248 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [October, 



20. An<za andria Scud. Common; April to November. T\vo 

 broods, possibly three; the imago hibernates. Food-plant, Cro- 

 ton capitatum. 



21. Debis portlandia Fabr. Rare ; two specimens in July. 

 Probably two broods ; the larva probably hibernates. Food- 

 plant, grass. 



22. Neonympha gemma Hiib. Common in dense woods July 

 to September. Three broods ; the larva probably hibernates. 

 Food-plant, grass. 



23. N. eurytris Fabr. Common; May to July. One brood, 

 possibly two; the larva hibernates. Food- plant, grass. 



24. N. sosybius Fabr. Rare; July to September. Two broods; 

 the larva hibernates. Food-plant, grass. 



25. Libythea bachmani Kirtl. Abundant ; June to October. 

 Two broods, possibly three; the imago probably hibernates, early 

 specimens being worn. Food-plant, hackberry. 



(To be continued.) 



-o- 



SPHERULARIA BOMBI IN AMERICA. 



An animal in which Prolapsus vaginas is normal. 



By CH. WARDELL STILES, Ph. D. 



Prof. John B. Smith recently sent me some parasites (Spheru- 

 laria bombi^) from the body-cavity of the Humble-Bee for deter- 

 mination and requested me to write a short account of them for 

 publication in ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS.* I acceed to the request 

 all the more willingly as, so far as I have been able to find, this 

 curious parasite has never been described in American literature, 

 although several records of the presence of a parasite in the Hum- 

 ble Bee occur in American journals which undoubtedly refer to this 

 particular species. 



The parasite in question is one of those curious forms in which, 

 what frequently occurs to a moderate degree as a pathological 

 process in higher animals, here takes place to an enormous ex- 

 tent as the normal condition of affairs; it is further an extremely 

 interesting form, as a particular set of organs normally undergoes 

 an hypertrophy entirely out of proportion to its original size, or 

 in fact to the size of the original organism. A third point in 

 connection with the worm is that it represents one of those pecu- 

 liar cases of parasitism in which only the female sex lives a para- 

 sitic life. 



* I found specimens in material collected by my students in female Boinbus pennsylva- 

 nicus, B. fervidus and B. consimilis. 



