154 NEW NORTH AMERICAN ANTHOMYIIDAE (dIPTERA) 



Female.— Dithn-s from the male in having the thorax with three brown 



vittae. 



Eyes separated by a httle less than one-third of the heatl-width at vertex, 

 widened anteriorly. Abd(jm(>n broad, tapered posteriorly. Length, 4 to 

 .) nun. 



Type.—&; Glen House, NeAv Hampshire, August 3, 1914, 

 (C. W. Johnson), [B. 8. N. H.]. Allotype.— 9 ] Mt. Washington, 

 New Hampshire, no othcM' (hita. Paratiipes.— Mi. Washington, 

 New Hampshire, two males, July 28, 1915, one male, August 16, 

 1915; Mt. Monadnock, New Hampshire, June 26, 1917; one 

 male, Princeton, Maine, July 12; Nain, Labrador, one male, 

 August 18; Mountains east of Codroy, Newfoundland, three 

 males, one female, July 19 to 22, 1905; Lewisport, Newfoundland, 

 one male, July to August, 1905. 



All except the last specimen were sent to me by Mr. C. W. 

 Johnson from the collection of Boston Society of Natural History, 

 the last s])e('imen belongs to the American Museum of Natural 

 History, New York. 



Linmophora suspecta sp. n. 



M(il(. — N'cry similar 1o ullicola liul iniu'li i)aler in coldr. Thorax and 

 abdomen den.sely pale gray ijruinescent. 'Ubiae rufous. ^^'inJ>:s yellowish, 

 veins pale, yellow basallv. 



Struf'turally similar to (illirolii, the eyes rather more widely separated, and 

 the liind femora less slroiifil>' bristled, esi^eeially on the postero-ventral sur- 

 face. Length, 4.5 to 5.5 mm. 



Type. — cf ; Capens, Maine, August 19, [B. 8. N. H.j. Pm^a- 

 type.— d'; Mt. Ascutney, Vermont, July 11, 1908. Collected 

 by C. W. Johnson. 



Limnophora caroli sp. u. 



Mdlc. — Bla(;k, subopaciue, densely gray pruinescent. Interfrontalia opaque 

 black when viewed from above; orbits, face, and cheeks with white pruines- 

 cence. Dorsum of thorax with three brown vittae, the outer one on each 

 side broadened at and beyond suture, all three ceasing befor(> posterior mar- 

 gin; sculehum with a large brown mark on each side of disc, .\bdomen 

 with a hirge sulxiuadrate black dor.sal spot on basal segment, which is paler 

 centrally, a i)air of large black spots on second and third segments, each pair 

 connected centrally by a brown spot, and a brown sj)ot in center of fourth 

 segmenf. Legs pitchy black. Wings slightly brownish. Calyptrae white. 

 Ilalteres yellow. 



ICyes separated by ;dm(ist one-third of tlie liead-widlh; frons a little widened 

 ■iMleriorly; (■.•idi oibil .'dioul one-i'oui'th as wide as iutcrfronlalia, with six 



