314- THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



fourth and fifth abdominal segments also have black hair on the disc ; the 

 basal joints of the tarsi are reddish-brown in the middle beneath, coarsely 

 fringed with black hair. The eyes are light yellowish-green. The 

 appearance of the bee is strongly suggestive o^ A. urbaiia, but it is a 

 larger insect, the abdominal bands are narrower, and without any yellowish 

 tint ; the first abdominal segment is much less hairy, the tibial spurs are 

 darker, and the third antennal joint is very long, I think quite twice as 

 long as in urbana, obviously longer than the scape. Six from Pasco, 

 Wash., May 25, 1896 (Kincaid)." 



Type coll. T. D. A. Cockerel!. 



(This species is more like ignava tiian Edtvardsii, but in ignava the 

 ab'dominal bands are rather indistinct and incomplete. — H. L. V.) 



Anthophora ignava. Cress. — Trans. Am. Ent. Soc, VII, 210, 1S79, 



i ?• 



Corvallis, Or., ? ?, 15th May, 1899; i6th May, 1896; 8th June 

 (Cordley). In these specimens the hairs of the dorsal aspect are hardly 

 tinted with ochreous as in the type, and the white hairs on dorsum of 

 abdomen are much more abundant. Beside the four co-types from 

 Nevada, there are only two other specimens in the collection of the Am. 

 Ent. Soc, and these are labelled Calif, and S. Calif. The specimen from 

 S. Calif, is more like the Oregon examples than any of the others. 



Anthophora Stan/ordiana, Ckll.— Ent. News, XV, 32, 1894. 



Corvallis, Or., 9 nth, March, 1899; c? , 12th June, 1898] 21st May, 

 1899 (Cordley). Differs from the description of the types in having the 

 pale pubescence ochreous instead of whitish. In the 9 the pale pubes- 

 cence on the second segment is inconspicuous, and on the third segment 

 pale pubescence is entirely absent. 



Anthophora solitaria, Ckll. 



" insu/arts, Sm. — New Spec. Hym., Brit. Mus., 124, ?. 



Vane. Not seen. 



I^mphoropsts cineraria, (Sm.). — Ibid, 9 S- 



Described as an Anthophora. 



Vane. Not seen. 



E?nphoropsis floridana Pascoensis, Ckll. — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. , 

 Phila., p. 54, 1898. 



Pasco, Wash. 



