Vol. XXvi] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. l8l 



a curved line behind these which is angled where it touches the apical 

 margin before the ocellus and is continued to the eye as a marginal 

 line, a more strongly curved line on the disk behind this terminating 

 behind the ocellus and near a vertical line which with the marginal 

 line and one next the eye nearly encircles a black dot ; median line 

 slender, black. Pale anterior margin of the pronotum with vermicu- 

 late dark marks. Scutellum with the anterior margin, in part beneath 

 the pronotum, the transverse incised line and three points before it 

 black. Elytral venation pale. Beneath pale, face darker, with about 

 10 brown arcs. A lateral line cutting the eye deep black; apex of the 

 head black bisected by a yellow line. 



Described from a single female taken in the Okefenokee 

 Swamp, Georgia, in June, by Prof. J. C. Bradley. 



Draeculacephala crassicornis n. sp. 



Allied to noz'cboracaisis, but with the vertex a little longer in the 

 female and more heavily lineated with black ; male antennae stout, 

 setaceous only at tip. Length 7-8 mm. 



Vertex about right-angled in the male, a little longer in the female. 

 Lineations of the vertex slender but distinct; black marks at apex of 

 the vertex parallel, not at all triangular in the male, in the female 

 linear, in both sexes leaving a conspicuous yellow median vitta. 

 Plates of the male abruptly narrowed to long, slender points as in 

 manitobiana, but here they are strongly divergent, almost at a right 

 angle, not upturned as in the other species. Antennae of the male long 

 and conspicuously thickened nearly to the apex and a little flattened, 

 the middle of the thicker portion a little more slender. Last ventral 

 segment of the female less produced than in noveboracensis, with the 

 lateral angles more retreating. 



Colors duller than in noveboracensis, the apex of the pronotum and 

 base of the vertex sometimes touched with green ; sides of pronotum 

 without a black longitudinal line. Elytral venation more or less bluish. 

 Antennae testaceous, becoming black on the apical one-half of the 

 thickened portion, with its apical seta white. 



Described from two males and one female collected at 

 Rock Creek, Oregon, July I4th, and two females from Cor- 

 vallis, Oregon, all received from Dr. H. F. Wilson, and one 

 female in my own collection taken by Mr. T. Kincaid at 

 Olympia, Washington. Should these sexes be incorrectly 

 placed the name must follow the male. The unusually thick- 

 ened antennae of the male will distinguish the species. 



