494 MOSQUITOES OF XORTH AMEEICA 



former contending that this name should be applied to the present species, the 

 latter that it was not so applicable, but probably the same as Culex pipiens 

 Linnaeus. After careful consideration we incline to agree with Mr. Aldrich; 

 we have, accordingly, made the name consohrinus a synonym of pipiens and 

 use the name inornatus for the present species. The adults are supplied with 

 scales on the cross-veins, but these are sometimes very few in number, or 

 altogether lost by abrasion, so that the species is liable to be confused with 

 impatiens. It can be distinguished by the color as described under that species. 

 The characteristic venation is less stable in these species than in the others of 

 the genus, and individual males occur which are liable to be mistaken for a 

 Culex. The large size, the weak plumosity of the antenna, the form of the palpi 

 and the poorly developed lateral ciliation of the abdomen, are an assistance to 

 identification in such cases. 



CULISETA MACCRACKENiE Dyar & Knab. 



Culex annulatus Williston (in part, not Schrank), U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Ornith. and 



Mammal., No. Am. Fauna No. vii, 253, 1893. 

 Culex annulatus Ludlow (not Schrank), Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, x, 131, 1902. 

 Theobaldia annulata Theobald (in part, not Schrank). Mon. Culic. iii, 148, 1903. 

 Theobaldia annulata Aldrich (not Culex annulatus Schrank), Cat. No. Amer. Dipt., 



126, 1905. 

 Culex annulatus Blanchard (in part, not Schrank), Les Moust, 280, 1905. 

 Theobaldia annulata Theobald (in part, not Culex annulatus Schrank), Gen. Ins., 



Dipt, 26 Fasc, 23, 1905. 

 Culiseta maccracTcenw Dyar & Knab, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xix, 133, 1906. 

 Theobaldia annulata Coquillett (not Culex annulatus Schrank), U. S. Dept. Agr., 



Bur. Ent, Tech. Ser. 11, 22, 1906. 

 Theobaldia annulatus Quayle (not Culex annulatus Schrank), Univ. Cal. Agr. Exper. 



Stat, Bull. 178, 52, 1906. 

 Theobaldia annulata Ludlow (in part, not Schrank), Can. Ent., xxxviii, 326, 1906. 

 Theobaldia annulata Theobald (in part, not Schrank), Mon. Culic, iv, 277, 1907. 

 Culiseta maccrackence Dyar, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxii, 123, 1907. 

 Theobaldia annulata Theobald (in part, not Schrank), Mon. Culic, v, 271, 1910. 

 Culiseta maccrackenw Theobald, Mon. Culic, v, 611, 1910. 



Original Description of Culiseta maccbacken^ : 



Proboscis black; thorax with two brown stripes, the vestiture yellowish over black. 

 Vv'ings with brown stains in the membrane where the scales form small black patches 

 at cell, on cross-veins and at bases of forked cells; abdomen black with narrow 

 whitish basal segmental bands, whitish scaled ventrally. Legs black, the femora pale 

 at base and with a white ring before tip; tibiae with a line of white scales on each 

 side; hind tarsaljoints banded with white at base nearly to middle. 



Id*. 4$, Stanford University, California, March, June 23, 1903 (Miss MacCracken) ; 

 Eureka, Cal., June 8 (H. S. Barber) ; San Francisco, Cal., July 4, 1906 (Miss Ludlow). 



Type. Cat. No. 9961, U. S. Nat Mus. 



Description of Female and Male of Culiseta maccbacken^ (Labva Unknown) : 



Female. Proboscis slender, long, hardly dilated towards tip; vestiture 

 blackish dorsally, ventrally of light gray scales. Palpi about one-fifth the 

 length of proboscis; black, a few white scales intermixed, two rings of white 

 scales at segmentations, tip white scaled. Antennre filiform, blackish; tori 

 globose, Avith a distal depression, bright chestnut brown, pruinose, with a 

 large patch of suberect, ovate, white scales on the inner side; second segment 

 with a median whorl and scattered hairs, the rest covered with silky gray 

 pubescence and basal whorls of rather short sparse hairs. Clypeus broad, 

 rounded, brown, smooth, nude. Occiput blackish, clothed with narrow, curved, 

 creamy scales, margin of eyes white, slender, erect, forked, dark brown scales 

 dorsally, cheeks white scaled; a row of coarse brown bristles along margin of 

 eyes, at vertex denser and projecting forward. 



Prothoracic lobes clothed with whitish scales and brown bristles. Meso- 

 notum brown, with darker mottlings, clothed with larger, narrow, curved, pale 

 golden and whitish scales and much smaller dark brown scales ; a pair of short 



