SUBFAMILY II. — CAPSINJE. 723 



Marion Co., Ind., June 26 — July 10; beaten from willow. 

 Dunedin, Fla., April 10 — 20 ; frequent on foliage of willow and 

 bay along the margins of ponds. Pigeon Cove and Oak Bluff, 

 Mass., July 29 — Aug. 3 (Olsen). Ranges from Ontario and 

 New England west to the Dakotas and south to Florida. Occurs 

 mainly on black willow, and probably predaceous. 



724 (931). Phytocoris angustulus Reuter, 1909, 29. 



Elongate, subparallel. Head reddish-yellow with a spot at base of 

 loraa blackish, tylus yellow; beak reaching sixth ventral, yellowish, its 

 apex fuscous ; pronotum grayish-yellow with lateral and basal submar- 

 gins fuscous, calli and collar paler, edge of hind margin pale; elytra fus- 

 cous-brown, corium with three translucent yellowish spots, the largest 

 triangular on apex and united with the pale center of cuneus, apex and 

 inner margin of cuneus fuscous; membrane fuscous with a pale spot 

 near apex of cuneus and a smaller one behind it; first antennal pale yel- 

 low with fuscous spots, second and third fuscous each with a narrow 

 pale ring at base, fourth blackish; femora blackish-brown thickly 

 sprinkled with small yellow spots, hind ones with an oblique pale band 

 near apex; tibia? annulate with brown and yellow; coxae pale yellow; ven- 

 trals blackish. Joint 1 of antennae one-fourth longer than pronotum, 2 

 more than twice as long as 1, and nearly twice as long as 3, 4 one-third 

 shorter than 3. Length, 6 — 6.2 mm. 



Black Mountains, N. Car., July 18 (Brimley). Described from 

 West Virginia and recorded from New York, Vermont and 

 Nova Scotia. Collected by Knight on the hemlock, Tsuga 

 canadensis (L). 



725 ( — ). Phytocoris obtectus Knight, 1920, 58. 



"Very similar to eximius, slightly smaller and more slender, hem- 

 elytra more uniformly grayish translucent, not distinctly marked with 

 fuscous at apex of corium; front transversely striate with fuscous; scu- 

 tellum grayish-brown, irrorate with paler; genital claspers and flagellum 

 of male as in fig. 21. Length, 5.5 mm." (Knight). 



Recorded only from Honeoye Falls, N. Y. 



726 ( — ). Phytocoris lacunosus Knight, 1920, 56. 



"Very similar to cortitectus only larger; nearly the size of onustus 

 but more slender and paler in color; corium with a longitudinal pale 

 area extending onto base of cuneus without interruption at cubitus; 

 flagellum and right genital clasper of male as in fig. 4. Length, 6.7 

 mm." (Knight). 



Described from McLean, N. Y., where it was taken on the 

 bark of water beech, Carpinus caroliniana Walt., growing at the 

 margin of a bog. Recorded elsewhere only from North Dakota 

 where it was found by Hussey on willow. 



