier, E. L.—The psychic life of insects. (An. Rept., Smiths. Inst., 1918, 451-9.) Chetverikov, S. S.—The fundamental factor of insect evolution. (An. Rept., Smiths. Inst., 1918, 441-9.) Crampton, G. C.—Remarks on the basic plan of the terminal abdominal structures of the males of winged insects. 4, lii, 178-83. Dixey, F. A.— The geographical factor in mimicry. (Rept. Br. Assoc. Adv. Sci., Bourne- mouth, 1919, 201-7.) van Eecke, R.—Varia entomologica. 112, v, 153-5. Folsom, J. W. et al.—Symposium on ‘The life cycle in in- sects.” 7, xiii, 133-201. Gibson, E. H.—Professional entomology: the call and the answer. 12, xiii, 355-7. Lyon, M. W.—Family and RXXI (20) ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 265 subfamily names in zoology. 68, lii, 291-2. McConnell, W. R.— Obituary. 12, xiii, 371-3. Onslow, H.—The iridescent colours of insects. 76, cvi, 149-52 (Cont.). Parman, D. C.—Observations on the effects of storm phenomena on insect activity. 12, xiii, 339-43. Raymond, P. E.—Phylogeny of the Arthropoda with especial reference to the Trilobites. 90, liv, 398-413. Sahlberg, J. R.—Obituary notice. 68, lii, 216-17. Smulyan, M. T.—An insect and lack of entomological knowledge an immediate cause of the world war. 5, xxvii, 85-6. Tothill, J. D.—The chloral hydrate method of preserving insects for dissection. 31, 1919, 8-10. Weiss, H. B.—The contents of our entomological jour- nals during 1919. 4, lii, 169-73. The insect enemies of polyporoid fungi. 90, liv, 443-7. ARACHNIDA, ETC. Bilsing, S. W.—Quantitative studies in the food of spiders. 82, xx, 215-60. Chamberlin, R. V.—On chilopods of the family Mecistocephalidae. 4, lii, 184-9. Corrections to Mr. Gunthrop’s summary of Wood’s Myriopoda papers. 4, lii, 202-3. Chamberlin, R. V.—New spiders from Utah. 4, lii, 193-201. NEUROPTERA. Lacroix, J. L.—Deux Odonates nouvelles. 20, 1920, 175-9. Watson, J. R.—An apparently new Haplothrips from Cubase s9viv, 7 12s Macnamara, C.—A new sp. of Pseudachorutes (Collembola). 4, Iii, 173-6. Watson, J. R.—New Thysanoptera from Florida. 39, iv, 13. ORTHOPTERA. Walker, E. M.—Report, Canadian Arctic Expe- dition 1913-18. Vol. iii, Part J: Orthoptera, 4pp. White, F.—The ‘katydid. 53, xvi, 258-61. Rehn & Hebard—Descriptions of new genera and species of North American Decticinae. 2, xlvi, 225-65. HEMIPTERA. Baker, A. C.—Generic classification of the hemip- terous family Aphididae. (U.S. D. A., Bull. 826.) Distant, W. L.— Descriptions of a new species of neotropical Cicadidae. 9, lili, 169. Goding, F. W.—Sinopsis de los membracidos del Ecuador. (Bol. Med. y Cirugia, Guayaquil, xviii, 31-37.) Hickernell, L. M.—The digestive system of the periodical cicada, Tibicen septendecim. 7, xiii, 223-42. Davidson, W. M.—A new Myzocallis (Aphididae). 4, li, 176-7. McAtee, W. L.—Key to the Nearctic species and varieties of Erythro- neura. 2, xlvi, 267-322. LEPIDOPTERA. Randall, J. L.—‘‘ Winter Hunting.” 17, iv, 66-7. Schaus, W.—Descriptions of two new species of butterflies from tropical America. (Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci., x, 434-5.) Seitz, A.—Die gross- -schmetterlinge der erde. Fauna Amer. 745-76. Strickland, E. H.— The noctuid genus Copablepharon with notes on its taxonomic relation- ships. 5, xxvii, 5. DIPTERA. Bresslau, E.—Eier und eizahn der einheimischen stech- mucken. 103, xlix, 337-55. Edwards, F. W.—Scent-organs (?) in 266 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XXXI, ’20 female midges of the Palpomyia group. 11, vi, 365-8. Engel, E. O.— Dipteren, die nicht pupiparen sind, als vogel-parasiten. 45, xv, 249-58. Fritsche, E.—Fliegenlarven als parasiten des menschen. 110, xix, 506-8.. Hine, J. S.—Description of horseflies from middle America. 82, xx, 311-19. Osburn, R. C.—The syrphid fly, Mesogramma marginata,,. and the flowers of Apocynum. 82, xx, 261-6. Seamans, H. L.—The external anatomy of Anthomyiaradicum. 7, xiii, 201-222. Seguy, E.— Liste des moustiques de la collection Meigen conservee au Mus. Nat. d’Hist. Nat. 20, 1920, 226. Sturtevant, A. H.—The dipterous genus Zygothrica of Wied. 50, lviii, 155-8. Treherne, R. C.—A note on the wingless tipulid Chionea valga. 