56 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



middle on both basal aud apical segments, but " best defined 

 apically. 



Bred at Ithaca 18th Julv, 1901. 



Heptag-enia sp. no. 3 



The nymph of this species was not bred. Like the two 

 preceding it is strongly marked and easily recognized. It 

 occurs in the larger streams, clinging to rocks in the swiftest 

 currents. 



The nymph. (P1.6, fig.4.) length, 10 mm.; antenna, 3 mm., 

 and setae 13 mm. additional. 



Body rather elongate, scarcely wider across the head than 

 across the mesothorax. Head strongly dejiressed, evenly rounded 

 in front, with flaring infero-lateral margins, dilated at the sides 

 and distinctly visible outside the eyes. Antennae slender, pale. 

 Prothorax slightly narroAved posteriorly, its margins flaring, 

 dilated. Legs moderate, pale; femora with indistinct median 

 and apical darker bands, and with a scanty development of the 

 usual posterior fringes of hair. Wings reaching the level of the 

 base of the 4th albdominal segment. 



Albdomen regularly tapering posteriorly. Segments 8-10 slightly 

 diminishing in length, 10 a little prodmced on the dorsal side, and 

 produced in a sharp triangular spine on each lateral margin; 

 lateral spines developed only on segments 7-0, best developed on 8. 



Gills represented on segments 1-7, on 1-G double, consisting of 

 an anterior protecting lamella and a posterior respiratory 

 lamella whose border is cut into a long fringe of branching gill 

 filaments; upper lamella oblicpiely oval, produced at the tip into 

 an acute spine-like point, l)e(;oming broader distally (obovate) on 

 4 and 5, and narrower again on 0. On segment 7 there is a 

 simple linear hairy filament, rtbtuse at the apex and hardly reach- 

 ing the level of the base of the lateral s})ine on the 8th segment. 



iSetae 3, long and hairy, the hairs becoming whorled and finally 

 obsolete tow^ard the tip. 



The distinctive features of the color pattern are shown in the 

 photogi'aphs reproduced in ]tl.O, fig.4. These are a broad 

 pale middorsal band divided Milli brown on the posterior 

 abdominal segments, lateral pale dashes at the sides of the 

 abdominal segmenis, and a brown longitudinal dash either side 

 of segments 8 and 9 below. 



