222 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [September, 



Hab . Colorado: Chamber's Lake, Larimer County, 9500 feet, 

 July 1 8, 1895 (C. F. Baker). Known by the yellow color being 

 confined to the clypeus; in this it is like C. calif ornicus , but in 

 tbat the clypeus is not all yellow. 



Calliopsis ianupttis n. sp. 9- Length 6.5 mm., stoutly built, black, the 

 face-marks yellow, and the tarsi reddish brown. Head somewhat broader 

 than long, coarsely and confluently punctured, the punctures more sparse 

 on vertex, and especially lower part of face; hindmost ocelli if anything 

 a little further apart than the distance of either from the orbit; antennae 

 rather short, wholly black, second joint of flagellum remarkably short; a 

 longitudinal keel between the antennae; clypeus and lateral face-marks 

 bright chrome-yellow, the clypeus with the usual two dots; the lateral 

 marks subquadrate, shaped something like the mainsail of a schooner, 

 but narrower, extending considerably above level of clypeus, but not to 

 level of antennae, notched on the inner lower corner; the clypeus is not 

 grooved ; face practically free from hairs, but the lower margin of the 

 clypeus has a sparse fringe; eyes dull sage-green. Thorax wholly dark, 

 with tolerably profuse, short, dirty whitish pubescence; punctures of meso- 

 thorax and scutellum very large and fairly close; base of metathorax ob- 

 liquely stnate; tegulae shining testaceous. Wings hyaline, slightly milky, 

 nervures and stigma brown, costal nervure black, marginal cell hardly at 

 all appendiculate, second submarginal narrowed about one-half to mar- 

 ginal. Legs black, knees and tarsi, and a short streak on anterior tibia, 

 reddish brown; scopa of hind legs comparatively short and inconspicu- 

 ous. Abdomen broad, apical margins of segments becoming narrowly 

 testaceous, first segment with large, rather sparse punctures, the other 

 segments with a transverse median punctured area. 



Hab. Colorado : Colorado Springs, middle of July, 1895 

 (Ckll. 3580). Also found by Mr. C. F. Baker (1593). 



Another from Colorado Springs has the face more hairy and 

 the second submarginal less narrowed above. This is quite dis- 

 tinct from C. coloradensis, lepidus, andrcniformis and maculatus, 

 the only four species with a partly light face and wholly dark 

 abdomen in the 9 . It may possibly be the 9 of some species 

 so far only known in the . It resembles the of albitarsis 

 more than does the 9 of that species. 



Calliopsis renimaculatus n. sp. 9- Length about 5.5 mm., black, with 

 a yellow spot on the face, form rather stout. Head broader than long, 

 face very broad, not narrowed below; front and vertex shining, with large 

 close punctures; occiput, cheeks and face with rather copious short white 

 hairs; no acute keel between the antennae; clypeus flat, not grooved; face 

 wholly dark, except a transverse bright chrome-yellow kidney-shaped 

 spot, half on clypeus and half supraclypeal, its convex side downwards; 



