84 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [March, '02 



ta. C. hentzii was certainly three weeks behind the usual time 

 of appearance, and specimens have been scarce and shy. 



While the rule has been a great dearth of both species and 

 specimens, the exception has given a few splendid series of 

 species generally considered very scarce in this region, the 

 most notable being in the Buprestidse and certain genera of 

 the Chrysomelidae. During the summer I was presented with 

 a fine little weevil that was found alive in a cargo of fruit from 

 the West Indies. 



Three New Species of Nemoatcerous Diptera. 

 By D. W. COQUILLETT. 



The early stages of the following new species of Diptera are 

 to be treated of by Dr. H. G. Dyar, at whose request the writer 

 hereby names and characterizes these species in order that they 

 may be recognized in the future. So little is known in regard 

 to the early stages of our Diptera that any facts on this subject 

 will form a welcome addition to our scanty knowledge, and it 

 is fortunate for the science that so experienced a biologist as 

 Dr. Dyar is to devote a portion of his energies to this interest- 

 ing but greatly neglected field of research. 



Ceratopogon varicolor, n. sp. 



$. Head black, eyes quite widely separated on the front, antennae 

 brown, the basal joint and sutures of the small ones yellowish, mouth 

 parts brown ; thorax black, opaque, gray pruinose, mesonotum in middle 

 of the front half marked with a pair of brown vittoe, scute'.lum brownish 

 yellow, abdomen pale yellow, dorsum of first segment brownish ; legs 

 yellow, coxae, a band before apices of front and middle femora, near base 

 of front and hind tibiae, and the hind femora, except the extreme bases, 

 black, narrow apices of tibiae and joints of tarsi also black ; first hind tarsal 

 joint about twice as long as the second, the fifth about twice as long as 

 the fourth, not spinose on under side, claws large and of an equal size, 

 each front femur bearing four stout spines on the apical half of the under 

 side, other femora without spines ; wings hyaline, bare, third vein separated 

 from the first, not connected with it by a crossvein, ending near four-fifths 

 length of wing, fourth vein forks slightly before small crossvein ; halteres 

 yellow ; length, 3 mm. 



A female specimen bred September 4 by Dr. H. G. Dyar. 

 Type, Cat. No. 6083, U. S. National Museum. 



