SI ALL I MO. 



bda, quadrimandata Linn. (Fig. 588) is reddish yellow, with 

 four dark clouds on the wings which are yellow anteriorly on 

 the base. In Diplax the abdomen is a little shorter than the 

 wings, and is slender, 

 flattened, compressed at 

 the base, while the feet 

 are lonu' and slender. 



Diplax rubicundula Fabr. 

 is a very abundant spe- 

 cies, being yellowish red. 

 Dijtlax Berenice Drury 

 (Fig. 589, male; tig. 590, 

 female) is black, with the Fl ~ r>! ' 1 - 



head blue in front, spotted with yellow, while the thorax and 

 abdomen ;uv striped with yellow. There are fewer stripes on 

 the body of the male. D. EUsa Hagen (Fig. 591) is black, 



with the head yellowish aad 

 with greenish yellow spots 

 on the sides of the thorax 

 and base of the abdomen. 

 The Nanii)>liu<i I"'!/" of 



Uhler (Fig. 592) is a smaller 

 form, with an unusually 

 short abdomen, and the 

 reticulations of the wings 

 are large and simple. It is 

 black, while the male is frosted over with a whitish powder. 



E Leach. This family is not a numerous one, but the 

 species are interesting as comprising some of the largest of in- 

 sects. Hagen defines the group briefly 

 as having the body short and thick, 

 while the prothorax is large and square. 

 The antenna} are long and setaceous ; 

 the wings are large, reticulated, the pos- 

 terior ones with the anal space plicated, 

 and the tarsi are five-jointed. Fi? - '''- 



"The female of Sialis," according to Westwood, "deposits 

 an immense quantity of eggs, which she attaches one by one 



