326 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 



[Jan 



Daulopogou terricola, n. sp. 



cf ?. Head with a deuse, grayish pubescence, iu certain lights 

 the middle of the trout and a line across the vertex is dark brown 

 mystax, and the hair on the lower part of the occiput white, the 

 antenna? and mouth parts black. Thorax and scutellum covered 

 with a thick, grey pubescence, with two dorsal and a dorso-pleural 

 line of brown, pleurae, also with a dense grayish pubescence. Ab- 

 domen black, with a thin, whitish pubescence, segments minutely 

 punctate, with a narrow, shining posterior border, w hi 3h in some 

 specimens show a more or less brownish color, a lateral margin 

 expanding toward the posterior angle of each segment, is of a light 

 gray on a yellowish ground, ventor with grayish pubescence, hy- 

 popygium brownish. "VViugs, hyaline veins dark brown, halters 

 yellow. Legs reddish brown, coxae, front and usually the middle 

 femora, except the tip black, pubescence and hair white, terminal 

 joints of the tarsi moi-e or less blackish, hairs and bristles on the 

 tiba? and tarsi black. Length, 7mm. 



Ocean County (Prof. J. B. Smith), Cleinenton, May 9th, 

 30th ; Weuouah, May 14th ; Eiverton, May 29th. This spe- 

 cies is quite common during the spring on the low, damp 

 ground of southern New Jersey. I have seen it from no other 

 locality. 



Rivellia brevifasciata, n. sp. 



c? ?. Lower half of the face shining black, upper half opaque, 

 front brown, opaque, vertex with three shining black spots, the 

 central one surrounding the ocelli, frontal and facial orbits silvery; 

 occiputs black, antenna? reddish, tip of third joint dark brown. 

 Thorax and abdomen a uniform dark green. Legs entirely light 

 yellow. The four bauds on the wings are obsolete or greatly ab- 

 breviated, the first and second costal cells are hyaline ; the first 

 baud consists only of a spot in the marginal cell : the second and 

 third bands do not extend beyond the fourth longitudinal vein ; 

 the fourth, or apical band, about the same as in li. flarimana. but 

 not connected with the third along the costal margin. Length,4min. 



This species is nearest related to K. Jhirhnana Loew, from 

 which it is at once separated by the obsolete bauds and hya- 

 line costal cells. 



Atco, June 18, 1893. I have also two specimens from Dr. 

 Garry deN. Hough, collected by Mr. G. R. Pilate at Tiftou, 

 Ga. , June 6th. 

 Chaetopsis apicalis, n. sp. Fig 1. 



Resembles C. (tinea Wied., except in the color of the wings, which 

 in this species are yellowish, with a large brownish-black apical 



