834 ZOOLOGY- INSECTS. 



their apex ; tarsi piceous, the upper side of the basal joint testaceous. Ce- 

 rium pitted with remote piceous varioles, some of which contain a central 

 granule ; the base and principal nervule with coarse piceous granules ; mem- 

 brane with densely ramose, brown nervules. Tergum dull orange-testa- 

 ceous, the surface with fine piceous punctures, and the penultimate seg- 

 ment with a broad piceous indentation each side ; the connexivum tumid 

 on each of the four central segments, beset with dense and minute piceous 

 granules. Venter paler, faintly ocln-eous, finely and irregularly punctured, 

 but witli rufous and piceous remote granules, which are coarser and coa- 

 lesce near the sides, forming longitudinal irregular lines of spots. 



Length, 7 millimeters ; width across the hunieri, 2 millimeters. 



Collected in the vicinity of the Gila River, in Arizona, by Dr. Oscar 



Loew. 



DASYCORIS, Dallas. 



DASYCORIS HUMILIS, Ubler. 



PLATE XLII, FIG. 8. 

 Dasycoris humilis, UHLER, U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., 1872, 403. 



A specimen of the curious short-winged form was collected by Dr. 

 Oscar Loew near the Gila River in October. 



AUFEIUS, Stal. 



AUFEIUS IMPRESSICOLLIS, St9,l. 

 Aiifeius impressicollis, STAL, Kongl. Svensk. Acad., ix, 222. 



One specimen from the vicinity of the Gila River, collected by Dr. 

 Oscar Loew. 



LYGAEIDAE. 



LYGAEUS, Fab. 



LYGAEUS RECLIVATUS, Say. 

 \. Lycfccus reclivatus, SAY, Jour. Acatl. Nat. Sci. Phila., iv, 321. 



From Owen's Valley, California (F. Bischoff), and from Fort Win- 

 gate, N. Mcx., July 10 ; vicinity of Gila River (Dr. Oscar Loew) ; Goat's 

 Peak (Dr. J. T. Rotlirock) and from Canon Chelle, September (G. M. 

 Keasbey). 



A species common in Arizona, Nevada, and California, but rare in the 

 eastern )>;irts of the United Stutcs. 