4, lii, 201-2. Villeneuve, J.—A propos de la revision des Muscidae testaceae de J. Surcouf. 20, 1920, 223-5. Walker, E. M.—Wobhlfahrtia vigil as a human parasite. 81, vii, 1-7. Malloch, J. R.—Descriptions of Diptera of the families Anthomyidae and Scatophagidae of the Katmaiexpedition. 82, xx, 267-91. Schmitz, H.—Eine neue nordamerikanische Phora-art. 112, v, 223-6. Stein, P.—Nordamerikanische Anthomyiden. 2. Beitrag. 111, 1918, A. 9, 1-106. COLEOPTERA. Boving & Champlain,—Larvae of North Amer- ican beetles of the family Cleridae. 50, lvii, 42-53. Desbordes, H.— Description d’un genre nouveau et d’une espece nouvelle d’Histeride. 20, 1920, 156-7. Fleutiaux, E.—Etudes sur les Melasidae (Serricornia). 33, Ix, 93-104. Frost & Weiss.—A bibliography of the literature on the described transformations and food plants of North American species. of Agrilus. 4, lii, 204-10. Kleine, R.—Ueber den stridulationsapparat der Brenthidae. 111, 1918, A. 10, 1-84. Kolbe, H.—Die Paussiden Sudamerikas. 49, ix, 131-41 (cont.). Obenberger, J.—Remarques et rectifications systematiques concernant le famille des Buprestides. 20, 1920, 189-91. Richmond, E. A.—Studies on the biology of the aquatic Hydrophilidae. 62, xlii, I-94. Rosewall, O. W.—Wood-boring beetles. of black locust. 4, lii, 203. Davis, J. J.—New species and varieties of Phyllophaga. (Bul. Nat. Hist. Survey, Illinois, xiii, 329-338.) Fall, H. C.—New Coleoptera, IX. 4, lii, 211-15. Jeannel, R.—Notes sur les Trechini (Carabidae). 20, 1920, 150-55. Martin, J. O.—A new California Methia. 4, lii, 215-6. HYMENOPTERA. Bequaert, J.—Bees and wasps. Katmai Expe- dition. 82, xx, 292-7. Boulange, H.—Sur le retournement de |’ap- pareil copulateur des Tenthredinidae. Sur les muscles qui actionnent l’ensemble de |’appariel copulateur chez les Chalastogastres. 20, 1920, 216-8; 227-30. da Costa Lima, A. M.—Contribuicao ao conhecimento: dos microhymenopteros parasitos de lagarta rosea . . . no Brazil. (Arch. da Esc. Sup. de Agric. e Med. Vet., Nictheroy, Brazil, iii, 57-63.) Enderlein, G.—Zur kenntnis aussereuropaischer Braconiden. 111, 1918, A, Heft 11, 51-224. MacGillivray, A. D.—Urocerus flavicornis. 4, lii, 216. Santschi, F.—Nouvelles fourmis du genre Cephalotes. 20, EX, 20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 267 1920, 147-9. Shapley, H.—Note on pterergates in the Californian harvesterant. 5, xxvii, 72-4. Viehmeyer, H.—Anleitung zum sammeln von ameisen. 111, 1918, A. 9, 160-70. Wheeler & Gaige,—Euponera gilva, a rare North American ant. 5, xxvii, 69-72. Cushman, R. A.—The North American ichneumon-flies of the tribes Lycorini, Polysphinctini, and Theroniini. 50, Iviii, 7-48. Girault, A. A.—New Serphidoid, Cynipoid and Chalcidoid H. 50, Iviii, 177- 216. Wilcox, A. M.—Notes and descriptions of species of Telenomus having ten-jointed antennae. 5, xxvii, 78-81. MANUAL OF THE ORTHOPTERA OF NEW ENGLAND, INCLUDING THE Locusts, GRASSHOPPERS, CRICKETS AND THEIR ALLIES. By ALBERT P. Morse. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, vol. 35, no. 6, pp. 197-556, pls. 10-29, 99 text figs. April, 1920.—It is a rare oc- -casion in the experience of any student of a special field in zoology or botany when he is able to pick up a new comprehensive work, purporting to be both technical and popular, written by a brother specialist, with almost all of whose conclusions and methods the reader finds himself ‘quite in accord. Usually there will be found a number of rocks upon which the conformity of opinion is shattered, some radical innovation which is untried and frequently unwarranted. Morse’s ‘‘Manual’’ is clearly one of these rare studies, a painstakingly accurate and thorough piece of work, a model of its kind and fully in keeping with the high plane achieved by that author in his previous memoirs. The style is attractive, literary and where needed is scientifically con- cise, the illustrations are generally well selected and carefully executed. The first paragraph of the Introduction (p. 207) fully deserves quota- tion, as it epitomizes the order better than we have seen done by any previous author: “The Orthoptera form a group of insects whose members