REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST 1904 549 



Acanthosoma lateralis Say. I took a few examples of this species 

 in beating trees. Professor MacGillivray seems to have found it 

 more abundant at Axton. 



Acanthosoma cniciata Say. Taken by Professor MacGillivray 

 at Axton. 



Protenor belfragei Haglund. Taken in numbers on a tall coarse 

 grass by the Wilmington road near the Ausable river. 



Corizus novaeboracensis Sign. Not uncommon in the fields 

 about the Lake Placid Club grounds, Aug. 12 and Sep. 22. 



Corizus nigristemum Sign. Common everywhere. 



Nysius angustatus Uhler, Common August 1904 and Septem- 

 ber 1902. 



Nysius sp. One example taken near the Ausable river of a spe- 

 cies I have not yet been able to determine. 



Ischnorhynchus resedae Panzer (didymus Zett.) Taken at Sar- 

 anac Lake and elsewhere. 



Phlegyas abbreviatus Uhler. Taken at Axton by Professor 

 MacGillivray. This species is certainly quite distinct from 

 annulicrus Stal which is a more western form occurring 

 from Kansas through the Rocky moimtain region. 



Cymus angustatus Stal. Common. 



Cymus claviculus Fallen. I took this species on the bald sum- 

 mit of Mt Whiteface and found it abundant on the lower levels, 

 August and September. 



Ligyrocoris sylvestris Linn. Taken on the summit of Mt White- 

 face and abundantly everywhere in the fields about Lake Placid. 



Ligyrocoris contracta Say. Less abimdant than sylves- 

 tris. This insect is hardly distinguishable from that deter- 

 mined by me as Ligyrocoris balteatus Stal in Dr 

 Skinner's list of insects taken at Beulah N. M. If that determina- 

 tion was correct Stal's species may have to fall as a synonym. 

 The species I identify as Say's constricta is a Pamera 

 (according to Heidemann) proportionately longer and more slender 

 than Perigenes fallax Heid. I have taken it about 

 Buffalo and at Phoenicia in the Catskills. 



TINGIDA-Ei 



Corythuca juglandis Fitch. Taken occasionally. 

 Physatochila plexa Say. Taken by Professor MacGillivray at 

 Axton. 



Aradus 4-lineatus Say. One young example of the species that 

 passes for 4-lineatus was taken on Cobble Hill. 



Aradus niger Stal. I captured an immature example of this 

 species in the dense woods near the Ausable river. I have already 

 recorded the occurrence of this species about Buffalo [Ent. News, 13 : 

 23] and Mr Heidemann records its capture at Washington D. C. 

 and Kirbyville Tex. Stal described it from South Carolina. 



Aradus abbas Bergr. Taken at Axton by Professor MacGilli- 

 vray. 



