38 PROC. ENT. soc. WASH., VOL. 22, NO. 2, FEB., 1920 



Female. Differs from the male in having the face entirely yellow, and the 

 abdomen with narrow glossy black fasciae. 

 Length 4 mm. 



Type. Male, allotype, and three male paratypes, Dubois, 111., 

 May 10, 1918; one female paratype, same locality, May 25, 1917 

 (J. R. Malloch). 



Gimnomera fasciventris, sp. n. 



Male. Yellowish testaceous; third antennal joint except base, oceilar 

 triangle, upper half of occiput, dorsum of thorax except anterior lateral' 

 angles, metanotum, and upper half of pleura black. Abdomen with a nar- 

 row brownish fascia at apex of each tergite, seventh tergite glossy black. 



Arista pubescent, swollen on a little more than its basal third. Hypopygium 

 much more prominent than in other species. 



Female. Similar in color to the male. 



Length 4 mm. 



Type. Male, allotype and one female paratype, Meredosia r 

 111., May 29, 1917 (J. R. Malloch). Taken in a sand-pit. 



TWO NEW TERMITES FROM ARIZONA. 



BY THOMAS. E. SNYDER, U. S. Bureau of Entomology. 



On June 30, 1919, Mr. George Hofer collected winged adults 

 of Kalotermes hiibbardi Banks, which were attracted to light in 

 Sabino Canyon, Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona. This was 

 the first flight observed in the season of 1919. With these adults 

 of K . hubbardi were smaller, darker adults of a Kalotermes which 

 prove to be a new species. This new Kalotermes is hairy like 

 K . minor Hagen, but is smaller and not so dark and the pronotum 

 seems to be proportionately longer. Unfortunately only three 

 adults were collected. 



This new termite brings the number of Nearctic termites to 

 37 species and 2 varieties. The termite fauna of the Santa Cata- 

 lina Mountains, Ariz., is richer in species than any other locality 

 in the United States; 12 species and 1 variety occur there. 