touch upon man’s interests in a variety of ways. Some are among the scourges of the earth, devastating wide areas, reducing the inhabitants to penury and starvation and leaving in their wake misery and pestilence. Others of obnoxious character enter dwellings in search of food and shelter, and though acting in part as scavengers destroy large quantities of food-stuffs and defile the premises. Wherever he wanders, whether on some name- less peak of the farthest ranges or in the less inviting vacant lot next door, by seabeach, grainfield, alkali desert, or mangrove swamp, on city pavements or yielding footpath to the spring, these little creatures are his companions; whether he sleep in hut or palace or beneath the stars their voices soothe his rest.” The ‘‘Manual” is made up of five major divisions: Introduction, The Orthoptera of New England (treated in systematic fashion), Accented List of Scientific Names, Glossary and Index.* The introductory division 268 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XXxI, "2e is made up of eighteen major sections, all of interest, very well presented and taken as a whole the best presentation of the subjects there treated we have ever seen in a work of this character. We feel called upon to comment upon certain of these sections, largely to direct the inquiring student to their contents. The ‘History of New England Orthopter-- ology”’’ is well and concisely presented, the author, however being too modest to give his own most valuable published work its proper empha-. sis. Under ‘Classification’? there is reviewed that published by Brues and Melander, and a modified form of the classic arrangement of the order, as influenced by the work of Brues and Melander, is followed in the Manual. Under ‘‘ Anatomy,” the external structure is clearly dis-- cussed and explained, with the aid of numerous figures, and the basic internal structure is briefly summarized. Under ‘‘Habits”’ we find egg-- laying, situations for egg placing, hatching, moults, maturity, food and migration discussed; while under ‘‘Songs”’ we find a careful exposition of the three methods of sound production in the Orthoptera. Under the- third method it might have been well to have considered the possibility of the thickened radiate veins of the wings of certain Oedipodinae pro- ducing sound in display flight or direct flight by rubbing one over the other, as their surfaces possess accessory modifications in certain species. “Coloration of Orthoptera’’ is treated in a very careful summary, in which there are discussed the types of colors in insects, relative predom-- inence of ‘“‘sympathetic and protective” coloration in the Orthoptera, the principles of ‘‘counter-shading,”’ display coloration, ‘‘contrast-mim- icry’’ or ‘‘signal coloration’’ as it has been variously called, the seasonal deepening of color in certain locusts, the rare albinistic and melanistic conditions, pink katydids, dichromatism, and the uncertainty and unre-- liability of color shade and markings in general as diagnostic features in New England Orthoptera. The author’s suggestion as to the signal value- of the conspicuous wing colors in the Oedipodinae is clearly logical and fits in with our own field experience. Dr. Phineas Whiting has con-- tributed a section giving a summary of his experimental work on color determination in the green-striped locust (Chortophaga viridifasciata), from which it appears that temperature rather than light or humidity is the important factor in color determination in that species, and that: certain ‘‘so-called color varieties . . . are but color phases dependent: to a large extent at least upon environmental conditions.” This is an interesting piece of evidence, making less secure the position of those workers who would name all such probably purely physiological forms. Under ‘‘Geographical Distribution of New England Orthoptera”’ we find a discussion of the New England life zones, analyses of the more typical species of the three zones, 7. e. Boreal, Transition and [Upper]! Austral, with a classification of the remainder of the Orthopterous fauna into such categories as ‘‘ Domiciliary—all introduced” and ‘ Adventive or introduced.’’ The Orthopterous ‘‘Colonization of New England” and XXXI, ‘20] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 269 “Dispersal Routes’’ are very well presented and the effect of the disap- pearance of the one-time extensive coastal sandy plain on the range of certain Orthoptera, which now have discontinuous or localized distribu- tions, is considered. The importance of the influx of campestrian sand- loving species from the southwest is emphasized, and a comprehensive summary of locust habitats or societies is given, the groups being those already used by the author. Morse’s attitude toward certain of the present day ecological work is a just one and his footnote on page 260 is well worth reading by those interested. In the section on ‘‘Wingless and Vestigial-winged Orthoptera’’ the author reaffirms his previously expressed hypothesis on the correlation of long and short-winged locusts in general with definite types of habitat. In his table of the species recorded from New England the author gives 132 species as recorded from New England, 104 of these native and 28 introduced purposely or accidentally. In the discussions of locust injuries and other matter of economic im- portance the fact is emphasized that in New England severe outbreaks usually have been local in area and of comparatively limited extent, although, as the context shows, occasionally of great severity. Methods of control and natural enemies are discussed and it is shown that such enemies are numerous and varied, ranging from fungus to the lowly farm- yard cat. There is a most useful section on ‘‘ Methods of Collecting and Preservation,’’ which gives a summary of the procedure followed by the author, and also draws upon the experience and practice of other workers. The division of the work treating systematically of the New England Orthoptera follows in general the following method: discussion of each family, general character, summary of development, food, general dis- tribution, key to species; under species, leading references, brief descrip- tion, measurements, habits and life period, distributional notes and records in New England, and generally one or more figures. Under families such as the Blattidae and Gryllidae established exotic species and adventive species are each properly treated separately from native forms. English names are given in all cases for species, the majority newly coined; the results are not always happy, as for example the ‘ Broad- shouldered Angulate Pygmy Locust,” although as a whole the names have been more carefully selected than is usually the case. The author avoids initiating nomenclatoral novelties, which is greatly to be com- mended, as a work intended as a manual for the student is no place for the airing of innovations or controversial matter, but should, instead, be founded on previously published conclusions. We find the earwig Euborellia annulipes reported as introduced in New England for the first time. Brief analyses of the variant color patterns of the species of Orphulella and of Chorthippus curtipennis are given, and these are particularly timely and useful. The word pictures of habi- tats and actions of Arphia xanthoptera, Psinidia fenestralis, Trimerotropis 270 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [XXXiep maritima, Circotettix verruculatus and Melanoplus punctulatus are par- ticularly fine, although all of such verbal sketches are good. The data presented (pp. 481 to 482) on the probable stridulation of species of spine- breasted locusts (Locustinae) is interesting and should stimulate further observation along these lines. The author’s picture (p. 495) of the repopulation of glaciated land, in treating of Podisma variegata, well deserves quotation. ‘Not by ex- tended flights of many miles at a time was the land in the wake of the retreating ice-sheet repeopled by this species, but by hopping, hopping, hopping, a foot or a yard at a time, pressing northward as the vegetation and circumstances permitted, clambering up the mountains as fast as the forest line advanced, dying out in the southern