SUBFAMILY III. — STENOPODINiE. 545 



glade and Bueno from St. Petersburg, Fla. Nothing regard- 

 ing its habits has been recorded. 



518 (721). Pnirontis modesta Banks, 1910a, 324. 



Elongate, slender. Dull straw-yellow; apical angles of connexivals 

 each with a very small dark spot; abdomen and median line of pronotum 

 often faintly tinged with fuscous; femoral and tibial spines with a brown 

 bar. Basal joint of antennae shorter than front portion of head, finely 

 spinose beneath. Antenniferous tubercles slightly surpassed by the two 

 cylindrical processes between them. Front femora with four or five promi- 

 nent spines, these increasing in length from the base; front tibia? armed 

 as stated in key. Apex of male abdomen with lobes more divergent, 

 their tips more broadly rounded than in infirma. In female these lobes 

 are wholly separate with an oblong lobe of equal length between them, 

 the tip of latter with a small median notch. Length, 11 — 12 mm. 



Moore Haven, Fla., March 25 ; one swept from foliage along 

 the canal (W.S.B.). Washington, D. C, June 15 (Davis). 

 Barber records it from Titusville, Fla., and Van Duzee (1917, 

 240) from Indiana. The types of Banks were from Virginia. 



519 ( — ). Pnirontis brimleyi sp. nov. 



Form and size of modesta. Color much the same; head and basal 

 lobe of pronotum tinged with fuscous; ventrals with a row of small 

 black dots along each side in addition to those on angles of connexivals. 

 Head and pronotum roughly scabrous. Antenniferous tubercles very 

 short, the antennae inserted beneath them, not apparently on their ends 

 as in our other species ; the tylus between them single, obtusely pointed. 

 First joint of antennae less than half the length of front lobe of head, 

 its basal half swollen, apical half tapering to an obtuse point. Front 

 tibiae of male strongly curved, armed as in modesta. Last dorsal of 

 male broader, with apical notch wider and much more shallow, the lobes 

 scarcely half the length of those of modesta. Characters otherwise much 

 as in that species. Length, 10.5 mm. 



Raleigh, N. Car., April 14 ; a single male sent me as modesta, 

 but very distinct in the characters above mentioned from that 

 species. Named in honor of C. S. Brimley, of Raleigh, N. Car., 

 who has shown me many favors during the preparation of this 

 work, and who has done much to make better known the insect 

 fauna of his State. Type in collection of North Carolina State 

 Department of Agriculture. 



II. Pygolampis Germar, 1824, 22. 



Elongate slender species having the head porrect, its sides 

 subparallel, the front lobe as wide as hind one, the base of 

 latter with four short processes ; antennae inserted on its front, 



