236 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



Myzus lycopersici Clarke. — -26 antenna of wingless viviparous 

 female; 27 antenna, 28 head, 29 cornicle and 30 cauda of winged 

 viviparous female; 31 antenna of winged male; 32 antenna of 

 oviparous female. 



Plate VII. Myzus lycopersici Clarke. — 33 hind tibia of 

 wingless oviparous female. 



Rhopalosiphum howardii Wilson. — 34 antenna of wingless 

 viviparous female; 35 head, 36 wing, 37 cornicle, 38 cauda and 

 39 antenna of winged viviparous female; 40 antenna of winged male. 



Eulachnus rileyi Williams. — 41 antenna of wingless viviparous 

 female; 42 head, 43 antenna, 44 beak, 45 wing and 46 hind tarsus 

 of winged viviparous female; 47 antenna of winged male, 48 hind 

 tibia of wingless oviparous female. 



Plate XVIII. Symdobius albasiphus n. sp. — 49 antenna, 50 

 cornicle and 51 cauda and anal plate of wingless viviparous female; 

 52 head, 53 antenna and 54 cauda and anal plate of winged 

 viviparous female; 55 antenna and 56 wing of winged male; 57 

 antenna and 58 hind tibia of wingless oviparous female. 



REPORT ON A COLLECTION OF JAPANESE CRANE- 

 FLIES (TIPULIDsE, DIPTERA). 



BY CHARLES P. ALEXANDER, ITHACA, N. Y. 

 (Continued from p. 211.) 



Tipula nipponensis, sp. n. 



Head yellowish ; thorax yellow with brown stripes; abdomen 

 with the caudal margin of the segments broadly brown; wings 

 variegated gray, brown and hyaline. 



Male: Length 12.8 mm.; wing 13.6 mm.; antenna? about 4 mm. 



Female: Length 13-14.1 mm.; wing 14.2-15.2 mm. 



Male: Palpi brown, the terminal segment very long and pale; 

 frontal prolongation of the head very short and stout, yellowish; 

 antennae, segments 1 and 2 yellow, flagellar segments with the 

 somewhat enlarged base dark brown, the remainder of each seg- 

 ment dull yellow; front, vertex and occiput dull yellow, the sides 

 of the vertex and the gena? dark brown. 



Pronotum pale; mesonotum dull yellow with dark brown 

 stripes, the median one bisected by a pale line, lateral stripes short, 



July, 1014 