areas and on dry slopes as ‘the fatal sea of warmth filled the valleys below’ and swept on- ward far to the north, until now such colonies as that on the summit of Ascutney Mt. are forever cut off from their kind.” Another species definitely and correctly recorded from New England for the first time is Melanoplus dawsoni, while some additional light is given upon the surprising occurrence of the western Phoetaliotes nebras- censts in New England. The Glossary is most useful and quite extensive, the ‘‘Accented List of Scientific Names”’ is welcome and the ‘‘Index’’ quite full. Of the twenty plates, three are originals in color, eight are black and white plates of details, in large part original, one plate of crickets is taken from a paper by E. M. Walker, three plates in colors of tree crickets are from Fulton’s study, a set most desirable to have republished in a work of this character, and five plates are of habitat photographs. The author has labored for years in his all-too-few spare hours on this splendid paper and his fellow students have eagerly awaited its appear- ance. We need say in summarizing only this—it has met every expecta- tion in scholarly, dignified fashion, it is more than a ‘‘Manual,” it is instead a monograph. It will soon be one of the much thumbed works of constant reference in the library of the student of the order. JaAsGak Correction On page 235 of the October, 1920, NEws, in the review of Blatchley’s “Orthoptera of Northeastern America,’”’ the words ‘original constancy”’ are used in the fifteenth line. The words intended were ‘‘regional con- stancy,’’ and the line as printed might convey a meaning quite the reverse of that intended by the reviewer. EXCHANGES. This column is intended only for wants and exchanges, not for advertisements of goods for sale. Notices not exceed- ing three lines free to subscribers. 4 These notices are continued as long as our limited space will allow; the new ones are added at the end of the column, and only when necessary those at the top (being long- est in) are discontinued. Wanted—For cash, or exchange, papers on insect biology, ecology or behavior (especially aculeate Hymenoptera). P. Rau, 2819 S. Kings high- way, St. Louis, Mo. Brachynus wanted for cash or exchange from any ae of North America. J. W. Green, 520 McCartney St., Easton, Pa. Lepidoptera Hesperidae wanted.—I will purchase or exchange and also name specimens. South American species particularly desired. Henry Skinner, Logan Square, Philadelphia, Pa. For Exchange—lIowa Catocalae in A-1 condition. Wanted, Cocoons of Actias luna also other lepidoptera. Mrs. O. F. Hiser, Arnolds Park, Iowa. Lepidoptera—Offer many Western species and will collect next month in Colorado desert, S. E. Cal.; will exchange or purchase. Desire rarer Noctuids, fresh, full data. Chas. A. Hill, 644 West 36th St., Los Angeles, Cal. Books Wanted—Entomological News, Vol. 11, Nos. 1, 3, 5; Vol. 14, Nos. 1, 7. Brooklyn Museum Library, Eastern Parkway and Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Wanted—N. A. Coleopterists interested in European Coleoptera. Liberal exchanges and friendly correspondence. Mr. C. Crozet, 155, Via Cavour, Rome, 23, Italy. Japanese and Formosan Butterflies will be exchanged by S. Satake, 48, Aoyama-minami-machi, 5-chome Tokyo, Japan. Wanted—To purchase or exchange papers and books on insect Biology, Ecology, and Behavior, especially aquatic Hemiptera.—C. F. Curtis Riley, Department of Forest "Zoology, The New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York. Wanted—North American or European Coleoptera to determine in exchange for specimens.—R. T. Garnett, 625a 14th St., Oakland, Cal. Wanted—Species of Rhynchophora from Eastern North America not represented in my collection, in exchange for duplicates from Indi- ana and Florida. Lists of desiderata and duplicates on application.—W. S. Blatchley, 1530 Park Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana. Omophron and Elaphrus desired, in numbers, including the common species. Good exchange given. H. F. Wickham, Iowa City, Iowa. Wanted—To examine, determine and exchange Cicadellidae or “ Jassi- dae”’ from all parts of North America. J. G. Sanders and D. M. DeLong, State Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa. Wanted—To purchase Stretch, Ullustrations of the Zygaenidae and Bombycidae of North America.—Dr. E. T. Learned, Fall River, Mass. RECENT LITERATURE FOR SALE BY THE AMERICAN ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 1900 RACE ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. DIPTERA 798.—Alexander (C. P.).—New or little known crane flies from Japan (Tipulidae). (Trans., 46, I-26, 1920)............ 40 799.—Cresson (E. T., Jr.).—A revision of the Nearctic Sciomyzidae (Acalyptratae). (Trans., 46, 27-89, 3 pls., 1920)......... 1.00 802.—Malloch (J. R.).—Descriptions of new North American Antho- myiidae. ‘(Vrans.; 46, 133-106, 3) pls:, 1920). pe eeee 1.10 A-3.—Cresson (E. T., Jr.).—Dipterological notes and descriptions. (Proc. A. N. SR. 1919) 17 T94). 22). ac eee -40 HEMIPTERA 806.—McAtee (W. L.).—Key to the Nearctic species and varieties of Erythroneura (Eupterygidae). (Trans., 46, 267-322, 1 pli, LO20) ti. cine ohts ae cies oie ce ou ie oe ee Dee .gO HYMENOPTERA 801.—Bradley (J. C.).—Descriptions, records, and notes on North American Nyssonidae. (Trans., 46, 113-132, 1920)...... IAS ORTHOPTERA 800.—Hebard (M.).—A revision of the North American species of the genus Myrmecophila (Gryllidae). (Trans., 46, 91- LD, OZO) Css ais. s Recieve eeyorcha atiscss 1s Sie ee eee oa A-2.—Rehn (J. A. G.).—A study of the orthopterous genus Mermiria. (Proc. A. N.S: Ps, 1919, 55=120; Supls) pee oee ee eee 1.10 A-4.—Hebard (M.).—Studies in Malayan, Papuan, and Australian Mantidae. (Proc.-A. No S)P.; 1920514—825 2 plss)y.c ene A Year of Costa Rican Natural History By AMELIA SMITH CALVERT, Sometime Fellow in Biology, Bryn Mawr College, and PHILIP POWELL CALVERT, Professor of Zoology, University of Penn- sylvania, Editor of Entomological News. Cloth, 8vo., pp. xix+577. Frontispiece (of 14 species of insects in colors), 137 black and white illustrations, 5 maps. $3.00. 1920-1 Collection of Lepidoptera ForSale Specimens in perfect condition. Approximately 2900 in multiple and single tablets (glass tops and bottoms) and Denton plaster mounts. 86 multiple tablets contain 1600 specimens illustrating variations of each species. For price and details address THE, BEEBE COMPANY Yonkers, N. Y. Fresh Uganda (Africa) specimens. Papilios, Charaxes, Junonia, Pierids, Nymphalids, etc., Ist quality papered. $15.00 for 100 specimens in about 40 species. Also East Indieslot. From Borneo, Java, Celebes, Obi, etc. Papilios, Ornithoptera, Tenaris, Euploea, Ideopsis, Leptocircus, Delias, etc., etc. $15.00 per 100. Papered. Ist quality. 40 species. G. G. MacBean, Lepidopterist, Assiniboia, Sask., Canada. TROPICAL AFRICAN (UGANDA) BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, ETC. Excellent Material. Great variety. Apply for particulars and prices. R. A. DUMMER, CARE JINJA POST OFFICE, UGANDA Insect Life Histories of all descriptions prepared for Colleges, Schools, De partments of Health, etc. Insects for Dissection. Pressed Corks .List on application. NEW JERSEY ENTOMOLOGICAL CO. P. O. BOX 432, SOUTH AMBOY, NEW JERSEY. COLEOPTERA I wish to buy original collections of exotic phytophaga, unmounted preferred. FRED C. BOWDITCH, 164 Rawson Rd., Brookline 46, Mass. The Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine—A journal devoted to general Entomology, started in 1864, and now edited by G. C. Champion, J. E. Collin, W. W. Fowler R. W. Lloyd G. T. Porritt and J. J. Walker. It contains descriptions of new genera and species in all orders (British and foreign), life histories, reviews of new works, etc. Volume LVI (VI of the sec- ond series) was commenced in January, 1920. The subscription for the 12 numbers is 15 shillings per annum, post free, to be sent to R. W. Lioyp, I, 5, Albany, Piccadilly, London, W., England. For terms for advertisements apply to him also. NICOLAISCHE Verlagsbuchhandlung R. Stricker. Berlin W. 57, Potsdamerstr. 90 Just appeared: CATALOGUS alphabeticus generum et subgenerum COLEOPTERORUM orbis terrarum totius (fam., trib., subtr., sect. incl.) von Dr. Robert Lucas, BERLIN Pars I XXXI und 696 pages. With an appendix: Index of all catalogues ap- peared from 1900 On finest woodless paper. Got up in a splendid style. Price 120 Mark. This gigantic work is of an eminent importance and will be a quite indispensible vademecum to every one who works on beetles, and as a most valuable compendium ought to find place in every entomological library. To all coleopterists, beginners as well as advanced scientific entomolo- gists, this catalogue will be ot the greatest use, saving them from the trouble and loss of time that until now were necessary when searching through the literature of the families, subfamilies, genera and subgenera of the Coleoptera of the world. We have in this catalogue the whole literature (including all synonyms, errata, etc.) on the subject, put to- gether in a marvellously clear and instructive manner. Notwithstanding the immense number of the citations, they can all be contained in two volumes, while, thanks to a system of abbreviations, that is most agree- able to the purpose, they occupy less space than in the other catalogues. Every Coleopterist, the advanced specialist too, will have to consult this work on all questions concerning the above-namedsy stematic groups , PARNASSIUS APOLLO L. und sein Formenkreis Unter Mitwirkung von Dr. E. Fischer, Ziirich, Dr. A. Pagenstecher, Wiesbaden, und Embrik Strand verfasst von F. BRYK, Stockholm 1034 sheet. On finest woodless paper. With many figures and 35 big plates, 13 of them colored. : Price 90 Mark. The favorite of all collectors of European butterflies, Parnassius A pollo and its nearest allies, interesting to collectors by its beauty, variability and biology, is treated in this work by the best connoisseur of this genus and three other well-known entomologists. The plates are first rate by their natural reproduction and by their artistic execution. The text is. printed on the best woodless paper and got up in a splendid style with many figures. All these qualities will secure for the work a standard place in lepidop- terological literature. On both prices must be added the legal foreign procentual tax (at the moment 175%.) %& ei ? JOHN D. SHERMAN, dt: 132 PRIMROSE AVENUE, | MOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK BOOKS ON INSECTS Catalogue No. 9 tees Mr. Sherman will publish during November a short Aakstomie of valu- ~__ able and important entomological books, including many very rare items of _ recently purchased. Owing to the high cost of printing, only a small edition of this catalogue will be printed, and it will be sent only to those - who have made purchases during the last two years, and to such others Biss as may apply for it before the supply is exhausted. fi 226 Eatrlopics Nos. 7 and 8, roo and 110 pages respectively, containing ~ over 5000 titles on all branches of entomology, will also be furnished upon eta es "Butterflies of Eastern United States eager A ie “ivand Canada | a ; By Samuel H. Scudder Three volumes, quarto, new buckram 1958 pages of text, 89 plates (21 colored) Price Twenty-five Dollars ites Almost ready to issue— (All page prone corrected) Leng’ s Catalogue of Coleoptera of | Ti, veers wae North America "About 480 pages (including Bibliography of 80 pages) Price Ten Dollars JOHN D. SHERMAN, Jr. 132 PRIMROSE AVENUE MOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK From Celemila. Sa ‘America OVER 10,000 BUTTERFLIES, INCLUDING | Morpho cypris sulkowskyi From Cuba: Oa9 | 1500 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio columbus andraemon celadon devilliersi 4c “ 66 From Venezuela: Over 5000 Lepidoptera ea 2000 Cal a : 200 Dynastes hercules _ ee - 200 2 Ses ra ay From Assam, ‘Indias. : 1200 BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS, INCLUDING Papilio arcturus . Kallima “* philoxenus Brahmaea And Many Other Showy Species re es ts - From Tibet (Bhutan) Raed Armandia lidderdalii ‘Parnassius h GATALOGUES OF .- ENTOMOLOGICAL SUPPLIES AND SPECIMENS ON APPLICATION If interested kindly send your list of desiderata tor Poesiieg inform mati Department of Natural Science G. Lagai, Ph.D. ghee 404- 410 W.